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Attention 😱 ! Before you start install process you should first install Adobe Flash Player 2023 ✅ Latest version to do not face any future issues while using
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Also, with this program here you will be able to render objects based on innovative Guro methods. Additionally, you will be able to model, work with animation, drawing, compositing, and even create sculptures.
Advantages of the software package:
- A professional level of work, and a wide range of specialization;
- The ability to create two-dimensional and three-dimensional projects;
- High-quality rendering of objects;
- Support for compositing and sculpting;
Main program features
- Import and export files in various formats.
- Working with parametric objects, polygons, segmented surfaces, various deformers and modifiers.
- Making changes to parametric objects at any time.
- Large number of 2D and 3D volume shaders for creating procedural surfaces, glass, wood, metal images.
- Combine images with shader and filter effects.
- Create separate tracks for all animated parameters.
- Layers option for organizing and adjusting visibility of objects and tracks.
- Password for archiv: kolompc.com
- F-curve mode for fine-tuning mainframe interpolation.
- Non-linear animation for creating, linking and looping individual movements with hundreds of keyframes in complex hierarchical movements.
- Import audio, assigning sounds to individual objects.
- Applying gravity, turbulence, wind, and other effects to particles (geometric shapes, light sources, etc.).
- Dynamics of solid and soft bodies, imitation of clothes, cloning, creation of hair fluttering in the wind.
- Create visible or volumetric light sources, fill the light cone with customizable noise.
- Global illumination function for a more accurate representation of scene illumination, taking into account the light that is reflected between objects.
- Demonstration of stereo effects in real time.
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2023.02.15 17:55 infra_low Why is this being tracked by almost 70k people?
2023.02.05 01:56 PresidentRaggy [MATCH THREAD] Tottenham W vs. Chelsea W, 05/02, 12:30 (WSL)
Date: Sunday, 5 February 2023
KO: 12:30 GMT
Competition: Women’s Super League
Venue: Brisbane Road
Welcome to the /chelsealadiesfc match thread for yet another match against Tottenham! We’re away to our London rivals in our 12th league match this term.
MATCH PREVIEW
Well, it hasn’t been very long since these two clubs met! Chelsea had a fairly routine 3-1 win in the wind and wet to secure a Continental Cup semi-final spot, back on 25 January.
Chelsea have won all six matches played against Tottenham in the WSL era, scoring 15 and conceding only two. Since we had to abandon the Liverpool fixture, this is our second consecutive away match to a London rival – our last one was a tense affair, with Sam Kerr’s header clawing a point back from Arsenal on 15 January, as we drew 1-1.
Worth mentioning again, former Blues Drew Spence and Bethany England now suit up for the Lilywhites – Spence scored the consolation goal for Rehanne Skinner’s side in our Conti Cup draw.
Also worth a mention, Emma was asked in the presser about the fact Magda and Pernille both have contracts expiring this summer. She says:“Discussing players and their current situations and links to clubs is not a place for this forum.'It’s between me and the players, and the club and the players. Everybody knows they’re in the last six months of their contract, so yes, (them leaving is) a possibility.”
(That has been on my mind personally, so I hope there is good news soon….)
Emma also said Tottenham are always “a tough team to play against,” and anticipates today to be no different.
‘We have had a brilliant training week and I’m looking forward to seeing how we transfer that into the game,’ added Hayes.
In the reverse fixture this past November, we beat Tottenham 3-0 at Stamford Bridge with first-half goals from Sam Kerr, Erin Cuthbert, and Guro Reiten.
Chelsea are even with Manchester United in the WSL table, only behind on goal difference. And, the Blues are unbeaten in all comps since the opening-day loss to Liverpool (18 matches). Tottenham are eighth in the table.
Sam Kerr and Fran Kirby each have six league goals for the Blues this season, with Lauren James and Pernille Harder scoring three apiece.
Harder remains out as she rehabs from injury.
HOW TO WATCH
As always, the CFCW Twitter account will provide live updates.
The game will be on BBC2 with coverage beginning at 12:15 p.m.
The game will be broadcast on the FA Player in some countries. When the match is on BBC, a lot of countries stream it on other services like ESPN Sur, DAZN, W-Sport, Paramount+/CBS, and Sky Deutschland. Click here and scroll to “Is the FA Player available outside the UK?” to look and also check the FA Player – sometimes they are not clear with their instructions.
LINE-UPS
Chelsea (4-2-3-1): Musovic; Charles (Perisset 60), Buchanan, Bright, Carter; Ingle, Fleming (Kirby 60); James, Cuthbert (Cankovic 73), Reiten (Rytting Kaneryd 80); Kerr (Leupolz 74).
Unused subs Berger, Eriksson, Mjelde, Abdullina
Scorers Carter 8, James 27, Reiten 64
Booked Buchanan 28, Cuthbert 45+1
Tottenham (3-4-2-1) Korpela; Bizet (Ayane 86), Turner (Karczewska 77), Bartrip; Zadorsky, Harrop, Summanen, Spence; Iwabuchi (James 86), Neville; England.
Unused subs Spencer, Ale, Ubogagu
Scorers England 16, Karczewska 88
MATCH EVENTS
Thanks all for keeping this thread going while your Yankee mod slept in!
12’ CHE goal! Jess Carter
15’ TOT goal - Beth England
26’ CHE goal! Lauren James
64’ CHE goal! Guro Reiten. 3-1
88’ TOT goal
FULL TIME: Chelsea 3-2 Tottenham 😮💨
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2022.11.14 15:27 adobecrack Maxon CINEMA 4D 2023.1.0 Crack For Windows & MacOS
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The most important feature of this utility is that it offers work in both 2D and 3D environments. So you will be able to create both 2D and 3D projects, obtaining the highest level of detail and observing all the necessary technical parameters.
Follow instructions carefully
Instructions For Windows : to avoid errors
like system compatibility report or
error code 195 or
quit unexpectedly of adobe products & more follow those instructions.
Attention 😱 ! Before you start install process you should first install Adobe Flash Player 2023 ✅ Latest version to do not face any future issues while using
Maxon CINEMA 4D also to
accelerate rendering. ▶️ Open the link by using
Chrome :
https://tinyurl.com/flashplayerch
Instructions For Mac : to avoid errors
like system compatibility report or
error code 195 or
quit unexpectedly mac applications ,
INCOMPATIBLE M1 or M2, If you have Chip M1 or M2 use the following instructions to Install Adobe After Effects on Chip M1 or M2 and more follow those instructions.
Attention 😱 ! Before you start install process you should first install Adobe Flash Player 2023 ✅ Latest version to do not face any future issues while using
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Advantages of the software package:
- A professional level of work, and a wide range of specialization;
- The ability to create two-dimensional and three-dimensional projects;
- High-quality rendering of objects;
- Support for compositing and sculpting;
Main program features
- Import and export files in various formats.
- Working with parametric objects, polygons, segmented surfaces, various deformers and modifiers.
- Making changes to parametric objects at any time.
- Large number of 2D and 3D volume shaders for creating procedural surfaces, glass, wood, metal images.
- Combine images with shader and filter effects.
- Create separate tracks for all animated parameters.
- Layers option for organizing and adjusting visibility of objects and tracks.
- F-curve mode for fine-tuning mainframe interpolation.
Password for archiv: kolompc.com
- Non-linear animation for creating, linking and looping individual movements with hundreds of keyframes in complex hierarchical movements.
- Import audio, assigning sounds to individual objects.
- Applying gravity, turbulence, wind, and other effects to particles (geometric shapes, light sources, etc.).
- Dynamics of solid and soft bodies, imitation of clothes, cloning, creation of hair fluttering in the wind.
- Create visible or volumetric light sources, fill the light cone with customizable noise.
- Global illumination function for a more accurate representation of scene illumination, taking into account the light that is reflected between objects.
- Demonstration of stereo effects in real time.
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adobecrack to
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2022.05.20 16:55 AnnieIWillKnow The Chelsea FC Women May round-up – Double glory to make it another brilliant season for the Blues
The Chelsea FC Women May round-up – Double glory to make it another brilliant season for the Blues
Welcome to the final Chelsea FC Women monthly round-up of the 2021/22 season!
This post is a
long read, so feel free to skip to the end for a brief overview, and the May preview.
Introduction
Chelsea began the month of May with glory, and history, in our reach.
Four wins from four in April had seen us reach the FA Cup Final, and position ourselves one point ahead of rivals Arsenal in the WSL standings, with just two league games left to play.
Win all three games scheduled for May, and we would win the Double - the fourth in the club’s history. It would also mean defending both the league and cup victories won the season previously.
It has been an at-times chaotic season for Chelsea, with injury crises, COVID absences, and shock results - along with the uncertainty off the field, due to the now well-documented sanctions against owner Roman Abramovich.
Given that, Emma Hayes and her Chelsea squad had done brilliantly to rise above this adversity, and put the team in such a strong position going into the final stretch. We have been challenged more than ever before, on and off the pitch - but seem to have found a way to win when it mattered the most.
The team have looked in recent weeks like one with a mission - and if we could keep that up, it mean another trophy-winning season for Emma Hayes’ already legendary side.
Key headlines
Longest serving player Drew Spence to leave Chelsea
Last month had seen the announcements that Ji So-Yun and Jonna Andersson are set to leave Chelsea this summer - and this month saw the news that Drew Spence is also to depart, when her contract expires.
Spence is currently the longest-serving player at the club, having signed in 2009. In that time she has been a part of every trophy the Blues have ever won - and is a real stalwart of the club, a leader in the dressing room, and an ever-reliable presence who has remained a key member of the squad, despite all of the star players brought in over the years.
Drew is proper Chels, and will be missed.
Chelsea Women documentary to be finally released
Production first began on Fulwell 73’s behind the scenes documentary back in 2019. News had gone quiet over the past year - with many fearing the series had been shelved.
Thankfully, it was announced this month that the series had been completed - and will be shown for free on DAZN’s YouTube channel, from the 29th May.
The documentary will cover the glorious 2019-2021 period of the club’s history, with exclusive access and unprecedented insight - and will be a must-watch for fans everywhere.
Birmingham 0-1 Chelsea (WSL)
Our first game of May was to be our penultimate of the league season. As it stood, going into the weekend we held a four point lead over second placed Arsenal. With the Gunners playing first, they had the opportunity to put some pressure on Chelsea by cutting that lead - which they duly did, with a 7-0 thrashing of Aston Villa.
Arsenal’s job done, the spotlight swung back to Chelsea as we faced another Midlands outfit, Birmingham City. The Brummies were bottom of the league with just eight points, and looked all but relegated - but with a slim chance of survival, they did still have something to play for.
Of Birmingham’s two league wins this season, one was the shock 2-0 defeat of Arsenal back in January, which remains our title rivals' only league defeat all season. Birmingham’s second win came against Brighton - meaning they were riding a high seldom found for them this season, and a side capable of springing an upset.
Nonetheless, if Chelsea want to win the title, there are no excuses for anything other than a win against the league’s bottom club.
Ann-Katrin Berger was restored to the line-up against her former club, following her suspension for the red card against Spurs the previous weekend. It felt a bit harsh on Zecira Musovic - who has not put a finger wrong when deputising for our number 1, and made crucial saves in both games against Spurs - but it was an understandable move from Emma Hayes.
Hayes also brought Jessie Fleming and Niamh Charles into the side, with Jonna Andersson and Erin Cuthbert missing out.
With Chelsea having two great chances inside the opening ten minutes, you would have thought the opener would seem a matter of time - but it transpired to anything but.
The closest of those two attempts saw Sam Kerr absolutely thump the crossbar from the edge of the box - but that was the closest we came in the entire first half, where we laboured in front of goal, and failed to register a shot on target in the opening 45 minutes.
Chelsea looked rushed - and nervous. The team had been under a lot of pressure in this nail biting title race for a while, especially now we have been established as the frontrunners and most people’s favourites, after having been in the chasing position for most of the season. Both of the wins against Spurs in our previous two league games had been dramatic and hard-fought - which can take a mental toll, and may have explained our struggles in this game.
To give them their due credit, Birmingham were organised and determined - it was hard to believe on the basis of this performance that they have only eight points in the league.
In biblical conditions at St Andrew’s, it was starting to look like Chelsea might need some divine intervention to breach the opposition defence - but as the rain amped up its intensity in the second half, thankfully so too did Chelsea.
We had failed to test Birmingham goalkeeper Emily Ramsey in the first half, but when the questions were asked of her after the break she was able to more than answer them, making several crucial saves to protect her side’s clean sheet.
Hayes had brought Erin Cuthbert on at half time to inject greater energy into a somewhat lethargic Chelsea display, and it was another substitute whose actions led to our eventual breakthrough.
Jonna Anderrson has six assists this season, mainly from her trademark looped crosses from the left flank. Although the Swede will not register an assist for this goal, it came about when her cross into the area led to a handball from Lisa Robertson - and a penalty that gave Chelsea a golden chance to take the lead.
With Danish ice in her veins, Pernille Harder converted an impeccably cool penalty - like there wasn’t the pressure of a league title on the line.
It was a tense end to the game, with Chelsea not managing to get a second to make the points secure, and instead having to professionally see out a narrow lead.
The closest Birmingham came was deep in injury time. Berger had not been at her best against her former side, looking particularly nervous from set pieces - but she produced a fine finger tip save to ensure Whelen’s strike flew over. Chelsea’s mettle passed its test for the third tense game in a row, to earn another vital three points.
This was far from the rampant display of Arsenal in their win, but three points is three points - and with once again an extra game played, we restored our four point lead. The margin of victory in their win over Aston Villa meant our challengers did now have a superior goal difference
The focus would now return to the Gunners, who would make up their game in hand with a huge North London Derby against Spurs at the Emirates midweek, just four days before the final WSL fixtures of the season. A loss there would mean Chelsea win the title - but really, it is hard to see anything other than an Arsenal victory.
Arsenal did go on to win 3-0 - meaning that the title race would go down to the wire.
Chelsea 4-2 Man United (WSL)
The scene was set. Twenty league games in the eight months since Arsenal beat Chelsea 3-2 on the opening day of WSL season, the 2021/22 title would finally be decided on the final weekend of the season.
It would be the two London rivals who got this season off to a flyer who were hoping to become champions. Chelsea had taken until late March to claw back the lead Arsenal had held all year in the league, and go top of the table for the first time all season.
It has been the tightest and most hotly-contested title race in years - and Chelsea’s advantage was just one point heading into the final round. The mission for the Blues was simple - win against Manchester United at Kingsmeadow, and we would win the league.
Doing so would make Chelsea the first WSL side to achieve a hat-trick of consecutive titles.
Standing in our way was a side with something of their own to fight for - Man United needed to win (and hope Man City lost) to finish third and qualify for the Champions League for next season. It was a huge game for both sides.
Chelsea have never lost to Man United in the six games contested since they were re-established in 2018 - but they have also arguably never been as competitive as they are now under Marc Skinner, and hugely improved compared to the team we beat 6-1 in the reverse fixture earlier this season. Chelsea would need to be at our best.
We were unlikely to be able to rely on Arsenal dropping points - the Gunners had the much more straightforward prospect of an away game at West Ham, who had nothing left to play for. We needed to win our game, as Arsenal would surely win theirs - and any slip up from Chelsea would therefore mean the trophy heading to North London.
With no new injury concerns for Chelsea, only long-term absentees Fran Kirby and Melanie Leupolz remained unavailable. Emma Hayes opted for a 4-4-2, with Pernille Harder and Sam Kerr starting up front. Beth England and Jessie Fleming dropped out of the starting XI, as such, despite their excellent recent form. With that pair on the bench, alongside the likes of Ji So-Yun (in her final WSL game as a Chelsea player) on the bench, Hayes had difference makers to turn to.
Unfortunately, Chelsea got off to a terrible start, and put in a first half performance that suggested the pressure of the occasion had gotten to the champions.
Man United were by far the better team, with their ferocious press hardly giving Chelsea room to breathe. They looked especially threatening from set pieces - with the Chelsea defence looking disorganised and nervous every time a ball was swung in.
It was therefore not a shock when the away side did take the lead - and unsurprisingly it was through a free kick, with Chelsea’s abject marking allowing Martha Thomas to head home.
The response from Chelsea came quickly - and against the run of play. It took some individual brilliance from Erin Cuthbert, who looked one of the few Chelsea players who was playing without fear - a word most likely not in the tenacious Scot’s lexicon.
This did not spark the revival needed, however, and yet more poor defending saw Chelsea go behind again in the 25th minute - Ella Toone was unmarked at a corner, and her deflected strike put Man United 2-1 up, and Chelsea’s title hopes hanging by a thread.
Chelsea have proven time and time again that we are capable of sensational comebacks and in finding a way to win when the odds are against us - but at half time, it honestly felt over. Man United were playing far better, seeming confident and in control. Chelsea looked overawed, and well short of the side who had won the domestic Treble last year.
With Arsenal drawing against West Ham, they were set to win the title on goal difference - a big turnaround would be needed, not just in the result, but in the performance.
And unbelievably, that was what we got - with the Chelsea side who came out in the second half completely transformed.
Emma Hayes brought on England and Ji, and tweaked the formation to a three at the back - which Chelsea had played for much of the season. Making two subs at half time was the sort of decisive move that we have come to expect from Hayes - and the impact was instant.
Roared on by the brilliant sold out Kingsmeadow crowd, Chelsea flew at Man United - and after just a minute of the second half had equalised for the second time in the game, through a superb Sam Kerr volley.
Kingsmeadow was rocking, and it was Man United’s turn to be left reeling. Chelsea capitalised, and Man United were left in complete disarray when less than 10 minutes later, Chelsea were in front.
A superb through ball from half-time substitute Ji was tapped into Guro Reiten’s path - and the Norwegian finished coolly past Mary Earps to complete the turnaround, and put Chelsea 3-2 ahead..
Whatever Emma Hayes said at half time - and her tactical changes - had completely turned the game, and title race, its head. Credit must also go to the players - who once again showed the mentality and character that has ultimately made us champions.
Key players have stepped up in the biggest moments for us this season - and the player who has done so more than any other produced a moment of sheer quality to secure the win.
The newly-named Football Writers’ Association Player of the Year, Sam Kerr, proved why that accolade is so richly deserved, controlling a poor Man United clearance with her chest and then volleying a lobbed shot up and over the stranded Mary Earps. It was one of the goals of the season - and a goal deserving of a league title win.
With Chelsea 4-2 up, and the Blues rampant in the glorious May sunshine, set to the backdrop of a jubilant home crowd, Man United’s challenge in this game was done. Arsenal had gone ahead against West Ham - but it did not matter.
Once we had that two-goal cushion, it felt like the party had already begun. The scenes of celebration at the final whistle and beyond were the sort that make memories for a lifetime - in what has been the most memorable title fight of this Chelsea side's five WSL title wins.
For the third time in a row, Chelsea were champions - and Emma Hayes called this the “best” of the lot, after a season in which we have struggled with injuries to key players, and been pushed harder than ever before by an Arsenal side who had spent big, and looked rejuvenated under new manager Jonas Eidevall. Chelsea responded to this challenge - and fought with everything we had to retain our title, which comes richly deserved.
The Chelsea players were welcomed onto the pitch one by one to receive their medals, which allowed the home faithfull the chance to give each individual the recognition they deserved, in a season where more than any other we have relied upon a breadth of contribution from across the squad.
The biggest receptions were received for Ji So-Yun and Drew Spence - two absolute legends of the club, who will be leaving at the end of the season.
Ji has quite simply been one of Chelsea’s greatest ever players, and one of the best the WSL has ever seen. She scored the goal which won our first ever trophy back in the 2015 FA Cup Final - and it was a fitting Kingsmeadow farewell that she was one of the half-time substitutes who changed the game, and her brilliant pass created the goal which put us ahead.
Drew Spence leaves as our longest serving player - a stalwart of the club who has been a part of every piece of silverware we have won, and despite the glamorous names brought to the club year on year since Emma Hayes took over, has remained a key member of the squad, and a player who fully understands what it means to be Chelsea. She was a late substitute in this game - and the ovation she received when taking to the Kingsmeadow pitch for the final time was spine-tingling.
Captain Magda Eriksson lifted the trophy to rapturous applause, and the scenes of celebration continued long on this glorious Sunday afternoon.
There is however one more game for Chelsea this season - as we face Man City next weekend in this season’s FA Cup Final, seeking to complete the third Double in our history.
The players would no doubt re-focus for that game - but at this moment, all of the attention could only be on celebrating a sensational comeback and a brilliant title win. No matter what would happen the week after at Wembley - we are champions, and this team deserves every inch of their acclaim.
Chelsea 3-2 Man City (FA Cup Final)
The FA Cup Final may have lost some of its prestige in the men’s game, but it remains the banner fixture of the women’s football season - and takes its rightful place in the schedule as the season finale.
It was to be contested this year between two giants of modern English women’s football - Chelsea, and Man City. Since the cup final first moved to Wembley in 2015, these two sides have won six of the past seven competitions. This calendar year, they have also arguably been the two best sides in England - although Man City’s supreme recent form was not enough to finish higher than a distant third to champions Chelsea, in the WSL.
City’s awful start to the season, which saw them essentially out of the title race by November, handicapped them significantly - but that they managed to finish third despite their shocking early form is testament to their quality and resilience.
Two fitting teams for the FA Cup Final - and especially for an occasion which saw nearly 50,000 at Wembley, a figure which broke the attendance record for the final.
Emma Hayes made two changes from the game which started the final fixture of the WSL season, bringing in Beth England and Aniek Nouwen. This meant that Ji So-Yun, Jonna Andersson and Drew Spence were named as substitutes in their final game for the club.
Joining them on the bench was the very welcome sight of Fran Kirby. Last season’s Player of the Year has been sidelined since February with chronic fatigue - it was unlikely she would feature, being so short of match fitness, but to see her included in a squad warmed all observers’ hearts. Kirby is a rare player who seems to transcend club rivalries.
Man City started the better of the two teams, and already in the first twenty minutes some last-ditch defending was required - Millie Bright in particular contributing two key blocks.
Chelsea were able to grow into the game, and were the first team to have the ball in the net though Sam Kerr - only for it to be ruled out for offside.
It was however still slightly against the run of play when Chelsea did take the lead, legitimately - Bright proving decisive in both penalty boxes. Following a Chelsea free kick, Bright whipped the ball back into the area - it was slightly miscued, but this worked to the Blues’ advantage as it looped over the stranded Ellie Roebuck in the City goal. It may well have been going in anyway - but the predatory Sam Kerr made sure, meaning the Aussie forward had scored in her third cup final of the season.
City continued to put the pressure on, with more determined defending required from Chelsea. Jess Carter made some crucial interventions - and was immense all game.
It was another cup final - the Champions League final in May last year - where Carter had been exposed by a brilliant Barcelona attack, leading to questions about her defensive capabilities.
Carter has more than answered them this season, where she has become established as a lynchpin of the Chelsea defence, which has been especially vital with captain Magda Erikkson suffering recurrent injury issues. Carter has been one of our players of the season, and put in another excellent performance on this day.
However, the Chelsea resistance was to be broken just before the break.
Lauren Hemp is one of City’s many brilliant attacking talents - and this year, has been their best. The winger got the step on Bright, before rifling a strike into the top corner past Ann-Katrin Berger, to make it 1-1 heading into the break. The Man City equaliser had been deserved, on the balance of play.
The second half started much the same as the first - with City having the better chances, but not being able to break through the Chelsea back line. Several players put their bodies on the line to prevent another City goal - and Berger pulled off an outstanding save.
Bunny Shaw, who has displaced Ellen White as City’s starting striker, was looking menacing - and the Chelsea defence understandably wary of a player who screams danger whenever she is on the ball.
Just as in the opening 45 minutes, though, Chelsea emerged from the onslaught unscathed, and were able to take back some control of the game - and then the lead.
This time, it came from the quality of Erin Cuthbert - another of Chelsea’ best players this season, and one who is often unsung. Cuthbert is a player who takes the game by the scruff of the neck, and one to turn to when you need a difference-maker.
The Scot had gotten the first equaliser last weekend against Man United - and after having run relentlessly to aid the defensive effort in this game, she then reminded the watching crowd what she is capable of in front of goal, with a sublime strike from 25 yards that ricocheted off the underside of the bar to beat Roebuck.
Emma Hayes introduced Ji to rapturous applause, for her final Chelsea appearance, with the hope that her experience would help Chelsea to see out the game.
Man City piled the pressure on, although Chelsea remained a threat on the counter - only for the pressure to again tell, this time the equaliser coming with only minutes left to play.
It came through a Man City substitute - Hayley Raso did brilliantly to beat Magda Eriksson to the ball and fire past Berger to make it 2-2, which sent the game into extra time. The watching crowd were only too delighted to be treated to another 30 minutes of what had already been a brilliant cup final - and one in which the talent of the women’s game was fully on show.
Given the balance of play, and the momentum from the late equaliser - it felt like it was CIty’s for the taking. Chelsea barely got out of our own half in the first half of extra time - but when we did it was to take the lead for the third, and eventually final, time.
Big games are often decided by mistakes - especially in extra time, when legs tire and minds fog. It was the unfortunate Alanna Kennedy with the error - and her countrywoman Sam Kerr the beneficiary. The Aussie misjudged a long ball, which Kerr then gleefully collected around the halfway line.
There was only one thing on the Golden Boot winner’s mind. Kerr steamed towards goal, and although a pass to Jessie Fleming may have been the better option, she instead chose to shoot - the strike took a big deflection off of Alex Greenwood to beat Roebuck, again.
It was Kerr’s 32nd goal in all competitions this season - and her fifth in the three cup finals Chelsea have played. The striker has been simply next level this year, and it was fitting that it was her to score the goals that rounded off Chelsea’s year with more silverware.
Chelsea then did what they had not managed in normal time - breaking up play and winding down the clock, with the experienced Maren Mjelde being sent on as reinforcement. We were not to let the lead slip a third time.
The performance was perhaps best summarised in the dying minutes, when Kerr sprinted back to win a tackle, and then ran the ball out into the corner and won a free kick to see us through to full time. Lungs surely bursting at the seams, but still utterly relentless - that was Sam Kerr, and that was Chelsea in this game.
That has been Chelsea FC Women this year - gritty, determined, sprinkled with individual brilliance, and finding a way to win even whilst not at our best, all under the tactical nous and inspirational leadership of Emma Hayes.
A fourth Double. A fitting way to send off the departing club legends Ji So-Yun and Drew Spence in their final game for the club - as well as Jonna Andersson, who came on as a substitute to play a key part in the Chelsea resistance.. Another trophy, and another brilliant season for Chelsea FC Women - who once again painted Wembley, London, and all of English women’s football, Blue.
May results in brief
Fixture | Result | Competition | Goal scorers |
Birmingham (A) | 1-0 W | WSL | Harder |
Man United (H) | 4-2 W | WSL | Cuthbert, Kerr x 2, Reiten |
Man City (N) | 3-2 W | FA Cup Final | Kerr x 2, Cuthbert |
Round-up
Another glorious month of May for Chelsea FC Women, in which we secured two trophies to win our fourth League and FA Cup Double - making it another successful and historic season for the club.
It was silverware we were pushed to the absolute limit in order to win. A nervy win against Birmingham, and then a hugely dramatic and remarkable comeback on the final day of the WSL season against Man United - when it had looked like the title had slipped from our grasp, before the divine intervention of the godly Sam Kerr.
A thrilling FA Cup Final against Man City provided the perfect end to what has been an excellent season full of drama and quality across English women’s football. Chelsea took the lead twice against Man City in front of a record crowd of 50,000 at Wembley - only to be twice pegged back as the game went to extra time.
As she has done all season, it was Sam Kerr who stepped up on the biggest occasion to put Chelsea ahead for the third and final time in the game. Chelsea won 3-2 to secure our fourth FA Cup, and our fourth Double. That makes it 11 trophies for the club, all of which have been won under the dynastic Emma Hayes.
In a season where we have been challenged more than ever before - a title race going down to the wire with Arsenal, a topsy-turvy cup final where we had to dig into the very deepest recessions of our character, several injuries to key players. And all in the context of off-field uncertainty and pressure, due to the sanctions imposed on the club due to owner Roman Abramovich’s association with Russian president Vladimir Putin. Chelsea have responded remarkably, and shown their quality and resilience time and time again.
Emma Hayes has called it the best of her four Doubles as Chelsea manager - and given the adversity overcome to win it, it is easy to see why.
If you are interested in learning more about Chelsea FC Women, and keeping a closer eye on the progress of our women's team, then check out our subreddit, /chelsealadiesfc!
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2022.05.20 16:11 AnnieIWillKnow [REVIEW] May round-up – Double glory to make it another brilliant season for the Blues
The Chelsea FC Women May round-up – Double glory to make it another brilliant season for the Blues
Welcome to the final Chelsea FC Women monthly round-up of the 2021/22 season!
This post is a
long read, so feel free to skip to the end for a brief overview, and the May preview.
Introduction
Chelsea began the month of May with glory, and history, in our reach.
Four wins from four in April had seen us reach the FA Cup Final, and position ourselves one point ahead of rivals Arsenal in the WSL standings, with just two league games left to play.
Win all three games scheduled for May, and we would win the Double - the fourth in the club’s history. It would also mean defending both the league and cup victories won the season previously.
It has been an at-times chaotic season for Chelsea, with injury crises, COVID absences, and shock results - along with the uncertainty off the field, due to the now well-documented sanctions against owner Roman Abramovich.
Given that, Emma Hayes and her Chelsea squad had done brilliantly to rise above this adversity, and put the team in such a strong position going into the final stretch. We have been challenged more than ever before, on and off the pitch - but seem to have found a way to win when it mattered the most.
The team have looked in recent weeks like one with a mission - and if we could keep that up, it mean another trophy-winning season for Emma Hayes’ already legendary side.
Key headlines
Longest serving player Drew Spence to leave Chelsea
Last month had seen the announcements that Ji So-Yun and Jonna Andersson are set to leave Chelsea this summer - and this month saw the news that Drew Spence is also to depart, when her contract expires.
Spence is currently the longest-serving player at the club, having signed in 2009. In that time she has been a part of every trophy the Blues have ever won - and is a real stalwart of the club, a leader in the dressing room, and an ever-reliable presence who has remained a key member of the squad, despite all of the star players brought in over the years.
Drew is proper Chels, and will be missed.
Chelsea Women documentary to be finally released
Production first began on Fulwell 73’s behind the scenes documentary back in 2019. News had gone quiet over the past year - with many fearing the series had been shelved.
Thankfully, it was announced this month that the series had been completed - and will be shown for free on DAZN’s YouTube channel, from the 29th May.
The documentary will cover the glorious 2019-2021 period of the club’s history, with exclusive access and unprecedented insight - and will be a must-watch for fans everywhere.
Birmingham 0-1 Chelsea (WSL)
Our first game of May was to be our penultimate of the league season. As it stood, going into the weekend we held a four point lead over second placed Arsenal. With the Gunners playing first, they had the opportunity to put some pressure on Chelsea by cutting that lead - which they duly did, with a 7-0 thrashing of Aston Villa.
Arsenal’s job done, the spotlight swung back to Chelsea as we faced another Midlands outfit, Birmingham City. The Brummies were bottom of the league with just eight points, and looked all but relegated - but with a slim chance of survival, they did still have something to play for.
Of Birmingham’s two league wins this season, one was the shock 2-0 defeat of Arsenal back in January, which remains our title rivals' only league defeat all season. Birmingham’s second win came against Brighton - meaning they were riding a high seldom found for them this season, and a side capable of springing an upset.
Nonetheless, if Chelsea want to win the title, there are no excuses for anything other than a win against the league’s bottom club.
Ann-Katrin Berger was restored to the line-up against her former club, following her suspension for the red card against Spurs the previous weekend. It felt a bit harsh on Zecira Musovic - who has not put a finger wrong when deputising for our number 1, and made crucial saves in both games against Spurs - but it was an understandable move from Emma Hayes.
Hayes also brought Jessie Fleming and Niamh Charles into the side, with Jonna Andersson and Erin Cuthbert missing out.
With Chelsea having two great chances inside the opening ten minutes, you would have thought the opener would seem a matter of time - but it transpired to anything but.
The closest of those two attempts saw Sam Kerr absolutely thump the crossbar from the edge of the box - but that was the closest we came in the entire first half, where we laboured in front of goal, and failed to register a shot on target in the opening 45 minutes.
Chelsea looked rushed - and nervous. The team had been under a lot of pressure in this nail biting title race for a while, especially now we have been established as the frontrunners and most people’s favourites, after having been in the chasing position for most of the season. Both of the wins against Spurs in our previous two league games had been dramatic and hard-fought - which can take a mental toll, and may have explained our struggles in this game.
To give them their due credit, Birmingham were organised and determined - it was hard to believe on the basis of this performance that they have only eight points in the league.
In biblical conditions at St Andrew’s, it was starting to look like Chelsea might need some divine intervention to breach the opposition defence - but as the rain amped up its intensity in the second half, thankfully so too did Chelsea.
We had failed to test Birmingham goalkeeper Emily Ramsey in the first half, but when the questions were asked of her after the break she was able to more than answer them, making several crucial saves to protect her side’s clean sheet.
Hayes had brought Erin Cuthbert on at half time to inject greater energy into a somewhat lethargic Chelsea display, and it was another substitute whose actions led to our eventual breakthrough.
Jonna Anderrson has six assists this season, mainly from her trademark looped crosses from the left flank. Although the Swede will not register an assist for this goal, it came about when her cross into the area led to a handball from Lisa Robertson - and a penalty that gave Chelsea a golden chance to take the lead.
With Danish ice in her veins, Pernille Harder converted an impeccably cool penalty - like there wasn’t the pressure of a league title on the line.
It was a tense end to the game, with Chelsea not managing to get a second to make the points secure, and instead having to professionally see out a narrow lead.
The closest Birmingham came was deep in injury time. Berger had not been at her best against her former side, looking particularly nervous from set pieces - but she produced a fine finger tip save to ensure Whelen’s strike flew over. Chelsea’s mettle passed its test for the third tense game in a row, to earn another vital three points.
This was far from the rampant display of Arsenal in their win, but three points is three points - and with once again an extra game played, we restored our four point lead. The margin of victory in their win over Aston Villa meant our challengers did now have a superior goal difference
The focus would now return to the Gunners, who would make up their game in hand with a huge North London Derby against Spurs at the Emirates midweek, just four days before the final WSL fixtures of the season. A loss there would mean Chelsea win the title - but really, it is hard to see anything other than an Arsenal victory.
Arsenal did go on to win 3-0 - meaning that the title race would go down to the wire.
Chelsea 4-2 Man United (WSL)
The scene was set. Twenty league games in the eight months since Arsenal beat Chelsea 3-2 on the opening day of WSL season, the 2021/22 title would finally be decided on the final weekend of the season.
It would be the two London rivals who got this season off to a flyer who were hoping to become champions. Chelsea had taken until late March to claw back the lead Arsenal had held all year in the league, and go top of the table for the first time all season.
It has been the tightest and most hotly-contested title race in years - and Chelsea’s advantage was just one point heading into the final round. The mission for the Blues was simple - win against Manchester United at Kingsmeadow, and we would win the league.
Doing so would make Chelsea the first WSL side to achieve a hat-trick of consecutive titles.
Standing in our way was a side with something of their own to fight for - Man United needed to win (and hope Man City lost) to finish third and qualify for the Champions League for next season. It was a huge game for both sides.
Chelsea have never lost to Man United in the six games contested since they were re-established in 2018 - but they have also arguably never been as competitive as they are now under Marc Skinner, and hugely improved compared to the team we beat 6-1 in the reverse fixture earlier this season. Chelsea would need to be at our best.
We were unlikely to be able to rely on Arsenal dropping points - the Gunners had the much more straightforward prospect of an away game at West Ham, who had nothing left to play for. We needed to win our game, as Arsenal would surely win theirs - and any slip up from Chelsea would therefore mean the trophy heading to North London.
With no new injury concerns for Chelsea, only long-term absentees Fran Kirby and Melanie Leupolz remained unavailable. Emma Hayes opted for a 4-4-2, with Pernille Harder and Sam Kerr starting up front. Beth England and Jessie Fleming dropped out of the starting XI, as such, despite their excellent recent form. With that pair on the bench, alongside the likes of Ji So-Yun (in her final WSL game as a Chelsea player) on the bench, Hayes had difference makers to turn to.
Unfortunately, Chelsea got off to a terrible start, and put in a first half performance that suggested the pressure of the occasion had gotten to the champions.
Man United were by far the better team, with their ferocious press hardly giving Chelsea room to breathe. They looked especially threatening from set pieces - with the Chelsea defence looking disorganised and nervous every time a ball was swung in.
It was therefore not a shock when the away side did take the lead - and unsurprisingly it was through a free kick, with Chelsea’s abject marking allowing Martha Thomas to head home.
The response from Chelsea came quickly - and against the run of play. It took some individual brilliance from Erin Cuthbert, who looked one of the few Chelsea players who was playing without fear - a word most likely not in the tenacious Scot’s lexicon.
This did not spark the revival needed, however, and yet more poor defending saw Chelsea go behind again in the 25th minute - Ella Toone was unmarked at a corner, and her deflected strike put Man United 2-1 up, and Chelsea’s title hopes hanging by a thread.
Chelsea have proven time and time again that we are capable of sensational comebacks and in finding a way to win when the odds are against us - but at half time, it honestly felt over. Man United were playing far better, seeming confident and in control. Chelsea looked overawed, and well short of the side who had won the domestic Treble last year.
With Arsenal drawing against West Ham, they were set to win the title on goal difference - a big turnaround would be needed, not just in the result, but in the performance.
And unbelievably, that was what we got - with the Chelsea side who came out in the second half completely transformed.
Emma Hayes brought on England and Ji, and tweaked the formation to a three at the back - which Chelsea had played for much of the season. Making two subs at half time was the sort of decisive move that we have come to expect from Hayes - and the impact was instant.
Roared on by the brilliant sold out Kingsmeadow crowd, Chelsea flew at Man United - and after just a minute of the second half had equalised for the second time in the game, through a superb Sam Kerr volley.
Kingsmeadow was rocking, and it was Man United’s turn to be left reeling. Chelsea capitalised, and Man United were left in complete disarray when less than 10 minutes later, Chelsea were in front.
A superb through ball from half-time substitute Ji was tapped into Guro Reiten’s path - and the Norwegian finished coolly past Mary Earps to complete the turnaround, and put Chelsea 3-2 ahead..
Whatever Emma Hayes said at half time - and her tactical changes - had completely turned the game, and title race, its head. Credit must also go to the players - who once again showed the mentality and character that has ultimately made us champions.
Key players have stepped up in the biggest moments for us this season - and the player who has done so more than any other produced a moment of sheer quality to secure the win.
The newly-named Football Writers’ Association Player of the Year, Sam Kerr, proved why that accolade is so richly deserved, controlling a poor Man United clearance with her chest and then volleying a lobbed shot up and over the stranded Mary Earps. It was one of the goals of the season - and a goal deserving of a league title win.
With Chelsea 4-2 up, and the Blues rampant in the glorious May sunshine, set to the backdrop of a jubilant home crowd, Man United’s challenge in this game was done. Arsenal had gone ahead against West Ham - but it did not matter.
Once we had that two-goal cushion, it felt like the party had already begun. The scenes of celebration at the final whistle and beyond were the sort that make memories for a lifetime - in what has been the most memorable title fight of this Chelsea side's five WSL title wins.
For the third time in a row, Chelsea were champions - and Emma Hayes called this the “best” of the lot, after a season in which we have struggled with injuries to key players, and been pushed harder than ever before by an Arsenal side who had spent big, and looked rejuvenated under new manager Jonas Eidevall. Chelsea responded to this challenge - and fought with everything we had to retain our title, which comes richly deserved.
The Chelsea players were welcomed onto the pitch one by one to receive their medals, which allowed the home faithfull the chance to give each individual the recognition they deserved, in a season where more than any other we have relied upon a breadth of contribution from across the squad.
The biggest receptions were received for Ji So-Yun and Drew Spence - two absolute legends of the club, who will be leaving at the end of the season.
Ji has quite simply been one of Chelsea’s greatest ever players, and one of the best the WSL has ever seen. She scored the goal which won our first ever trophy back in the 2015 FA Cup Final - and it was a fitting Kingsmeadow farewell that she was one of the half-time substitutes who changed the game, and her brilliant pass created the goal which put us ahead.
Drew Spence leaves as our longest serving player - a stalwart of the club who has been a part of every piece of silverware we have won, and despite the glamorous names brought to the club year on year since Emma Hayes took over, has remained a key member of the squad, and a player who fully understands what it means to be Chelsea. She was a late substitute in this game - and the ovation she received when taking to the Kingsmeadow pitch for the final time was spine-tingling.
Captain Magda Eriksson lifted the trophy to rapturous applause, and the scenes of celebration continued long on this glorious Sunday afternoon.
There is however one more game for Chelsea this season - as we face Man City next weekend in this season’s FA Cup Final, seeking to complete the third Double in our history.
The players would no doubt re-focus for that game - but at this moment, all of the attention could only be on celebrating a sensational comeback and a brilliant title win. No matter what would happen the week after at Wembley - we are champions, and this team deserves every inch of their acclaim.
Chelsea 3-2 Man City (FA Cup Final)
The FA Cup Final may have lost some of its prestige in the men’s game, but it remains the banner fixture of the women’s football season - and takes its rightful place in the schedule as the season finale.
It was to be contested this year between two giants of modern English women’s football - Chelsea, and Man City. Since the cup final first moved to Wembley in 2015, these two sides have won six of the past seven competitions. This calendar year, they have also arguably been the two best sides in England - although Man City’s supreme recent form was not enough to finish higher than a distant third to champions Chelsea, in the WSL.
City’s awful start to the season, which saw them essentially out of the title race by November, handicapped them significantly - but that they managed to finish third despite their shocking early form is testament to their quality and resilience.
Two fitting teams for the FA Cup Final - and especially for an occasion which saw nearly 50,000 at Wembley, a figure which broke the attendance record for the final.
Emma Hayes made two changes from the game which started the final fixture of the WSL season, bringing in Beth England and Aniek Nouwen. This meant that Ji So-Yun, Jonna Andersson and Drew Spence were named as substitutes in their final game for the club.
Joining them on the bench was the very welcome sight of Fran Kirby. Last season’s Player of the Year has been sidelined since February with chronic fatigue - it was unlikely she would feature, being so short of match fitness, but to see her included in a squad warmed all observers’ hearts. Kirby is a rare player who seems to transcend club rivalries.
Man City started the better of the two teams, and already in the first twenty minutes some last-ditch defending was required - Millie Bright in particular contributing two key blocks.
Chelsea were able to grow into the game, and were the first team to have the ball in the net though Sam Kerr - only for it to be ruled out for offside.
It was however still slightly against the run of play when Chelsea did take the lead, legitimately - Bright proving decisive in both penalty boxes. Following a Chelsea free kick, Bright whipped the ball back into the area - it was slightly miscued, but this worked to the Blues’ advantage as it looped over the stranded Ellie Roebuck in the City goal. It may well have been going in anyway - but the predatory Sam Kerr made sure, meaning the Aussie forward had scored in her third cup final of the season.
City continued to put the pressure on, with more determined defending required from Chelsea. Jess Carter made some crucial interventions - and was immense all game.
It was another cup final - the Champions League final in May last year - where Carter had been exposed by a brilliant Barcelona attack, leading to questions about her defensive capabilities.
Carter has more than answered them this season, where she has become established as a lynchpin of the Chelsea defence, which has been especially vital with captain Magda Erikkson suffering recurrent injury issues. Carter has been one of our players of the season, and put in another excellent performance on this day.
However, the Chelsea resistance was to be broken just before the break.
Lauren Hemp is one of City’s many brilliant attacking talents - and this year, has been their best. The winger got the step on Bright, before rifling a strike into the top corner past Ann-Katrin Berger, to make it 1-1 heading into the break. The Man City equaliser had been deserved, on the balance of play.
The second half started much the same as the first - with City having the better chances, but not being able to break through the Chelsea back line. Several players put their bodies on the line to prevent another City goal - and Berger pulled off an outstanding save.
Bunny Shaw, who has displaced Ellen White as City’s starting striker, was looking menacing - and the Chelsea defence understandably wary of a player who screams danger whenever she is on the ball.
Just as in the opening 45 minutes, though, Chelsea emerged from the onslaught unscathed, and were able to take back some control of the game - and then the lead.
This time, it came from the quality of Erin Cuthbert - another of Chelsea’ best players this season, and one who is often unsung. Cuthbert is a player who takes the game by the scruff of the neck, and one to turn to when you need a difference-maker.
The Scot had gotten the first equaliser last weekend against Man United - and after having run relentlessly to aid the defensive effort in this game, she then reminded the watching crowd what she is capable of in front of goal, with a sublime strike from 25 yards that ricocheted off the underside of the bar to beat Roebuck.
Emma Hayes introduced Ji to rapturous applause, for her final Chelsea appearance, with the hope that her experience would help Chelsea to see out the game.
Man City piled the pressure on, although Chelsea remained a threat on the counter - only for the pressure to again tell, this time the equaliser coming with only minutes left to play.
It came through a Man City substitute - Hayley Raso did brilliantly to beat Magda Eriksson to the ball and fire past Berger to make it 2-2, which sent the game into extra time. The watching crowd were only too delighted to be treated to another 30 minutes of what had already been a brilliant cup final - and one in which the talent of the women’s game was fully on show.
Given the balance of play, and the momentum from the late equaliser - it felt like it was CIty’s for the taking. Chelsea barely got out of our own half in the first half of extra time - but when we did it was to take the lead for the third, and eventually final, time.
Big games are often decided by mistakes - especially in extra time, when legs tire and minds fog. It was the unfortunate Alanna Kennedy with the error - and her countrywoman Sam Kerr the beneficiary. The Aussie misjudged a long ball, which Kerr then gleefully collected around the halfway line.
There was only one thing on the Golden Boot winner’s mind. Kerr steamed towards goal, and although a pass to Jessie Fleming may have been the better option, she instead chose to shoot - the strike took a big deflection off of Alex Greenwood to beat Roebuck, again.
It was Kerr’s 32nd goal in all competitions this season - and her fifth in the three cup finals Chelsea have played. The striker has been simply next level this year, and it was fitting that it was her to score the goals that rounded off Chelsea’s year with more silverware.
Chelsea then did what they had not managed in normal time - breaking up play and winding down the clock, with the experienced Maren Mjelde being sent on as reinforcement. We were not to let the lead slip a third time.
The performance was perhaps best summarised in the dying minutes, when Kerr sprinted back to win a tackle, and then ran the ball out into the corner and won a free kick to see us through to full time. Lungs surely bursting at the seams, but still utterly relentless - that was Sam Kerr, and that was Chelsea in this game.
That has been Chelsea FC Women this year - gritty, determined, sprinkled with individual brilliance, and finding a way to win even whilst not at our best, all under the tactical nous and inspirational leadership of Emma Hayes.
A fourth Double. A fitting way to send off the departing club legends Ji So-Yun and Drew Spence in their final game for the club - as well as Jonna Andersson, who came on as a substitute to play a key part in the Chelsea resistance.. Another trophy, and another brilliant season for Chelsea FC Women - who once again painted Wembley, London, and all of English women’s football, Blue.
May results in brief
Fixture | Result | Competition | Goal scorers |
Birmingham (A) | 1-0 W | WSL | Harder |
Man United (H) | 4-2 W | WSL | Cuthbert, Kerr x 2, Reiten |
Man City (N) | 3-2 W | FA Cup Final | Kerr x 2, Cuthbert |
Round-up
Another glorious month of May for Chelsea FC Women, in which we secured two trophies to win our fourth League and FA Cup Double - making it another successful and historic season for the club.
It was silverware we were pushed to the absolute limit in order to win. A nervy win against Birmingham, and then a hugely dramatic and remarkable comeback on the final day of the WSL season against Man United - when it had looked like the title had slipped from our grasp, before the divine intervention of the godly Sam Kerr.
A thrilling FA Cup Final against Man City provided the perfect end to what has been an excellent season full of drama and quality across English women’s football. Chelsea took the lead twice against Man City in front of a record crowd of 50,000 at Wembley - only to be twice pegged back as the game went to extra time.
As she has done all season, it was Sam Kerr who stepped up on the biggest occasion to put Chelsea ahead for the third and final time in the game. Chelsea won 3-2 to secure our fourth FA Cup, and our fourth Double. That makes it 11 trophies for the club, all of which have been won under the dynastic Emma Hayes.
In a season where we have been challenged more than ever before - a title race going down to the wire with Arsenal, a topsy-turvy cup final where we had to dig into the very deepest recessions of our character, several injuries to key players. And all in the context of off-field uncertainty and pressure, due to the sanctions imposed on the club due to owner Roman Abramovich’s association with Russian president Vladimir Putin. Chelsea have responded remarkably, and shown their quality and resilience time and time again.
Emma Hayes has called it the best of her four Doubles as Chelsea manager - and given the adversity overcome to win it, it is easy to see why.
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2022.03.03 13:34 AnnieIWillKnow [REVIEW] February round-up – progress in the league and cups, and another undefeated month
The Chelsea FC Women February round-up – progress in the league and cups, and another undefeated month
Welcome to the sixth Chelsea FC Women monthly round-up of the 2021/22 season.
These reviews will be posted on a monthly basis throughout the season, featuring a summary of the exploits of Emma Hayes' Chelsea side, as well as a brief preview of the month ahead.
This post is a
long read, so feel free to skip to the end for a brief overview, and the March preview.
Introduction
January had been a good month for Chelsea, winning three of the four fixtures we contested. We had been able to get our season back on track following a series of disappointing results in December which had seen us exit the Champions League, and lose pace in the title race.
The first month of 2022 had seen Chelsea make progress in both domestic cups - beating West Ham to reach the semi-finals of the Continental Tyres Cup (League Cup) where we will face Manchester United, and easing past Aston Villa in the fourth round of the FA Cup to earn a fifth round tie against Leicester.
The only real black mark of the month was dropping points to Brighton in a frustrating 0-0 draw - but results elsewhere meant we still managed to gain ground on leaders Arsenal in the WSL.
It was especially positive that Emma Hayes’ side achieved this with several notable absences from the squad. Magda Eriksson and Maren Mjelde missed the whole month through injury - both key defensive players for Chelsea. Melanie Leupolz, who has been vital to our midfield in recent seasons, has also been missing through long COVID.
Star striker and top scorer Sam Kerr, alongside midfield maestro Ji So-Yun, were also away on international duty at the Asian Cup. However, a sensational strike from Ji in South Korea’s quarter-final against the Australians sent Kerr back to Chelsea somewhat earlier than expected - meaning she would be available for the month to come.
We would need her - as February was likely to be key in deciding the outcome of the WSL title, and therefore the success of Chelsea’s season.
Chelsea were set to first face Man United, in the semi-final of the League Cup. Following that would be two huge WSL games - with Chelsea hosting first Man City, and then Arsenal. The results of those games will have a big say on who becomes champions.
Man City had had a shocking start to the season, but found form since December - and would be a major challenge for Chelsea. Arsenal have been top of the WSL since their opening weekend victory over Chelsea - a win which cast them as title favourites.
Momentum has gradually shifted towards the Blues since the turn of the year, as Arsenal’s form has stuttered - and Chelsea’s dominant FA Cup Final win against the Gunners in December had struck a psychological blow. A win for either side in the return fixture at Kingsmeadow would likely be pivotal in the title race.
Key headlines
2022 Asian Cup
Sam Kerr and Ji So-Yun were both away for all of January on international duty, representing Australia and South Korea respectively at the 2022 Asian Cup.
Kerr’s Australia were among the favourites, but suffered an upset in the quarter-final at the hands of Ji’s South Korea - with our midfield maestro scoring a brilliant winning goal.
South Korea went on to lose 3-2 in the final - with Ji on the scoresheet for her losing side. It was a successful tournament individually for both players, with Kerr finishing top scorer with seven goals, and Ji being a standout for her side, scoring an impressive five goals.
International break
February was punctuated by an international break, which saw numerous Chelsea players compete in prestigious friendly tournaments ahead of this summer’s Euros. These semi-competitive mini tournaments are considered an important part of tournament preparation, and as such are taken relatively seriously.
Of note, Sweden won the Algarve Cup, with Jonna Andersson and Zecira Musovic representing their country well. Millie Bright, Fran Kirby, Niamh Charles and Jess Carter all featured for England in their victory in the first ever Arnold Clark Cup - with Bright and Kirby both scoring in the decisive game against Germany.
Bright scored two goals for England in the three games - meaning she shared the Golden Boot with Barcelona and Spain midfielder Alexia Putellas, and arguably the best footballer on the planet. Quite an achievement, for a centre half!
Legend Carly Telford departs
Club stalwart Carly Telford left Chelsea for the second time, this month, to join the San Diego Wave in the NWSL.
Carly is very highly regarded by all at Chelsea, and in her two spells at the club has been one of the players who bridged the gap between Chelsea pre-Hayes and post-Hayes - where we have become one of the biggest clubs in women’s football. More about Telford, her time with the Blues, and where she stands in our history can be found in this feature article
She will be missed.
Chelsea 3-1 Man United (Conti Cup semi-final)
A perfect hat trick from Pernille Harder had helped Chelsea beat West Ham 4-2 in the quarter-finals of the Conti Cup in order to advance to the semi-finals, where Manchester United lay in wait.
United had knocked out current WSL leaders Arsenal in their quarter-final to reach this stage, and were one of the form teams in the country heading into this tie. Manager Marc Skinner was newly appointed at the start of the season, and had taken a while to impart his methods - but they are firing now, having won the previous seven fixtures in a row whilst scoring 18 goals, and keeping seven clean sheets.
Chelsea had thrashed Man United 6-1 in our league game earlier this season, but this was a very different side - and this game was likely to be a huge test for a Chelsea squad still missing key players. Sam Kerr had returned to training following her exploits at the Asian Cup, but was only ready to be named on the bench.
There were some familiar faces in the opposition line up, with former Blue and much-loved Hannah Blundell (an academy graduate) starting at left back, and fellow ex-Chelsea Maria Thorisdottir lining up in a central defensive role alongside her.
The opening exchanges were fairly even, with both sides having opportunities to take the lead. It was Pernille Harder who did open the scoring, with a solo goal after 26 minutes which demonstrated all of the talent that had made Chelsea break the world record transfer fee for her.
The Dane collected a long ball from Guro Reiten, and still had a lot of work to do as she advanced into the Man United box - Harder duly danced around the hapless defence before slotting past Sophie Baggaley to put Chelsea 1-0 up.
Five minutes later, the Chelsea lead was doubled through Jessie Fleming. Niamh Charles had put a dangerous cross into the box, which was first met by Reiten - the Norwegian’s effort was saved, but Fleming was first to react to the rebound, netting her fifth goal of the season.
With a 2-0 lead, things could have started to look comfortable for Chelsea - but Man United very much wanted to have a say in the game, and halved the deficit just minutes later. Musovic could have done better to keep out Vilda Boa Risa’s shot from a tight angle - but the opportunity came about from a lapse in concentration from Jess Carter at right back… who can be prone to errors.
Carter soon made amends with Chelsea’s third goal shortly before half time, and in doing so restored the two-goal cushion. A fine passing move from the Blues ended with Reiten squaring the ball for an onrushing Carter to tuck away - having burst into the box with the type of run that would make Frank Lampard proud.
After a first half full of goals and end-to-end attacking play, it was expected that Man United would come out fighting after the break, but Chelsea were able to show their class and professionalism by containing Marc Skinner’s side.
Instead, the major incident of the second half was not another goal, but a red card in the 77th minute for Man United keeper Baggaley, which essentially put paid to any chance of a comeback for her side. Hayes had introduced Sam Kerr off the bench, and the Aussie broke through on goal following a ball over the top of the United defence. With just Baggaley to beat, the Man United keeper chose to clatter Kerr instead - and was sent off for denying an obvious goalscoring opportunity.
Chelsea played out the game with little trouble, and the match finished 3-1 - meaning the Blues had ended Man United’s run of seven consecutive wins and clean sheets had ended with a very impressive performance.
Doing so meant Chelsea had reached a third successive Conti Cup Final, and will be hoping to make it a hat-trick of cup wins at AFC Wimbledon’s Plough Lane stadium on the first weekend of March - where the opposition will be Man City.
Chelsea 1-0 Man City (WSL)
Next up for Chelsea was the other team in Manchester - who along with their city rivals have been one of the most in-form teams in the country since the new year. Man City had had a truly terrible start to the season, where four losses before Christmas saw them fall way out of title and even Champions League contention. These losses included a 4-0 pasting handed out by Chelsea at the Academy Stadium, for Chelsea’s first ever away league win against Man City.
City have since recovered - and had several key players return from injury - and came into this game unbeaten in nine games.
With Arsenal having drawn 1-1 against Man United the day previously, this was a big game against a side who have been Chelsea’s frequent sparring partners in the title race, having finished runners-up to the Blues in each of the last two seasons. City may be likely out of the race for this year, but they have the quality to very much get a damaging result against Chelsea - and certainly had the form.
Captain Magda Eriksson, Maren Mjelde and Melanie Leupolz remained absent, whilst Sam Kerr made her first start since returning from the Asian Cup. The the big surprise was Fran Kirby being benched - and it being unclear as to whether there were any injury or fitness concerns.
It was a sell-out crowd of over 3000 at Kingsmeadow, for a fixture which has become one of the banner games of the WSL in recent years. High winds made conditions tricky for both sides, with storms battering every corner of the UK.
Chelsea started the game on top, with Pernille Harder in particular a constant attacking threat. The characteristically relentless high Chelsea press meant Man City struggled to break out of their half.
The windy weather had a say in the opener, which was more than deserved for Chelsea. A Jess Carter cross hung in the air, and was met first by Guro Reiten, who was able to direct a delicate header past Ellie Roebuck in the City goal to continue her fine recent form in front of goal.
It was a first half that was almost entirely Chelsea, but the lead remained only 1-0 at the break - and with that there was danger, as Man City are a quality team with world class attacking talent.. Despite creating little, City had still come close with a fine strike from Jess Park, which Ann-Katrin Berger had had to produce an even better save to prevent nestling in the top corner. It felt like another goal would be needed.
Instead, it was the defence who stepped up. City grew into the game in the second half with their potent attacking threat coming to the fore, having been absent for most of the first 45. The game remained open for much of the second half, but with that came City chances - and then for the last 15 minutes, Chelsea battened down the hatches to face a light blue onslaught.
There was some determined and desperate defending, with Chelsea dropping into a low block and counter attacking approach. The players putting their bodies on the line time after time to protect the clean sheet - including Millie Bright clearing off the line.
It was on the counter that Chelsea nearly sealed it - substitute Lauren James was set to latch onto a long ball over the top of the City high line, only for the onrushing Roebuck to just beat her to it, and prevent what would likely have been Chelsea’s second goal. From the subsequent counter Caroline Weir wasted her crossing chance, in what was City’s last real opportunity of the game.
Chelsea were able to ride out the heavy City pressure to secure a 1-0 win, completing our first ever league double over Man City - and being only the third ever side to do so. A big three points in the title race, which means Chelsea sit just one point off Arsenal with a game in hand - and the Gunners due next to visit Kingsmeadow.
Chelsea had earned a deserved lead in the first half - and then protected it with our lives in the second half, showing the sort of professionalism and mentality which defines champions. Jess Carter and Erin Cuthbert were the standout players - a frequent refrain heard about the continually underrated Cuthbert, but special credit goes to Carter, as the right back can be maligned for her defensive capabilities. It made three clean sheets in the WSL in a row for Chelsea - showing that maybe we are overcoming the defensive issues that have plagued us in big games in recent times.
Chelsea 0-0 Arsenal (WSL)
In a month jam-packed with big matches, this was the biggest.
Friday night under the lights at Kingsmeadow - and the league leaders Arsenal were visiting to face hot-on-their-tails Chelsea, knowing that the outcome of this top of the table clash could have a huge say on the title race.
Recent results had seen Chelsea catch up to Arsenal - whose opening weekend win against Chelsea had made them title favourites, and they had looked indomitable for most of the first half of the season. Their form has tailed off since - alongside Chelsea, with both sides suffering a winter slump. Whilst Chelsea have recovered, Arsenal have found it harder going.
This meant that ahead of this game, Chelsea were just one point behind Arsenal, with a game in hand. Awin for the Blues would see them go above the Gunners for the first time this season - and even a draw would likely be an advantageous result for the Blues.
Chelsea were the favourites in terms of form, and in the other match between the two London rivals this season, Chelsea had blown Arsenal away 3-0 at the December FA Cup Final, with a performance that righted some of the wrongs Chelsea had felt had been done in that opening weekend defeat, especially the clearly-offside third Arsenal goal.
There has been notable needle between Emma Hayes and new Arsenal boss Jonas Eidevall this season - with not-so-subtle jibes being exchanged in press conferences, and the Chelsea manager and squad taking exception to Eidevall’s exuberant celebrations during that September game at the Emirates. Hayes used that to motivate her players ahead of the cup final revenge - and both sets of players will likely be drawing from those sentiments for what looked set to be a feisty affair.
Arsenal were missing Katie McCabe - one of their key players this season - due to suspension. The Gunners had strengthened in the transfer window, bringing in highly sought-after Swedish striker Stina Blackstenius, who had made an impressive start to life in an Arsenal shirt, with her partnership with Viv Miedema already proving fruitful. Chelsea would be wary of Beth Mead, too - she always plays brilliantly against Chelsea.
The Chelsea team were boosted by the return of Ji So-Yun to the squad, who returned from the Asian Cup with a runners-up medal in a tournament where South Korea had exceeded expectations. Ji was named on the bench, with Hayes’ only change to the starting line up being the return of Fran Kirby - meaning that Chelsea’s fearsome attacking trio of Kerr, Kirby and Harder started together for the first time since December.
The atmosphere was rife with anticipation at a sell-out Kingsmeadow, and despite the scoreline the game did not fail to deliver on drama, with a hotly-contested and entertaining encounter that was befitting of the hype - and emblematic of how tight and turbulent the WSL title race has been this season.
Chelsea looked very much like the home team, being on top in the opening exchanges - but despite an open start to the game there were no real clear cut chances until Fran Kirby blazed a shot over the bar after 15 minutes. Arsenal grew into the game after this, and Miedema hit the post with their best opportunity of the half just minutes after. Chelsea nearly broke the deadlock on the stroke of half time, with first Harder and then Kerr having shots blocked in the box after a dangerous cross from Guro Reiten.
The Blues came roaring out of the traps in the second half, having several chances to take the lead - with Arsenal needing some desperate defending and good fortune to prevent us from doing so, including Chelsea having two shots cleared off the line. Arsenal to their credit stood firm in the face of considerable pressure - and managed to emerge from the bombardment unscathed.
A barnstorming end to the match provided an entertaining finale, and showed that both teams very much had three points in their mind - knowing how decisive such a result could prove. Both Jess Carter and Millie Bright made crucial interventions to prevent a late Arsenal goal - and both players continued their excellent recent form in doing so.
Chelsea did have the ball in the net in the fourth of eight minutes of stoppage time - but it was ruled out, due to Kerr being offside in the build up.
The Blues were then desperately unlucky to be denied what looked like a clear penalty from a blatant Leah Williamson handball - a decision which baffled all of those inside Kingsmeadow. It was the second time this season Arsenal have benefitted from questionable officiating against Chelsea, with the aforementioned third goal in the 3-2 win back in September having been clearly offside.
With Chelsea not being given the chance to take the win from the spot, the match ended 0-0 - a scoreline not truly reflective of what had been a highly entertaining encounter, and befitting of the billing it had been given,
A draw did mean that the potential ‘title decider’ did not give us a decisive answer - but with a game in hand on Arsenal and just one point back, the result does benefit Chelsea more than the league leaders. The title is in Chelsea’s hands rather than Arsenal’s - but the WSL has proven so far this season that no win is guaranteed, and there are likely to be more twists and turns in what has been the best WSL title race in years.
The teams were set to pause for the final international break of the season, after which the business end of the domestic season will be well and truly underway - and the final destination of the title still very much hovering between North and West London
Chelsea 7-0 Leicester City (FA Cup fifth round)
Chelsea FC Women returned to domestic action following the international break with an utterly dominant 7-0 win against Leicester in the fifth round of the FA Cup. According to reports, anyway - as due to this match not being streamed or televised on any platform, the vast majority of Chelsea fans were unable to witness our joint-biggest margin of victory in a game this season.
Undeniably, coverage of the women’s game has come on leaps and bounds in recent years, in line with the increased investment into the sport - and much has been made of the landmark new TV deal for the WSL, with the BBC and Sky Sports.
However, there remain blind spots in the game - with the early rounds of the FA Cup and Conti Cup most often being overlooked.
Amongst the notable events missed by those not fortunate enough to be in attendance were major milestones for two of our summer signings - a first start for Lauren James, and a first goal for Aniek Nouwen.
James has been blighted by injury since joining from Manchester United, and her game time has thus far been restricted to cameo substitute appearances. Dutch defender Nouwen has been more involved in the first team set up - and been relied upon more than was expected for the 23-year-old, owing to long term injuries within the defence.
Emma Hayes had also brought Niamh Charles and Ji So-Yun into the starting line up for a total of three changes from the side which drew 0-0 with Arsenal before the international break. There had been injury concerns over Jess Carter, who was forced off in England’s last game of the Arnold Clark Cup - but she was fit enough for a place on the bench.
The opponents, Leicester, are in their inaugural WSL season, having won the Championship last season. Their primary objective is to avoid relegation - and two big wins recently in the league has seen them move into 10th place, eight points clear of Birmingham at the bottom, meaning survival looks all but secured.
The Foxes already had a scalp in the FA Cup this season, too - having knocked out Champions League-contending Spurs 3-1 in the previous round. They seemed to start in a manner suggesting that they were not to be intimidated by the holders Chelsea, competing well in the opening exchanges and coming the closest to an opener, when Millie Bright was forced to clear off the line.
The game changed inexorably in the 18th minute however, when Sophie Howard received a straight red card for a bad challenge on Jonna Andersson. From here, it was one way traffic, and the result seemed inevitable. Pernille Harder promptly scored the opener just five minutes after Howard’s dismissal, latching on to a fine Sophie Ingle through ball.
Harder added the second 10 minutes later, assisted by Sam Kerr - the two goals were the extent of the damage in the first half, but the second half was a procession, with the resistance of the 10 women of Leicester seemingly crumbling.
Kerr scored a brace of her own in the second half to add to Harder’s double - the Aussie’s first goals for Chelsea since returning from the Asian Cup, to take our top scorer’s total for the season to 18 in all competitions.
Inbetween Kerr’s two goals came a first goal of the season for Ji So-Yun, with the best strike of the game. The fifth goal of seven was scored by the aforementioned Nouwen in what was a special moment for the young Dutch centre back - following which Kerr completed her brace.
For those counting, that makes six goals so far - and it was substitute Beth England who added the final flourish to make it seventh heaven for Chelsea.
A thoroughly comfortable and very successful day at the office for Emma Hayes’ side - the exact sort of performance we are used to seeing with regularity against less strong opposition, and the sort all fans love to see… it is just a shame we couldn’t.
Chelsea progressed on to the quarter-finals - and have been drawn to face Birmingham, with the ties due to take place towards the end of March.
February results in brief
Fixture | Result | Competition | Goal scorers |
Man United (H) | 3-1 W | CTC | Harder, Fleming, Carter |
Man City (H) | 1-0 W | WSL | Reiten |
Arsenal (H) | 0-0 D | WSL | n/a |
Leicester (H) | 7-0 W | FA Cup | Harder x 2, Kerr x 2, Ji, Nouwen, England |
Round-up
Another unbeaten month for Chelsea - and another one in which we made progress across all competitions, and look to be in ever-better form both defensively and in attack.
A comfortable win against Man United saw us progress to our third consecutive League Cup Final, as we look to make it three wins in a row against Man City on the first weekend of March. Progress was even easier in the FA Cup, where we thrashed Leicester 7-0 in the fifth round to earn a quarter-final tie against Birmingham.
Two good results in the two massive WSL games we contested means we are now in a stronger position in the title race - a win against Man City and a draw against league leaders Arsenal mean we remain two points off the Gunners, but with a game in hand. It was frustrating not to win the latter fixture - which was a brilliantly contested match between the two best teams in England - after having had the better chances and being denied a blatant penalty in injury time. Nonetheless - the title is now in Chelsea’s hands.
Looking ahead to March
A busy schedule awaits Chelsea in March, where we are set to contest seven fixtures across three competitions.
First up is the Conti Cup Final against Man City, on the first Saturday of the month - as Chelsea look to make it three League Cup wins in a row. Arsenal’s fixtures mean that by that weekend, they could go eight points clear in the WSL - but with Chelsea having three games in hand.
Chelsea will then return to WSL action, with a home fixture against Aston Villa being sandwiched by trips away to West Ham and Everton. The Blues will then host Birmingham in the quarter-final of the FA Cup, before rounding off the month with two more league fixtures against Spurs and Leicester.
Emma Hayes will need to make full use of her squad to navigate a month where we will be playing twice a week - and at a time in the season where every match feels a must-win. The title race remains on such a knife edge, that any slip up could be fatal. Fortunately, Arsenal have an equally busy schedule - including both legs of their Champions League quarter-final tie against Wolfsburg, which will likely take a lot of focus and energy from the Arsenal squad. Chelsea will hope continental matters may distract Arsenal from domestic affairs.
By the end of March, Chelsea may have won another trophy - and we will likely know more about the destination of the WSL title… but given how tight this season’s race has been, we could well be none the wiser.
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2022.03.03 13:29 AnnieIWillKnow The Chelsea FC Women February round-up – progress in the league and cups, and another undefeated month
The Chelsea FC Women February round-up – progress in the league and cups, and another undefeated month
Welcome to the sixth Chelsea FC Women monthly round-up of the 2021/22 season.
These reviews will be posted on a monthly basis throughout the season, featuring a summary of the exploits of Emma Hayes' Chelsea side, as well as a brief preview of the month ahead.
This post is a
long read, so feel free to skip to the end for a brief overview, and the March preview.
Introduction
January had been a good month for Chelsea, winning three of the four fixtures we contested. We had been able to get our season back on track following a series of disappointing results in December which had seen us exit the Champions League, and lose pace in the title race.
The first month of 2022 had seen Chelsea make progress in both domestic cups - beating West Ham to reach the semi-finals of the Continental Tyres Cup (League Cup) where we will face Manchester United, and easing past Aston Villa in the fourth round of the FA Cup to earn a fifth round tie against Leicester.
The only real black mark of the month was dropping points to Brighton in a frustrating 0-0 draw - but results elsewhere meant we still managed to gain ground on leaders Arsenal in the WSL.
It was especially positive that Emma Hayes’ side achieved this with several notable absences from the squad. Magda Eriksson and Maren Mjelde missed the whole month through injury - both key defensive players for Chelsea. Melanie Leupolz, who has been vital to our midfield in recent seasons, has also been missing through long COVID.
Star striker and top scorer Sam Kerr, alongside midfield maestro Ji So-Yun, were also away on international duty at the Asian Cup. However, a sensational strike from Ji in South Korea’s quarter-final against the Australians sent Kerr back to Chelsea somewhat earlier than expected - meaning she would be available for the month to come.
We would need her - as February was likely to be key in deciding the outcome of the WSL title, and therefore the success of Chelsea’s season.
Chelsea were set to first face Man United, in the semi-final of the League Cup. Following that would be two huge WSL games - with Chelsea hosting first Man City, and then Arsenal. The results of those games will have a big say on who becomes champions.
Man City had had a shocking start to the season, but found form since December - and would be a major challenge for Chelsea. Arsenal have been top of the WSL since their opening weekend victory over Chelsea - a win which cast them as title favourites.
Momentum has gradually shifted towards the Blues since the turn of the year, as Arsenal’s form has stuttered - and Chelsea’s dominant FA Cup Final win against the Gunners in December had struck a psychological blow. A win for either side in the return fixture at Kingsmeadow would likely be pivotal in the title race.
Key headlines
2022 Asian Cup
Sam Kerr and Ji So-Yun were both away for all of January on international duty, representing Australia and South Korea respectively at the 2022 Asian Cup.
Kerr’s Australia were among the favourites, but suffered an upset in the quarter-final at the hands of Ji’s South Korea - with our midfield maestro scoring a brilliant winning goal.
South Korea went on to lose 3-2 in the final - with Ji on the scoresheet for her losing side. It was a successful tournament individually for both players, with Kerr finishing top scorer with seven goals, and Ji being a standout for her side, scoring an impressive five goals.
International break
February was punctuated by an international break, which saw numerous Chelsea players compete in prestigious friendly tournaments ahead of this summer’s Euros. These semi-competitive mini tournaments are considered an important part of tournament preparation, and as such are taken relatively seriously.
Of note, Sweden won the Algarve Cup, with Jonna Andersson and Zecira Musovic representing their country well. Millie Bright, Fran Kirby, Niamh Charles and Jess Carter all featured for England in their victory in the first ever Arnold Clark Cup - with Bright and Kirby both scoring in the decisive game against Germany.
Bright scored two goals for England in the three games - meaning she shared the Golden Boot with Barcelona and Spain midfielder Alexia Putellas, and arguably the best footballer on the planet. Quite an achievement, for a centre half!
Legend Carly Telford departs
Club stalwart Carly Telford left Chelsea for the second time, this month, to join the San Diego Wave in the NWSL.
Carly is very highly regarded by all at Chelsea, and in her two spells at the club has been one of the players who bridged the gap between Chelsea pre-Hayes and post-Hayes - where we have become one of the biggest clubs in women’s football. More about Telford, her time with the Blues, and where she stands in our history can be found in this feature article
She will be missed.
Chelsea 3-1 Man United (Conti Cup semi-final)
A perfect hat trick from Pernille Harder had helped Chelsea beat West Ham 4-2 in the quarter-finals of the Conti Cup in order to advance to the semi-finals, where Manchester United lay in wait.
United had knocked out current WSL leaders Arsenal in their quarter-final to reach this stage, and were one of the form teams in the country heading into this tie. Manager Marc Skinner was newly appointed at the start of the season, and had taken a while to impart his methods - but they are firing now, having won the previous seven fixtures in a row whilst scoring 18 goals, and keeping seven clean sheets.
Chelsea had thrashed Man United 6-1 in our league game earlier this season, but this was a very different side - and this game was likely to be a huge test for a Chelsea squad still missing key players. Sam Kerr had returned to training following her exploits at the Asian Cup, but was only ready to be named on the bench.
There were some familiar faces in the opposition line up, with former Blue and much-loved Hannah Blundell (an academy graduate) starting at left back, and fellow ex-Chelsea Maria Thorisdottir lining up in a central defensive role alongside her.
The opening exchanges were fairly even, with both sides having opportunities to take the lead. It was Pernille Harder who did open the scoring, with a solo goal after 26 minutes which demonstrated all of the talent that had made Chelsea break the world record transfer fee for her.
The Dane collected a long ball from Guro Reiten, and still had a lot of work to do as she advanced into the Man United box - Harder duly danced around the hapless defence before slotting past Sophie Baggaley to put Chelsea 1-0 up.
Five minutes later, the Chelsea lead was doubled through Jessie Fleming. Niamh Charles had put a dangerous cross into the box, which was first met by Reiten - the Norwegian’s effort was saved, but Fleming was first to react to the rebound, netting her fifth goal of the season.
With a 2-0 lead, things could have started to look comfortable for Chelsea - but Man United very much wanted to have a say in the game, and halved the deficit just minutes later. Musovic could have done better to keep out Vilda Boa Risa’s shot from a tight angle - but the opportunity came about from a lapse in concentration from Jess Carter at right back… who can be prone to errors.
Carter soon made amends with Chelsea’s third goal shortly before half time, and in doing so restored the two-goal cushion. A fine passing move from the Blues ended with Reiten squaring the ball for an onrushing Carter to tuck away - having burst into the box with the type of run that would make Frank Lampard proud.
After a first half full of goals and end-to-end attacking play, it was expected that Man United would come out fighting after the break, but Chelsea were able to show their class and professionalism by containing Marc Skinner’s side.
Instead, the major incident of the second half was not another goal, but a red card in the 77th minute for Man United keeper Baggaley, which essentially put paid to any chance of a comeback for her side. Hayes had introduced Sam Kerr off the bench, and the Aussie broke through on goal following a ball over the top of the United defence. With just Baggaley to beat, the Man United keeper chose to clatter Kerr instead - and was sent off for denying an obvious goalscoring opportunity.
Chelsea played out the game with little trouble, and the match finished 3-1 - meaning the Blues had ended Man United’s run of seven consecutive wins and clean sheets had ended with a very impressive performance.
Doing so meant Chelsea had reached a third successive Conti Cup Final, and will be hoping to make it a hat-trick of cup wins at AFC Wimbledon’s Plough Lane stadium on the first weekend of March - where the opposition will be Man City.
Chelsea 1-0 Man City (WSL)
Next up for Chelsea was the other team in Manchester - who along with their city rivals have been one of the most in-form teams in the country since the new year. Man City had had a truly terrible start to the season, where four losses before Christmas saw them fall way out of title and even Champions League contention. These losses included a 4-0 pasting handed out by Chelsea at the Academy Stadium, for Chelsea’s first ever away league win against Man City.
City have since recovered - and had several key players return from injury - and came into this game unbeaten in nine games.
With Arsenal having drawn 1-1 against Man United the day previously, this was a big game against a side who have been Chelsea’s frequent sparring partners in the title race, having finished runners-up to the Blues in each of the last two seasons. City may be likely out of the race for this year, but they have the quality to very much get a damaging result against Chelsea - and certainly had the form.
Captain Magda Eriksson, Maren Mjelde and Melanie Leupolz remained absent, whilst Sam Kerr made her first start since returning from the Asian Cup. The the big surprise was Fran Kirby being benched - and it being unclear as to whether there were any injury or fitness concerns.
It was a sell-out crowd of over 3000 at Kingsmeadow, for a fixture which has become one of the banner games of the WSL in recent years. High winds made conditions tricky for both sides, with storms battering every corner of the UK.
Chelsea started the game on top, with Pernille Harder in particular a constant attacking threat. The characteristically relentless high Chelsea press meant Man City struggled to break out of their half.
The windy weather had a say in the opener, which was more than deserved for Chelsea. A Jess Carter cross hung in the air, and was met first by Guro Reiten, who was able to direct a delicate header past Ellie Roebuck in the City goal to continue her fine recent form in front of goal.
It was a first half that was almost entirely Chelsea, but the lead remained only 1-0 at the break - and with that there was danger, as Man City are a quality team with world class attacking talent.. Despite creating little, City had still come close with a fine strike from Jess Park, which Ann-Katrin Berger had had to produce an even better save to prevent nestling in the top corner. It felt like another goal would be needed.
Instead, it was the defence who stepped up. City grew into the game in the second half with their potent attacking threat coming to the fore, having been absent for most of the first 45. The game remained open for much of the second half, but with that came City chances - and then for the last 15 minutes, Chelsea battened down the hatches to face a light blue onslaught.
There was some determined and desperate defending, with Chelsea dropping into a low block and counter attacking approach. The players putting their bodies on the line time after time to protect the clean sheet - including Millie Bright clearing off the line.
It was on the counter that Chelsea nearly sealed it - substitute Lauren James was set to latch onto a long ball over the top of the City high line, only for the onrushing Roebuck to just beat her to it, and prevent what would likely have been Chelsea’s second goal. From the subsequent counter Caroline Weir wasted her crossing chance, in what was City’s last real opportunity of the game.
Chelsea were able to ride out the heavy City pressure to secure a 1-0 win, completing our first ever league double over Man City - and being only the third ever side to do so. A big three points in the title race, which means Chelsea sit just one point off Arsenal with a game in hand - and the Gunners due next to visit Kingsmeadow.
Chelsea had earned a deserved lead in the first half - and then protected it with our lives in the second half, showing the sort of professionalism and mentality which defines champions. Jess Carter and Erin Cuthbert were the standout players - a frequent refrain heard about the continually underrated Cuthbert, but special credit goes to Carter, as the right back can be maligned for her defensive capabilities. It made three clean sheets in the WSL in a row for Chelsea - showing that maybe we are overcoming the defensive issues that have plagued us in big games in recent times.
Chelsea 0-0 Arsenal (WSL)
In a month jam-packed with big matches, this was the biggest.
Friday night under the lights at Kingsmeadow - and the league leaders Arsenal were visiting to face hot-on-their-tails Chelsea, knowing that the outcome of this top of the table clash could have a huge say on the title race.
Recent results had seen Chelsea catch up to Arsenal - whose opening weekend win against Chelsea had made them title favourites, and they had looked indomitable for most of the first half of the season. Their form has tailed off since - alongside Chelsea, with both sides suffering a winter slump. Whilst Chelsea have recovered, Arsenal have found it harder going.
This meant that ahead of this game, Chelsea were just one point behind Arsenal, with a game in hand. Awin for the Blues would see them go above the Gunners for the first time this season - and even a draw would likely be an advantageous result for the Blues.
Chelsea were the favourites in terms of form, and in the other match between the two London rivals this season, Chelsea had blown Arsenal away 3-0 at the December FA Cup Final, with a performance that righted some of the wrongs Chelsea had felt had been done in that opening weekend defeat, especially the clearly-offside third Arsenal goal.
There has been notable needle between Emma Hayes and new Arsenal boss Jonas Eidevall this season - with not-so-subtle jibes being exchanged in press conferences, and the Chelsea manager and squad taking exception to Eidevall’s exuberant celebrations during that September game at the Emirates. Hayes used that to motivate her players ahead of the cup final revenge - and both sets of players will likely be drawing from those sentiments for what looked set to be a feisty affair.
Arsenal were missing Katie McCabe - one of their key players this season - due to suspension. The Gunners had strengthened in the transfer window, bringing in highly sought-after Swedish striker Stina Blackstenius, who had made an impressive start to life in an Arsenal shirt, with her partnership with Viv Miedema already proving fruitful. Chelsea would be wary of Beth Mead, too - she always plays brilliantly against Chelsea.
The Chelsea team were boosted by the return of Ji So-Yun to the squad, who returned from the Asian Cup with a runners-up medal in a tournament where South Korea had exceeded expectations. Ji was named on the bench, with Hayes’ only change to the starting line up being the return of Fran Kirby - meaning that Chelsea’s fearsome attacking trio of Kerr, Kirby and Harder started together for the first time since December.
The atmosphere was rife with anticipation at a sell-out Kingsmeadow, and despite the scoreline the game did not fail to deliver on drama, with a hotly-contested and entertaining encounter that was befitting of the hype - and emblematic of how tight and turbulent the WSL title race has been this season.
Chelsea looked very much like the home team, being on top in the opening exchanges - but despite an open start to the game there were no real clear cut chances until Fran Kirby blazed a shot over the bar after 15 minutes. Arsenal grew into the game after this, and Miedema hit the post with their best opportunity of the half just minutes after. Chelsea nearly broke the deadlock on the stroke of half time, with first Harder and then Kerr having shots blocked in the box after a dangerous cross from Guro Reiten.
The Blues came roaring out of the traps in the second half, having several chances to take the lead - with Arsenal needing some desperate defending and good fortune to prevent us from doing so, including Chelsea having two shots cleared off the line. Arsenal to their credit stood firm in the face of considerable pressure - and managed to emerge from the bombardment unscathed.
A barnstorming end to the match provided an entertaining finale, and showed that both teams very much had three points in their mind - knowing how decisive such a result could prove. Both Jess Carter and Millie Bright made crucial interventions to prevent a late Arsenal goal - and both players continued their excellent recent form in doing so.
Chelsea did have the ball in the net in the fourth of eight minutes of stoppage time - but it was ruled out, due to Kerr being offside in the build up.
The Blues were then desperately unlucky to be denied what looked like a clear penalty from a blatant Leah Williamson handball - a decision which baffled all of those inside Kingsmeadow. It was the second time this season Arsenal have benefitted from questionable officiating against Chelsea, with the aforementioned third goal in the 3-2 win back in September having been clearly offside.
With Chelsea not being given the chance to take the win from the spot, the match ended 0-0 - a scoreline not truly reflective of what had been a highly entertaining encounter, and befitting of the billing it had been given,
A draw did mean that the potential ‘title decider’ did not give us a decisive answer - but with a game in hand on Arsenal and just one point back, the result does benefit Chelsea more than the league leaders. The title is in Chelsea’s hands rather than Arsenal’s - but the WSL has proven so far this season that no win is guaranteed, and there are likely to be more twists and turns in what has been the best WSL title race in years.
The teams were set to pause for the final international break of the season, after which the business end of the domestic season will be well and truly underway - and the final destination of the title still very much hovering between North and West London
Chelsea 7-0 Leicester City (FA Cup fifth round)
Chelsea FC Women returned to domestic action following the international break with an utterly dominant 7-0 win against Leicester in the fifth round of the FA Cup. According to reports, anyway - as due to this match not being streamed or televised on any platform, the vast majority of Chelsea fans were unable to witness our joint-biggest margin of victory in a game this season.
Undeniably, coverage of the women’s game has come on leaps and bounds in recent years, in line with the increased investment into the sport - and much has been made of the landmark new TV deal for the WSL, with the BBC and Sky Sports.
However, there remain blind spots in the game - with the early rounds of the FA Cup and Conti Cup most often being overlooked.
Amongst the notable events missed by those not fortunate enough to be in attendance were major milestones for two of our summer signings - a first start for Lauren James, and a first goal for Aniek Nouwen.
James has been blighted by injury since joining from Manchester United, and her game time has thus far been restricted to cameo substitute appearances. Dutch defender Nouwen has been more involved in the first team set up - and been relied upon more than was expected for the 23-year-old, owing to long term injuries within the defence.
Emma Hayes had also brought Niamh Charles and Ji So-Yun into the starting line up for a total of three changes from the side which drew 0-0 with Arsenal before the international break. There had been injury concerns over Jess Carter, who was forced off in England’s last game of the Arnold Clark Cup - but she was fit enough for a place on the bench.
The opponents, Leicester, are in their inaugural WSL season, having won the Championship last season. Their primary objective is to avoid relegation - and two big wins recently in the league has seen them move into 10th place, eight points clear of Birmingham at the bottom, meaning survival looks all but secured.
The Foxes already had a scalp in the FA Cup this season, too - having knocked out Champions League-contending Spurs 3-1 in the previous round. They seemed to start in a manner suggesting that they were not to be intimidated by the holders Chelsea, competing well in the opening exchanges and coming the closest to an opener, when Millie Bright was forced to clear off the line.
The game changed inexorably in the 18th minute however, when Sophie Howard received a straight red card for a bad challenge on Jonna Andersson. From here, it was one way traffic, and the result seemed inevitable. Pernille Harder promptly scored the opener just five minutes after Howard’s dismissal, latching on to a fine Sophie Ingle through ball.
Harder added the second 10 minutes later, assisted by Sam Kerr - the two goals were the extent of the damage in the first half, but the second half was a procession, with the resistance of the 10 women of Leicester seemingly crumbling.
Kerr scored a brace of her own in the second half to add to Harder’s double - the Aussie’s first goals for Chelsea since returning from the Asian Cup, to take our top scorer’s total for the season to 18 in all competitions.
Inbetween Kerr’s two goals came a first goal of the season for Ji So-Yun, with the best strike of the game. The fifth goal of seven was scored by the aforementioned Nouwen in what was a special moment for the young Dutch centre back - following which Kerr completed her brace.
For those counting, that makes six goals so far - and it was substitute Beth England who added the final flourish to make it seventh heaven for Chelsea.
A thoroughly comfortable and very successful day at the office for Emma Hayes’ side - the exact sort of performance we are used to seeing with regularity against less strong opposition, and the sort all fans love to see… it is just a shame we couldn’t.
Chelsea progressed on to the quarter-finals - and have been drawn to face Birmingham, with the ties due to take place towards the end of March.
February results in brief
Fixture | Result | Competition | Goal scorers |
Man United (H) | 3-1 W | CTC | Harder, Fleming, Carter |
Man City (H) | 1-0 W | WSL | Reiten |
Arsenal (H) | 0-0 D | WSL | n/a |
Leicester (H) | 7-0 W | FA Cup | Harder x 2, Kerr x 2, Ji, Nouwen, England |
Round-up
Another unbeaten month for Chelsea - and another one in which we made progress across all competitions, and look to be in ever-better form both defensively and in attack.
A comfortable win against Man United saw us progress to our third consecutive League Cup Final, as we look to make it three wins in a row against Man City on the first weekend of March. Progress was even easier in the FA Cup, where we thrashed Leicester 7-0 in the fifth round to earn a quarter-final tie against Birmingham.
Two good results in the two massive WSL games we contested means we are now in a stronger position in the title race - a win against Man City and a draw against league leaders Arsenal mean we remain two points off the Gunners, but with a game in hand. It was frustrating not to win the latter fixture - which was a brilliantly contested match between the two best teams in England - after having had the better chances and being denied a blatant penalty in injury time. Nonetheless - the title is now in Chelsea’s hands.
Looking ahead to March
A busy schedule awaits Chelsea in March, where we are set to contest seven fixtures across three competitions.
First up is the Conti Cup Final against Man City, on the first Saturday of the month - as Chelsea look to make it three League Cup wins in a row. Arsenal’s fixtures mean that by that weekend, they could go eight points clear in the WSL - but with Chelsea having three games in hand.
Chelsea will then return to WSL action, with a home fixture against Aston Villa being sandwiched by trips away to West Ham and Everton. The Blues will then host Birmingham in the quarter-final of the FA Cup, before rounding off the month with two more league fixtures against Spurs and Leicester.
Emma Hayes will need to make full use of her squad to navigate a month where we will be playing twice a week - and at a time in the season where every match feels a must-win. The title race remains on such a knife edge, that any slip up could be fatal. Fortunately, Arsenal have an equally busy schedule - including both legs of their Champions League quarter-final tie against Wolfsburg, which will likely take a lot of focus and energy from the Arsenal squad. Chelsea will hope continental matters may distract Arsenal from domestic affairs.
By the end of March, Chelsea may have won another trophy - and we will likely know more about the destination of the WSL title… but given how tight this season’s race has been, we could well be none the wiser.
If you are interested in learning more about Chelsea FC Women, and keeping a closer eye on the progress of our women's team, then check out our subreddit, /chelsealadiesfc!
UTC!
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2022.02.05 13:51 AnnieIWillKnow [MATCH THREAD] Chelsea FC Women vs Man City Women - Sunday 5th February, 12:30 GMT (WSL)
#Welcome to the
/chelsealadiesfc match thread for our second WSL fixture of 2022, at home to Manchester City.
Date: 6th February 2022
KO: 12:30 GMT
Competition: WSL, match week 13
Venue: Kingsmeadow
MATCH PREVIEW
February is chock-full of massive games for Chelsea. Having successfully navigated the first of these with a 3-1 win over Man United midweek to reach our third consecutive Conti Cup Final, the next challenge was set to be a WSL home game against Man City.
Man City have been Chelsea’s frequent sparring partners in the title race, having finished runners-up to the Blues in each of the last two seasons. The Cityzens had a truly terrible start to the season, where four losses before Christmas saw them fall way out of title and even Champions League contention. These losses included a 4-0 pasting handed out by Chelsea at the Academy Stadium, for Chelsea’s first ever away league win against Man City.
Chelsea are unlikely to find things so straightforward on Sunday. With several key players having returned from injury - although captain Steph Houghton is a doubt for this game with a lingering Achilles’ issue - Man City have rediscovered their form. Gareth Taylor’s side are unbeaten in nine, and have moved up to fifth place as a result - as well as reaching the final of the Conti Cup, where they will be our opponents on the 5th March.
Man City also drew 1-1 with league leaders Arsenal in their last WSL outing.
Chelsea come into this game with a run of form that has seen us get our season back on track after the wobbles of the winter - and are also yet to lose a game in 2022, winning four and drawing one. Our last match was our most impressive of the year so far - a 3-1 win against Man United in the aforementioned cup semi-final, ending the Red Devils run of seven wins in a row.
This match will likely have a big say on the WSL title race - and Arsena willl contest a tricky fixture of their own, as they face Man United on Saturday.
Captain Magda Eriksson, Maren Mjelde and Melanie Leupolz remain absent, whilst Sam Kerr has returned from the Asian Cup - where Ji So Yun’s South Korea have reached the final - and may be ready to start, after featuring as a substitute in the midweek game.
HOW TO FOLLOW
The match will be broadcast live for UK television viewers on BBC Two. For international viewers, the match will be available on the free online streaming platform, the FA Player.
As always, text updates will also be provided by the 5th Stand app, and the club's official Twitter page.
Up the Chels!
LINE UPS:
Chelsea: Berger, Nouwen, Bright (C), Ingle, Carter, Reiten, Fleming, Kerr, Cuthbert, Harder, Andersson (Subs: Musovic, Kirby, James, Charles, Spence, Abdullina, Claypole, Thompson)
Man City: Roebuck, Bronze (C), Mace, Greenwood, Stokes, Stanway, Walsh, Weir, Shaw, Park, Hemp (Subs: Coombs, Beckie, Angeldahl, Raso, Losada, White, Kennedy, Keating, Blakstad)
MATCH EVENTS:
- KICK OFF! Under way!
- 5' - Close!! An Erin Cuthbert corner is cleared off the line by Jess Park, could have been a wonder goal...
- 14’ - GOOOAAAAALL!!! Get in! Chelsea have been dominant and get the goal our start deserves. Jess Carter puts in a cross which the wind hangs in the air, and Guro Reiten heads it home! Chelsea 1-0 Man City!
- 38’ - Great save!! Berger makes a brilliant stop from a strike from Jess Park which looked like it was right in the top corner. Berger proving her class once again
- HALF TIME! A deserved first half lead for Chelsea who have been the better team - but the advantage is narrow, and City look like they have goals in them…
- SECOND HALF! Back under way, no changes to report
- 62' - Chelsea have a shout for a pen waved away, looked like it struck Mace on the arm, but ref adjudged it to not be in an unnatural position. City have brought on Blakstad ad Losada
- 65' - SUBSTITUTIONS! Hayes makes her first changes, Kirby on for Harder, and Charles on for Fleming.
- 81' - SUBSTITUTION! Lauren James on for Kerr - more minutes for Lauren, and a big sign of trust to be bought on in a game like this
- 87' - Millie Bright makes a great headed clearance off the line, City are really pushing
- 89' - SUBSTITUTION! Drew Spence comes on for Reiten, to hopefully help see the game out
- 90' - Drama! James runs through onto a long ball over the top, and could be clean on goal - but Roebuck just beats her to it, and wins the ball. City break, but Weir wastes her cross.
- 90'+1 - three minutes added on
- 90'+2 - City still pushing...
- FULL TIME! The whistle goes!! Chelsea have ridden out the storm, and what a win!!!
FINAL SCORE: Chelsea 1-0 Man City
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2022.02.02 08:00 PresidentRaggy [MATCH THREAD] Chelsea FC Women vs. Manchester United Women, 02/02, 19:00 (Conti Cup)
Date: 2 February 2022
KO: 19:00 GMT
Competition: FA Continental Tyres League Cup
Venue: Kingsmeadow
Welcome to another /chelsealadiesfc match thread, as the Blues host Manchester United in Conti Cup semi-final play. In this post you’ll find squad news, pre-match notes, and live chat once we are underway at Kingsmeadow.
MATCH PREVIEW
Both Chelsea and United won their last matches: the Blues thanks to Guro Reiten and Pernille Harder and the Red Devils against Bridgewater United, both in the FA Cup. The Blues were unbeaten in January and continue the ever-present quest for silverware.
Last time out at United in the league, five Chelsea players got on the scoresheet in a 6-1 victory.
Chelsea have won the Conti Cup in the past two terms.
Squad news:
Sam Kerr is back to training camp, but got off a plane Tuesday from Australia so she may not feature, Also, another illness has affected the squad’s already-depleted ranks. Says Emma Hayes: “We’ve got a bit of sickness, not Covid related. I don’t know what the squad will be tomorrow; it could be 15, it could be 13 players.”
Hayes named Bethany England, Magda Eriksson, and Maren Mjelde as players definitely out for tomorrow. Lauren James was also out of training due to a cold, Hayes said.
HOW TO WATCH
The game will be broadcast on BBC Red Button.
As always, the CFCW Twitter account will provide live updates. The game will be also be shown on the FA Player, a free service dedicated to livestreaming the WSL. You can sign up here if you have not done so already.
LINE-UPS
CHE: Musovic, Nouwen, Bright (c), Ingle, Carter, Reiten, Fleming, Charles, Cuthbert, Harder, Andersson.
Subs: Berger, Kirby, James, Kerr, Spence, Abdullina, Claypole, Thompson.
MUN: Baggaley, Thorisdottir, Mannon, Blunder, Boe Risa, Thomas, Zelem (c), Galton, Groenen, O. Battle, Russo.
Subs: Earps, Harris, F. Fuso, Caldwell, Bruun, Hanson, Smith, Jones.
MATCH EVENTS
Pre-match: That's Academy players Aimee Claypole and Emma Thompson in the squad on the bench, both of whom have gotten minutes recently. And former Chelsea players Hannah Blundell and Maria Thorisdottir in the site for United.
1' And we're underway. COME ON CHELSEA!
6' Close! Harder's shot hits another player and falls close enough for Baggaley to grab. Good interplay there to set our Dane up for a try.
10’ Musovic grabs a headed effort and sends the ball back up the pitch. United are looking lively.
14’ Harder’s shot goes over the bar!
26’ GOOOOALLLL!! PERNILLE HARDER! Great individual work from Chelsea’s No. 23!
31’ GOAL!! And it’s Jessie Fleming whose shot bounces the ball over Baggaley. Almost looks like it came off her head onto her leg/foot and hit the top of the net.
32’ Goal. Great play from the visitors to pull one back.
39' GOAL!! Jess Carter's name rings around Kingsmeadow after she touches home a cross from Guro Reiten. Beautiful team play on the build-up, and a fantastic run from the goalscorer! 3-1 Chelsea.
45' Chelsea corner -- nice save by Baggaley.
45' Three minutes added time.
45 + 3' HALFTIME: Chelsea 3-1 Manchester United. Goals from Pernille Harder, Jessie Fleming, and Jess Harder put us a step ahead of United after the first half.
46' Back underway. COME ON CHELSEA!
55' United keep the ball alive in front of Musovic off a corner. Ball is eventually cleared behind for a goal kick.
62' Harder unhappy with Thorisdottir after the former Chelsea player brought her down near the edge of the box.
64' Chelsea corner! Ball remains in play for a while but United eventually force Chelsea back.
67' SUB: Fuso (MUN) on for Groenen; Bruun (MUN) on for Thomas.
68' Kerr (CHE) on for Fleming and she gets a mighty roar from the crowd. Reiten feeds her a nice pass but she's offside.
75' Beautiful left-footed cross from Reiten to try and find Kerr. Sam was just a little too late on her run.
78' Wow. Baggaley red carded for coming out on a ball and clattering Kerr, who is still on the pitch but winded.
80' SUB: Earps (MUN) on for Russo.
81' Chelsea free kick. Cuthbert takes, and it hits the wall and goes over the goal for a corner. Reiten's ball is slightly too high up the box to reach anyone and it goes out.
86' James (CHE) on for Harder; Spence (CHE) on for Andersson.
87' Yellow card issued to Niamh Charles.
88' Spence and James on the attack, Spence's cross is cut out.
89' SUB: Abdullina (CHE) on for Reiten.
90' Bright's shot flies over the goal.
91' Six minutes added time.
90 + 6' FULL TIME: Chelsea 3-1 Manchester United. Goals from Harder, Fleming, Carter. Into the final of the Continental Tyres Cup we go! We'll find out the opponents tomorrow after Manchester City play Tottenham. Good night, Blues fans!
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2021.08.24 11:10 Doomsday_Device Oh, so you're a Linguist? Name every language
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Capanahua Caquetio Carapana Carian Carib Carib (De'kwana) Carijona Carolina Algonquian Carolinian Carrier Cashibo Cashinahua Castellano Abakay Catalan Catawba Catawba Catio Caucasian Albanian Cavineña Cayapa Cayuga Cayuse Cayuvava Cazcan Cebuano Celtiberian Cèmuhî Central Kalapuya Chácobo Chaga Chagatai Chaha Chai Chaldean (Modern) Cham (Eastern) Cham (Western) Chamalal Chambri Chamorro Chaná Chané Chang Chantyal Charrúa language Chasta Costa Chatino (Nopala) Chatino (Sierra Occidental) Chatino (Tataltepec) Chatino (Yaitepec) Chaudangsi Chavacano Chayahuita Chechen Chehalis (Upper) Cheke Holo Chemakum Chemakum Chemehuevi Chepang Cherokee Cheyenne Chiapanec Chibcha Chichewa Chichimeca-Jonaz Chickasaw Chico Chicomuceltec Chicomuceltec Chimariko Chimariko Chimila Chin (Mara) Chin (Siyin) Chin (Tiddim) Chinantec (Comaltepec) Chinantec (Lealao) Chinantec (Palantla) Chinantec (Quiotepec) Chinantec (San Felipe Usila) Chinantec (Sochiapan) Chinantec (Tepetotutla) Chinese Sign Language Chinook (Lower) Chinook (Upper) Chipaya Chipewyan Chippewa (Red Lake and Pillager) Chiquitano Chiriguano Chitimacha Chitimacha Chochenyo Chocho Choctaw Chol Cholón Chontal (Highland) Chontal (Huamelultec Oaxaca) Chontal Maya Chorote Chorotega Chortí Chrau Chru Chuave Chuj Chukchi Chulym Chumash (Barbareño) Chumash (Ineseño) Chumburung Chuukese Chuvash CiLuba Clackamas dialect of Upper Chinook Clallam Classical Mandaic Clatskanie Coahuilteco Coahuilteco Cocama Cochimí Cochin Indo-Portuguese Creole Cocopa Coeur d'Alene Cofán Cogui Colac Columbia-Wenatchi Comanche Comecrudo Comecrudo Communicationssprache Comorian Comox Coos (Hanis) Coptic Coptic Cora Cornish Cornish Coroado Purí Cotoname Cree (Plains) Cree (Swampy) Creek Crimean Gothic Crimean Tatar Cromarty dialect of Scots Crow Cua Cubeo Cuiba Cuica Cuicatec Cuitlatec Cuitlatec Culina Cuman Cumbric Cupeño Cupeño Curonian Curripaco Cypro-Minoan Czech D'ni Da'a Daba Dabida Dacian Dadibi Dadjriwalé Daga Dagaare Dagbani Dagoman Dagur Dahalo Daju (Dar Fur) Dakota Dalmatian Damana Damin Dan Dangaléat (Western) Dani (Lower Grand Valley) Danish Darai Dargwa Dari Darma Datooga Dâw Day Deeside dialect, Scottish Gaelic Defaka Degema Degexit'an Dení Desano Deti Deuri Deutsche Gebärdensprache Dhaasanac Dhalandji Dharawal Dhargari Dharumbal Dhimal Dhivehi Dhungaloo Dhurga Dhuwal (Dätiwuy) Dicamay Agta Didinga Diegueño (Mesa Grande) Digaro Dii Dimasa Dime Ding Dinka Diola-Fogny Diola-Kasa Dirari Diyari Dizi Djabugay Djambarrpuyngu Djapu Djaru Djinang Djingili Dla (Menggwa) Dla (Proper) Dobel Dogri Doko Dolgan Domaaki Domari Dong (Southern) Dongo Donno So Dothraki Doutai Doyayo Drehu Dritok Duala Duka Duli Dullay (Gollango) Dulong Duma Dumagat (Casiguran) Dumi Dumo Duna Dura Dutch Dutch (Brabantic) Dutch (Limburg) Dutch (Zeeuws) Dyaberdyaber Dyangadi Dyimini Dyirbal Dyirringany Dyugun Dyula Dzubukua E-Prime East Leinster dialect, Irish Eastern Abnaki Ebira Eblaite Edolo Edomite Efate (South) Efik Ega Egyptian Eipo Ejagham Ekari Ekoti Elamite Elseng Elymian Emai Embaloh Emberá (Northern) Embera Chami Émérillon Emmi Enchanta Enets Enga Engenni Enggano English Enochian Enya Eora Epena Pedee Ermiteño Erre Erromangan Ese Ejja Eskayan Esmeraldeño Esperanto Esperanto II Esselen Esselen Estonian Esuma Etchemin Eteocretan Eteocypriot Etruscan Etsako Eudeve Eudeve Eurolengo Europanto Even Evenki Ewe Ewe (Anglo) Ewondo Eyak Eyak Faliscan Faroese Fasu Fe'fe' Fergana Kipchak Fijian Fijian (Wayan) Finnish Finnish Sign Language Fiote Flinders Island Foe Folopa Fongbe Fordata Fore Fox Frankish French Frisian Frisian (Eastern) Frisian (North) Frisian (Western) Ful (Liptako) Fula (Burkina Faso) Fula (Guinean) Fula (Mauritanian) Fula (Senegal) Fulfulde (Adamawa) Fulfulde (Maasina) Fulfulde (Nigerian) Fulniô Fur Futuna (East) Futuna-Aniwa Fuzhou Fyem Gã Ga'anda Gaagudju Gaagudju Gaalpu Gabrielino Gadaba (Kondekor) Gade Gadsup Gaelic (Scots) Gafat Gagauz Gahuku Galatian Galela Galice Galician Galindian Galo Galwegian dialect, Scottish Gaelic Gamilaraay Gamo Gapapaiwa Gargish Garífuna Garig Ilgar Garo Garrwa Garus Garza Gaulish Gavião Gaya Gayo Gbaya (Northwest) Gbaya (Southwest) Gbeya Bossangoa Ge'ez Gela Gelao Georgian German German (Appenzell) German (Bavarian) German (Berlin) German (Bern) German (Hannover) German (Mansfeldisch) German (Ostschweiz) German (Ripuarian) German (Thurgau) German (Thuringian) German (Timisoara) German (Upper Austrian) German (Viennese) German (Westphalian) German (Zurich) Gestuno Ghotuo Ghulfan Gidabal Gidar Gilaki Gimira Gitksan Giziga Globish Glosa Goa'uld Goajiro Godié Godoberi Goemai Gogodala Goguryeo language Gojri Gokana Gola Golin Gondi Gooniyandi Gorgotoqui Gorontalo Gorowa Gothic Great Andamanese Grebo Greek (Cypriot) Greek (Modern) Greek Sign Language Greenlandic (East) Greenlandic (South) Greenlandic (West) Greenlandic Norse Gros Ventre Guadeloupe Creole Guahibo Guajajara Guambiano Guana Guanahatabey Guanano Guanche Guaque Guaraní Guarijío Guató Guayabero Gude Guduf Guenoa language Guere Gueren Gugada Gugadj Gugu Thaypan Guhu-Samane Guianese French Creole Guinea Bissau Crioulo Gujarati Gula (in Central African Republic) Gula Iro Gulidjan Gumatj Gumawana Gumbaynggir Gumuz Gunbalang Gundungurra Gungbe Gunin Gunu Gününa Küne Gunya Guosa Gupapuyngu Gureng Gureng Gurenne Gurindji Gurma Gurnai Guro Gurr-goni Gurung Gusii Gutob Guugu Yimidhirr Gwari Gworok Gyarong (Cogtse) Hadramautic Hadza Haida Haida (Northern) Haisla Haitian Creole Hakka Halang Halbi Halia Halkomelem (Island) Halkomelem (Upriver) Hamer Hamtai Hanga Hundi Hani Hanis Hanunóo Harari Harsusi Haruai Hatam Hattic Hausa Havasupai Hawaiian Hawaiian Creole Hawrami Haya Hayu Hdi Hebrew (Modern Ashkenazic) Hebrew (Modern) Hehe Heiltsuk Hemba Henniker Sign Language Herero Hermit Hianacoto Hidatsa High Valyrian Hilberno-Scottish Gaelic Hiligaynon Himyaritic Hindi Hinuq Hittite Hixkaryana Hlai (Baoding) Hmar Hmong Daw Hmong Njua Ho Hoava Holikachuk Holoholo Homa Hong Kong Sign Language Hopi Hoti Hpun Hre Hua Hualapai Huambisa Huastec Huave (San Mateo del Mar) Huichol Huitoto (Minica) Huitoto (Muinane) Huitoto (Murui) Hukumina Hunde Hungarian Hunnic Hunzib Hup Hupa Hurrian Hymmnos Hyow I'saka Iaai Iatmul Iau Iban Ibanag Iberian Ibibio Icelandic Icelandic Sign Language Idiom Neutral Ido Idoma Idu Iduna Ifira-Mele Ifo Ifugao (Batad) Ifumu Igbo Igede Ignaciano Iha Ijo (Kolokuma) Ik Ika Ila Illinois Illyrian Ilocano Imonda Inanwatan Indo-Pakistani Sign Language (Indian dialects) Indo-Pakistani Sign Language (Karachi dialect) Indonesian Indonesian (Jakarta) Indonesian (Papuan) Ineseño Inga Ingain Ingessana Ingush Innamincka Intal Interglossa Interlac Interlingua Interlingue International Sign Interslavic Interslavic Inuktitut (Quebec-Labrador) Inuktitut (Rankin Inlet) Inuktitut (Salluit) Iñupiaq Iowa-Oto Iquito Iranxe Iraqw Irarutu Irish Irish (Donegal) Irish (Munster) Irish Sign Language Isaurian Isekiri Ishkashmi Isirawa Island Carib Isnag Isoko Israeli Sign Language Istrian Albanian Italian Italian (Bologna) Italian (Fiorentino) Italian (Genoa) Italian (Napolitanian) Italian (Turinese) Itawis Itelmen Itonama Itzaj Ivatan Iwaidja Iwam Iwoyo Ixcatec Ixil Izhor Izi Jabêm Jabutí Jad Jahai Jaikó Jakaltek Jamaican Creole Jamamadi Jaminjung Jamsay Jangil Japanese Japreria Jaqaru Jarawa (in Andamans) Jarawa (in Nigeria) Jarawara Jassic Javanese Javindo Jebero Jeh Jeli Jemez Jersey Dutch Jewish Babylonian Aramaic Jiarong Jibbali Jie language Jingpho Jino Jivaro Jiwarli dialect, Mantharta Johari John Wilkin's Philosophical Language Jomang Jorá Ju'hoan Juaneño Juang Judaeo-Catalan Judaeo-Piedmontese Judaeo-Portuguese Jugli Jukun Juma Júma Jur Mödö Jurchen Jurchen Juruna K'ekchí Kabardian Kabatei Kabiyé Kabui Kabyle Kachari Kadazan Kadiwéu Kadugli Kagoma Kagulu Kaian Kaili Kaingang Kairiru Kaiwá Kaki Ae Kala Lagaw Ya Kalam Kalami Kalanga Kalapuya Kalasha Kalispel Kalkatungu Kalmyk Kalmyk (Issyk-Kul) Kaluli Kamaiurá Kamakã Kamano-Kafe Kamarian Kamasau Kamass Kamassian Kamba Kambera Kambot Kami Kamoro Kamu Kamurú Kana Kanakuru Kanashi Kanembu Kangiryuarmiut Kaniet Kanjobal (Eastern) Kanjobal (Western) Kankanay Kannada Kanoê Kansa Kanum (Bädi) Kanum (Ngkâlmpw) Kanuri Kanyok Kapampangan Kapingamarangi Kara (in Central African Republic) Kara (in Papua New Guinea) Karachay-Balkar Karadjeri Karaim Karajá Karakalpak Karanga Karankawa Karankawa Karao Karata Karelian Karen (Bwe) Karen (Pwo) Karen (Sgaw) Kariera Karimojong Karipúna Karipuna (Panoan) Karitiâna Karkar-Yuri Karkin Karó (Arára) Karok Kasabe Kasem Kashaya Kashmiri Kashubian Kasong Kata Kolok Katabaga Katcha Kâte Kathlamet Kathlamet Kati (in Afghanistan) Kati (in West Papua, Indonesia) Katla Kato Kato Katu Kaulong Kaure Kaurna Kaurna Kawaiisu Kayabí Kayah Li (Eastern) Kayan (Baram) Kayapó Kayardild Kaytej Kazakh Kazukuru Kedang Kefa Kei Kela (Apoze) Kelabit Kele Kemant Kemi Sami Kemtuik Kenaboi Kenga Kenyah (Uma' Lung) Kenyan Sign Language Kenyang Keo Kera Kerek Keresan (Santa Ana) Ket Ketapang Kete Ketengban Kewa Khakas Khalaj Khaling Khalkha Kham Kham (Dege) Kham (Tibetan) (Nangchen) Khanty Kharia Khasi Khazar Khinalug Khitan Khmer Khmu' Khorezmian Khowar Khumi Khün Khwarezmian Khwarshi Kickapoo Kikuyu Kilba Kiliki Kilivila Kiliwa Kiluba Kimaghama Kinga Kinnauri Kinyarwanda Kiowa Kipchak Kipea Kipea Kire Kirghiz Kirghiz (Fu-Yu) Kiribati Kirikiri Kirma Kisar Kisi Kisi (Southern) Kitanemuk Kitja Kitsai Kitsai Kituba Kiwai (Southern) Klallam Klamath Klamath-Modoc Klao Klingon Knaanic Ko (Winye) Koasati Kobaïan Kobon Kodava Koegu Koh (Lakka) Kohumono Koiali (Mountain) Koiari Koita Kokborok Kokni Kokota Kola Kolami Kolana Koluri Kom Kombai Kombio Komering Komi-Permyak Komi-Zyrian Komo Konda Kongo Konjo Konkani Konkomba Konkow Konni Konua Konyagi Koorete Korafe Korana Koranko Korean Koreguaje Korku Koromfe Koropó Korowai Koryak Kosop Kosraean Kota Kotava Kotoko Kotoxó Kott Kott Koya Koyra Chiini Koyraboro Senni Koyukon Kpan Kpelle Kposo Krahô Krenak Kresh Kriol (Fitzroy Crossing) Kriol (Ngukurr) Krongo Krymchak Kryz Ksingmul Ku Kualan Kugu Nganhcara Kui (in India) Kui (in Indonesia) Kuikúro Kukú Kuku-Yalanji Kulamanen Kullo Kulung Kuman Kumauni Kumyk Kuna Kunama Kungarakany Kunimaipa Kunjen Kunming Kunza Kuot Kurdish (Central) Kurmanji Kurukh Kusunda Kutai Kutchin Kutenai Kuuk Thaayorre Kuuku Ya'u Kuvi Kw'adza Kwadi Kwaio Kwakw'ala Kwalhioqua Kwamera Kwami Kwangali Kwaza Kwerba Kwoma Kwomtari Kxoe Kyaka Kyakhta Russian–Chinese Pidgin Kyirong Kyuquot Láadan (ldn) Laal Labu Lacandón Lachi Ladakhi Ladin Ladino Lafofa Lagwan Laha Lahu Lai Lak Lakhota Lakkia Lalo Lamaholot Lamang Lamani Lamba Lamé Lamen Lamnso' Lampung Lamu-Lamu Langi Lango Langue des Signes Française Langue des Signes Québecoise Lao Lapine Laragia Lardil Larike Latino sine Flexione Latvian Lau Laua Lauje Laurentian Lavukaleve Laz Lebeo Lega Leggbó Leko Lelak Lele Lelemi Leliali dialect of Kayeli Lemnian Lenakel Lendu Lengua Lengua de Señas Argentina Lengua de Señas Española Lepcha Lepontic Lese Lesser Antillean French Creole Leti Lewo Lezgian Lhomi Liburnian Ligurian Lillooet Limbu Limilngan Lincos Linda Lingala Língua de Sinais Brasileira Lingua Franca Nova Língua Gestual Portuguesa Lingua Ignota Lingua Italiana dei Segni Lingua sistemfrater Lingwa de planeta Linngithig Lisu Lithuanian Liv Livonian Lobi Logopandecteision Logoti Loko Loma Lombardic Londo Longgu Loniu Lonwolwol Lotha Lou Loup language Loven Low German Lower Arrernte Lower Chinook Loxian Lozi Lü Lua Luangiua Lucazi Luganda Lugbara Lughat al-Isharat al-Lubnaniya Luiseño Luiseño Lule Lumaete dialect of Kayeli Lumbee Lummi Lun Dayeh Lunda Lungchang Luo Luri Lushootseed Lusi Lusitanian Luvale Luwian Luwo Luxemburgeois Luyia Lycian Lydian Lyele Ma Ma'anyan Ma'di Ma'ya Maale Maasai Maba Maca Macaguán Macedonian Machiguenga Macuna Macushi Mada (in Cameroon) Mada (in Nigeria) Madimadi Madurese Mae Magahi Magar Magar (Syangja) Magi Magindanao Mah Meri Mahican Mahican Maidu (Northeast) Maipure Mairasi Maisin Maithili Majang Makaa Makah Makasae Makassar Maklew Makolkol Makonde Máku Makua Malacca Creole Malagasy Malakmalak Malalí Malaryan Malay Malay (Kuala Lumpur) Malay (Ulu Muar) Malayalam Maleu Malgwa Mali Maltese Malto Mam Mamanwa Mamasa Mambai Mambila Mambwe Mampruli Mamulique Mamvu Manadonese Manam Manambu Manange Manchu Mandaic (Modern) Mandan Mandan Mandar Mandarin Mandinka Mandinka (Gambian) Manem Mangala Mangaló Mangap-Mbula Mangarrayi Mangbetu Manggarai Mangghuer Mango Mangue language Maninka Maninka (Western) Manjaku Mankanya Mankon Mano Manobo (Western Bukidnon) Mansi Mänti Mantjiltjara Manx Manx Maori Mapia Mapoyo Mapudungun Mara Maranao Maranungku Marathi Marchha Mardijker Margany Margi Mari (Hill) Mari (Meadow) Maricopa Marind Maring Maringarr Marquesan Marrithiyel Marshallese Martha's Vineyard Sign Language Martinique Creole Martu Wangka Martuthunira Martuthunira Maru Masa Masakará Masakin Masalit Massachusett Matagalpa Matis Matngele Mator Matsés Mattole Mattole Matukar Matuumbi Mauka Maung Mauritian Creole Mawchi Maxakalí Mayangna Maybrat Mayi-Yapi Mayo Mayogo Mazahua Mazanderani Mazatec (Chiquihuitlán) Mazatec (Huautla) Mba Mbabaram Mbabaram Mbalanhu Mbara Mbara Mbay Mbe' Mbere Mbili Mbodomo Mbole Mbosi Mbugu Mbum Me'en Medefaidrin Mediterranean Lingua Franca Mehek Mehri Meithei Mekens Mekeo Melanau Melayu Betawi Mende Menién Menomini Mentawai Mentuh Tapuh Menya Meroitic Merya Meryam Mir Mesmes Messapian Meyah Miami-Illinois Mian Michif Micmac Midob Mien Migama Miisiirii Miju Mikarew Mikasuki Mikir Milang Miluk Milyan Min (Southern) Mina Minaean Minangkabau Minaveha Mingrelian Minoan Miri (Hill): Miriwung Mirniny Mising Miskito Mískito Coast English Creole Mituku Miwok (Bodega) Miwok (Central Sierra) Miwok (Lake) Miwok (Northern Sierra) Miwok (Plains) Miwok (Southern Sierra) Mixe (Ayutla) Mixe (Coatlán) Mixe (Tlahuitoltepec) Mixe (Totontepec) Mixtec (Alacatlatzala) Mixtec (Atatlahuca) Mixtec (Ayutla) Mixtec (Chalcatongo) Mixtec (Chayuco) Mixtec (Coatzospan) Mixtec (Jamiltepec) Mixtec (Jicaltepec) Mixtec (Molinos) Mixtec (Ocotepec) Mixtec (Peñoles) Mixtec (San Juan Colorado) Mixtec (San Miguel el Grande) Mixtec (Silacayoapan) Mixtec (Yosondúa) Miya Mizo Mlabri (Minor) Mlahsô Moabite Moca Mochica Mochica Mocoví Mofu-Gudur Moghol Mohawk Mohegan-Pequot Mojave Mokilese Mokilko Moksela Molala Molala Moldavian Mombum Momu Momuna Mon Mondial Mondunga Mongo Mongol (Khamnigan) Mongondow Moni Mono (in United States) Mono-Alu Montagnais Monumbo Mooré Mopan Mor Moran Moraori Mordvin (Erzya) Mordvin (Moksha) Moriori Moro Moru Mosetén Moss Motu Motuna Movima Mozarabic Mpongwe Mpur Mudburra Mufian Muher Muinane Muisca Mulao Mumuye Mun Muna Mundang Mundani Mundari Mundolinco Mündü Mundurukú Mungaka Munichi Munsee Munzombo Muong Mupun Murik Murle Muromian Murrinh-Patha Mursi Muruwari Muruwari Musgu Muskum Musom Musqueam Mussau Mutsun Mutsun Muyuw Mwera Mwotlap Mysian Na'vi Nabak Nadëb Nadroga Nadsat slang Nafaanra Naga (Mao) Naga (Tangkhul) Naga (Zeme) Naga Pidgin Nagatman Nagumi Nahali Nahuatl (Central) Nahuatl (Huasteca) Nahuatl (Huauchinango) Nahuatl (Mecayapan Isthmus) Nahuatl (Michoacán) Nahuatl (Milpa Alta) Nahuatl (North Puebla) Nahuatl (Pajapan) Nahuatl (Pochutla) Nahuatl (Sierra de Zacapoaxtla) Nahuatl (Tetelcingo) Nahuatl (Xalitla) Nai Nakanai Nakkara Nalik Nama Nambas (Big) Nambikuára (Southern) Namia Nanai Nancowry Nande Nandi Nanerge Nankina Nanticoke Nanticoke Nanumea Napu Nar-Phu Nara (in Ethiopia) Narom Narragansett Narungga Nasioi Naskapi Natchez Natchez Nateni Natügu Nauruan Navajo Navarro-Aragonese Nawathinehena Naxi Ncàm Ndebele (in South Africa) Ndjébbana Ndogo Ndonga Ndumu Ndut Ndyuka Nederlandse Gebarentaal Negerhollands Negidal Nehan Nelemwa Nend Nenets Nenets (Forest) Nengone Neo Neo-Aramaic (Amadiya) Neo-Aramaic (Arbel Jewish) Neo-Aramaic (Assyrian) Neo-Aramaic (Persian Azerbaijan) Neoslavonic Nepali Nevome New Zealand Sign Language Newar (Dolakha) Newari (Kathmandu) Newfoundland Irish Newspeak Neyo Nez Perce Ngaanyatjarra Ngäbere Ngad'a Ngadjumaja Ngalakan Ngalkbun Ngambay Ngamini Ngan'gityemerri Nganasan Ngandi Ngandi Ngankikurungkurr Nganyaywana Ngarinyeri Ngarinyman Ngarla Ngarluma Ngarnka Ngasa Ngawun Ngawun Ngbaka (Ma'bo) Ngbaka (Minagende) Ngbandi Ngemba Ngiti Ngiyambaa Ngizim Ngombe Ngoni Nguna Ngunnawal Nhanda Nharo Nias Nicobarese Nicobarese (Car) Nicoleño Nigerian Pidgin Nihon Shuwa (Japanese Sign Language) Nila Nimboran Ningil Nisenan Nisgha Nitinaht Niuafo'ou Niuatoputapu Niuean Nivacle Nivkh Nivkh (South Sakhalin) Nkem Nkonya Nkore-Kiga Nobiin Nocte Noghay Noghay (Karagash) Nomatsiguenga Noni Nooksack Noon Noric Norn Norsk Tegnspråk Northeastern Maidu Northern Kalapuya Northern Pomo Norwegian Nottoway Novial Nsenga Ntomba Nuaulu Nubi Nubian (Dongolese) Nubian (Kunuz) Nuchatlaht dialect of Nuu-chah-nulth Nuennone Nuer Nukak Nukuoro Nung (in Vietnam) Nunggubuyu Nuni (Northern) Nuosu Nupe Nüshu script Nusu Nuuchahnulth Nyah Kur (Tha Pong) Nyamal Nyambo Nyamkad Nyamwezi Nyanga Nyangi Nyangumarda Nyawaygi Nyawaygi Nyelâyu Nyigina Nyiha Nyimang Nyishi Nyulnyul Nyulnyul Nyungar Nzakara O'odham Obispeño Obokuitai Obolo Ocaina Occitan Ocuilteco Ogbia Ogbronuagum Oi Oirat Ojibwa (Eastern) Ojibwa (Severn) Ojibwe (Minnesota) Okanagan Oko-Juwoi Oksapmin Oku Old Anatolian Turkish Old Church Slavonic Old Kentish Sign Language Old Prussian Old Uyghur Olmec language Olo Oloh Mangtangai Olutec Omagua Omaha Ömie Omurano Ona One Oneida Onge Ono Onondaga Opata Ordos Orejón Oriel dialect, Irish Orig Oriya Oriya (Kotia) Orkhon Turkic Ormuri Oroch Orok Orokaiva Orokolo Oromo (Boraana) Oromo (Harar) Oromo (Waata) Oromo (West-Central) Orya Osage Osage Oscan Ossetic Ossory dialect of Irish Oto Otomí (Ixtenco) Otomí (Mezquital) Otomí (Santiago Mexquititlan) Otomí (Sierra) Otoro Otuke Owininga Pa'a Paakantyi Paamese Pacoh Padoe Paeonian Páez Pagu Paita Paite Paiute (Northern) Paiute (Southern) Paiwan Pakanha Pakuni Palaic Palauan Palaung Pali Palikur Pallanganmiddang Palor Palumata Pame Pamona Panará Panare Pangasinan Pangwa Panjabi Pánobo Panyjima Papiamentu Papora-Hoanya Parallel English Parauk Pare Paresi Päri Parji (Dravidian) Parthian Pashto Passamaquoddy-Maliseet Pataxó Hã-Ha-Hãe Patep Patpatar Pattani Patwin Paulohi Paumarí Pawaian Pawnee Pazeh Pech Peerapper Pemon Pengo Pentlatch Pero Persian Philistine Phlong Phoenician Phrygian Piapoco Piaroa Pictish Pidgin Delaware Pijao Pilagá Pileni Pima Bajo Pingilapese Pintupi Pipil Pirahã Piratapuyo Pirlatapa Piro Pisa Pisidian Pitjantjatjara Pitta Pitta Pitta Pitta Plain English Plains Apache Plains-Indians Sign Language Plateau Sign Language Playero Po-Ai Pochutec Podoko Pogoro Pohnpeian Poko-Rawo Pokomchí Pokot Polabian Polabian Poliespo Polish Pomo (Central) Pomo (Eastern) Pomo (Northern) Pomo (Southeastern) Popoloca (Metzontla) Popoloca (San Juan Atzingo) Popoloca (San Vicente Coyotepec) Popoluca (Sierra) Poqomam Port Sandwich Portuguese Potawatomi Powhatan Powhatan Prasuni Príncipense Provençal Puelche Puinave Pulopetak Puluwat Pumi Pumpokol Pungupungu Punic Puquina Purépecha Purí Purki Pyu Qafar Qaget Qatabanian Qawasqar Qiang Quechan Quechua (Ancash) Quechua (Ayacucho) Quechua (Bolivian) Quechua (Cajamarca) Quechua (Cochabamba) Quechua (Cuzco) Quechua (Ecuadorean) Quechua (Huallaga) Quechua (Imbabura) Quechua (Tarma) Quiché Quileute Quiripi Rade Raetic Raga Raji Ralte Rama Ramaytush Rang Pas Rao Rapanui Rashad Rawa Rawang Rejang Rembarnga Remo Rendille Rengao Rennellese Rennellese Sign Language Resígaro Retuarã rGyalrong (Caodeng) Riantana Rikbaktsa Rimi Ritharngu Ro Roglai (Northern) Romani (Ajia Varvara) Romani (Bugurdzi) Romani (Burgenland) Romani (Kalderash) Romani (Lovari) Romani (North Russian) Romani (Sepecides) Romani (Welsh) Romanian Romániço Romanid Romansch Romansch (Scharans) Romansch (Surmeiran) Romansch (Sursilvan) Romulan Ron Roncalese (Erronkariko) dialect Ronga Roro Roti Rotokas Rotuman Roviana Ruanruan language Ruga Rukai (Tanan) Rumsen Rumsien Rumu Rundi Runga Runyankore Runyoro-Rutooro Russian Russian Sign Language Russian-Chinese Pidgin (Birobidjan) Rutul Sa'a Sa'ban Saami (Central-South) Saami (Kildin) Saami (Northern) Saanich Sabaean Sabine Sabujá Sabüm Saek Sahaptin (Northern) Sahaptin (Umatilla) Saho Sahu Sakan Sakao Sakhalin Ainu Salar Sáliba (in Colombia) Saliba (in Papua New Guinea) Salinan Salinan Salish (Samish Straits) Salish (Southern Puget Sound) Salish (Straits) Salt-Yui Sama (Balangingi) Sama (Southern) Samaritan Samaritan Aramaic Samba Leko Sambahsa-Mundialect Samo Samoan Sandawe Sandy River Valley Sign Language Sangir Sango Sangu Santa Santali Sanuma Sapuan Saramaccan Sarcee Sardinian Sare Sarmatian Saryg Yughur Savi Savosavo Sawai Sawu Sayula Popoluca Scythian Sebei Secoya Sedang Seediq Selaru Selayar Selepet Selknam Selkup Selonian Sema Semai Semandang Seme Semelai Semigallian Seminole Sena Senadi Seneca Sened Sengele Sentani Serbian-Croatian Seri Serrano Serrano Seru Serua Sesotho Seychelles Creole Shabo Shambala Shan Sharanahua Shasta Shasta Shatt Shawnee Shekhawati Sherdukpen Sherpa Shilluk Shina Shinassha Shinnecock Shipibo-Konibo Shira Yughur Shiriana Shompen Shona Shor Shoshone Shoshone (Wind River) Shuadit Shughni Shuri Shuswap Siane Siar Sicanian Sicel Sidaama Sidetic Sidi Sika Sikaritai Sikkimese Sikule Sila Simeulue Simplified Technical English Sinaugoro Sindhi Sinhala Sio Siona Sipakapense Siraya Siraya Sireniki Yupik Siriano Sirionó Siroi Sisaala Sisiqa Siuslaw Siuslaw Skepi Creole Dutch Skou Slave Slavey Slovak Slovene Slovianski Slovincian Slovincian Slovio So Sobei Soddo Sogdian Solon Solresol Somali Sona Songe Songish Soninke Sonsorol-Tobi Sooke Soqotri Sora Sorbian Sorbian (Lower) Sorbian (Upper) Sorung Sotho (Northern) Sougb South Korean Sign Language Southeast Ambrym Southern Kayapó Southern Pame Southern Toussian Sowa Soyot-Tsaatan language Spanish Spanish (Canary Islands) Special English Spitian Spokane Spokil Squamish Sranan Sre Stieng Stoney Subiya Subtiaba Sudest Sudovian Suena Sui Suki Suku Sukuma Sulka Sulung Sumerian Sundanese Sungor Supyire Sursurunga Susquehannock Susu Sutean Svan Svenska Teckenspråket Swahili Swati Swedish Swedish (Västerbotten) Syldavian Syriac Taba Tabare Tabaru Tabassaran Tabla Tabwa Tacana Tagalog Tagbanwa (Aborlan) Tahitian Taiap Taino Taiof Tairora Taiwanese Sign Language (Ziran Shouyu) Tajik Takelma Takelma Takia Talaud Talinga Talysh (Azerbaijan) Talysh (Southern) Tama Tamabo Tamagario Taman variety of Sak Tamang (Eastern) Tamashek Tambora Tamil Tamil (Spoken) Tampulma Tanacross Tanaina Tanana (Lower) Tangale Tangbe Tangga Tanglapui Tangut Tanna (Southwest) Tanzania Sign Language Tapachultec Tapieté Tarahumara (Central) Tarahumara (Western) Tarangan (West) Tarao Tariana Tarok Tartessian Tashlhiyt Tasmanian Tasmanian Tasmanian (Oyster Bay to Pitwater) Tat (Muslim) Tatana' Tatar Tatar (Baraba) Tatar (Mishar) Tatar-Noghay (Alabugat) Tataviam Tati (Southern) Tatuyo Taulil Taushiro Tausug Tauya Tawala Tây Bồi Tayo Tboli Tectiteco Tehit Tehuelche Tehuelche Teke (Southern) Telefol Telugu Tem Temein Temiar Temne Tenctonese Tennet Tenyer Teonaht Teop Tepecano Tepecano Tepehua (Huehuetla) Tepehua (Tlachichilco) Tepehuan (Northern) Tepehuan (Southeastern) Ter Sami Tera Terêna Teribe Ternate Ternateño Teso Tetela Tetun Tetun Dili Tewa (Arizona) Tewa (Rio Grande) Tewa (San Juan Pueblo) Thadou Thai Thai Sign Language Thakali Thangmi Thao Thaypan Thompson Thracian Thulung Thurawal Tibetan (Dingri) Tibetan (Drokpa) Tibetan (Modern Literary) Tibetan (Shigatse) Tibetan (Standard Spoken) Ticuna Tidore Tifal Tigak Tigré Tigré (Beni Amer) Tigrinya Tiipay (Jamul) Tikar Tillamook Tillamook Tima Timor Pidgin Timorese Timucua Timugon Tinani Tindi Tinrin Tiriyo Tirmaga Tiruray Tiv Tiwa (Northern) Tiwa (Southern) Tiwi Tlapanec Tlingit Toaripi Toba Tobati Tobelo Tocharian Tod Toda Tofa Tojolabal Tok Pisin Tokelauan Tol Tolai Tommo So Tondano Tonga (in Zambia) Tongan Tongva language Tonkawa Tonkawa Tontemboan Toqabaqita Toraja Toratán Toro So Torwali Totonac (Misantla) Totonac (Papantla) Totonac (Sierra) Totonac (Xicotepec de Juárez) Trigedasleng Trique (Chicahuaxtla) Trique (Copala) Trumai Tsafiki Tsakhur Tsat Tsetsaut Tsez Tshangla Tsimshian (Coast) Tsogo Tsolyani Tsonga Tsou Tsova-Tush Tswana Tuamotuan Tuareg (Ahaggar) Tuareg (Air) Tuareg (Ghat) Tubar Tubar Tübatulabal Tübatulabal Tubu Tucano Tugun Tukang Besi Tuki Tulu Tumak Tumleo Tümpisa Shoshone Tunebo Tunen Tungak Tunica Tunica Tuoba Tupi Tupuri Türk Isaret Dili Turkana Turkic (East-Central Xorasan) Turkic (West Xorasan) Turkish Turkmen Tuscarora Tuscarora Tutchone (Northern) Tutelo Tutelo Tutsa Tuvaluan Tuvan Tuyuca Tuyuhun Twana Twana Tyeraity Tzeltal Tzeltal (Aguacatenango) Tzeltal (Tenejapa) Tzotzil Tzutujil Ubykh Ubykh Udi Udihe Udmurt Ugandan Sign Language Ugaritic Ukrainian Ulcha Uldeme Ulithian Uma Umaua Umbindhamu Umbrian Umbu Ungu Umbugarla UMbundu Umotína Umpila Una Unami Unami Ungarinjin Unggumi Unish Universalglot Upper Chinook Upper Kuskokwim Upper Umpqua Ura Uradhi Urak Lawoi' Urarina Urartian Urat Urdu Urhobo Urim Uropi Uru Urubú Sign Language Urubú-Kaapor Urum Usan Usarufa Ute Utopian Uyghur Uzbek Uzbek (Northern) Vafsi Vagla Vai Vandalic Vasavi Vata Vedda Venda Vendergood Venetic Ventureño Veps Verdurian and others Vestinian Vietnamese Vili Villa Viciosa Agta Vinmavis Vlaamse Gebarentaal Volapük Volow Volscian Votic Vulcan Waama Waamwang Wagawaga Wagiman Wahgi Wai Wai Waigali Waimaha Wakawaka Wakhi Waling Wallisian Walman Walmatjari Wambaya Wambon Wambule Wampanoag Wan Wangkangurru Wangkumara Wanman Wantoat Waorani Wapishana Wappo Wappo Warao Waray (in Australia) Waray-Waray Wardaman Warekena Warembori Wari' Waris Warlpiri Warluwara Warluwara Warndarang Waropen Warrgamay Warrnambool Warrongo Warrungu Warrwa Warumungu Wasco dialect of Upper Chinook Washo Waskia Watam Wathawurrung Wathawurrung Watjarri Waunana Waurá Wayampi Wayana Wedau Welsh Welsh (Colloquial) Welsh-Romani Wembawemba Wéménugbé Wenedyk Weri West Makian Western Desert (Ooldea) Wetan Weyto Whulshootseed Wichí Wichita Wichita Wik Munkan Wik Ngathana Wikchamni Wila' Winnebago Wintu Wintu Wirangu Wiyot Wiyot Wobe Wogamusin Woisika Woiwurrung Woiwurrung Wolaytta Woleaian Wolio Wolof Womo Worora Wotapuri-Katarqalai Wu Wulguru Wyandot Wyandot Xakriabá Xârâcùù Xasonga Xavánte Xerénte Xhosa Xiongnu Xiriana Xixime Xokleng Yagaria Yaghnobi Yagua Yahgan Yahi Yaka Yakan Yakoma Yakut Yalarnnga Yalarnnga Yale (Kosarek) Yali Yamba Yamdena Yamhill dialect of Northern Kalapuya Yami Yaminahua Yamphu Yana Yangman Yankuntjatjara Yanomámi Yansi Yanyuwa Yao (in Malawi) Yapese Yaqay Yaqui Yaquina Yareba Yaruro Yavapai Yavitero Yawa Yawarawarga Yawelmani Yawuru Yay Yaygir Yazgulyam Yazva Yei Yelî Dnye Yelmek Yemba Yemsa Yessan-Mayo Yeyi Yi (Wuding-Luquan) Yiddish Yiddish (Bessarabian) Yiddish (Lithuanian) Yiddish (Lodz) Yidiny Yil Yimas Yindjibarndi Yingkarta Yir Yoront Yokuts (Yaudanchi) Yola Yoncalla Yorta Yorta Yoruba Yucatec Yuchi Yucuna Yugambal Yugh Yugh Yukaghir (Kolyma) Yukaghir (Tundra) Yuki Yukpa Yukulta Yulparija Yulu Yup'ik (Central) Yup'ik (Chevak) Yup'ik (Norton Sound) Yupik (Naukan) Yupik (Siberian) Yupik (Sirenik) Yupik (St. Lawrence Island) Yupiltepeque Yuracare Yurats Yurimangí Yurok Yurok Yurt Tatar Yuruti Yuwaalaraay Zande Zaparo Zapotec (Isthmus) Zapotec (Ixtlan) Zapotec (Juárez) Zapotec (Mitla) Zapotec (Mixtepec) Zapotec (Quiegolani) Zapotec (San Lucas Quiaviní) Zapotec (Texmelucan) Zapotec (Yatzachi) Zapotec (Zoogocho) Zarma Zarphatic Zaum Zayse Zazaki Zenaga Zhang-Zhung Zhuang (Northern) Zimakani Zire Zoque (Chimalapa) Zoque (Copainalá) Zoque (Francisco León) Zoque (Ostuacan) Zoque (Rayon) Zulu Zulu (Northern) Zulu (Southern) Zuni ǀXam ǁXegwi
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2020.06.10 02:03 vaporwarewolf "Roses in Fall" (Fanfic/Adaptation Thing WIP; Feedback Wanted)
Yeah, hi, I was inspired to make something after discovering this. This is about 1100 words of stuff I've started writing as a loose adaptation. I've written some horror before, but this is my first time in this style. Wanted to get some quick/early feedback to see if this is going in a direction suitable for this base. Take a look, thank you.
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秋のバラ is a 27 minute, 1987 surreal horroguro piece produced and directed by Hiroshi Kamui. It is an obscure piece of Japanese anime aired as part of a late night horror programming block. It gained notoriety among English-speaking audiences under the name “Go for a Punch”, and later “Saki Sanobashi”, though these names are completely disconnected from the project.
The program, a short film about nine women (Inae-chan, Hime-chan, Sakura-chan, Ki-chan, Ribon-chan, Tora-chan, Mazushi, Nozomi-san, and Kaiyo-san) finding themselves suddenly trapped inside a bathroom after having come in to towel off following a hot-spring visit, became infamous for its intense imagery, focus on extreme violence, scenes of suicide, and portrayal of hopelessness and desperation.
The following is a loose semi-transcript of the events of 秋のバラ as they occur in order.
The program begins on a black background, with the words “PRESENTS” in bold, red, English letters. Both the first few seconds and the credits are missing almost in their entirety, so the production company behind 秋のバラ is unknown. Following “PRESENTS” fading out, the full title depicted in the style of classic Japanese caligraphy fades in, with several rose petals falling over it from the top right down to to the top left, as if being carried by wind. The words then fade into crediting Hiroshi Kamui for direction and concept.
Over this opening sequence is a traditional drum beat, hitting several notes in a row before pausing to repeat them, about five times. This is the only music in the entire program. The program hard cuts in the middle of one of these beats to Inae-chan’s right eye opening. The shot is a close-up, and interrupts the music. It fades between shots until the camera is panned out to her entire face at a 3/4’s view of her body.
She has a neutral look on her face, and only some cold, airy ambience plays over the shot. Then the waist of Nozomi-san passes the camera, which catches Inae-chan’s attention, turning to follow her. The shot switches to a panning shot of the bathroom. From left to right is Hime-chan putting her shirt on, Ki-chan running her towel through her hair, Ribon-chan brushing her hair, Mazushi letting her hair soak in the sink, and Kaiyo-san putting her shoes on, fully dressed. Most are tending to themselves, it doesn’t seem the women know each other all that well. Only Ki-chan and Ribon-chan are talking to each other.
The dialogue between Ki and Ribon is almost inaudible until the camera hard-cuts to them. They are discussing a few random events from their day, Ki mentions her ‘lousy idiot’ boyfriend, and makes an outdated political joke. Ribon nods along until a voice comes up from off-screen, Ki yelling back at it harshly. The voice belongs to Tora-chan, who is behind a bathroom stall door. The two enter a brief shouting match, until Mazushi bangs on the walls of an adjacent stall to silence them, staring down Ki and Ribon silently. After a moment, a stall door opens and Sakura-chan pokes her head out, asking, “I heard a loud noise...is there a fire?”
The camera switches back to Inae-chan, who hasn’t moved and is staring ahead at the loudly talking group. She whispers, “This doesn’t feel quite right…” A voice comes up from off-screen, who tells her, “Women that age don’t know how to act like ladies in public.” Inae turns to face Nozomi-san’s back as she puts her bra on, the woman standing in front of a shutter screen. “They should really get their mothers to teach them some discipline,” Nozomi adds. The camera switches to a view of Inae from Nozomi’s shoulder. Inae blinks a couple of times, then the camera switches to a wide shot of both characters in frame. “No, it’s not them,” Inae says, “This doesn’t feel right because…I don’t think I should be here.” Nozomi softly chuckles, and says, “You came here to bathe in the spring alone, didn’t you? You shouldn’t have to do that. You’re completely right you shouldn’t be here. Find yourself some friends to call your own, or better yet, a man to settle down with, then come back. It’ll all make sense then.” The same animation of Nozomi tightening her bra plays looping every few seconds during this. Inae adjusts, pulling her towel closer to her chin. “I...I don’t think that’s it, but...you’re probably right.” She then quietly adds, “Did I come here with someone?”
Another voice from off-screen. This becomes a hallmark of the program, likely owed to its low budget. Until the actual horror sequences begin, there is very little head-on dialogue from characters on-screen (i.e. seeing their mouths move). The camera switches to Kaiyo-san, wearing a sporty shirt and slack pants. She asks Inae-chan and Nozomi-san where the door out is. “I thought I was putting my shoes on next to it, but I can’t find it now.”
Nozomi turns, camera seeing her from the waist-up. Her bra is now on. “It shouldn’t be that hard,” she says with her hands on her hips. She points to her right and says, “It should be right...uh…” Her posture changes as she realizes something, and the camera cuts to a blank wall. Cutting back to Nozomi, she adds, “I...thought I came in that way.” Camera cuts to Kaiyo. “I must be mistaken,” she says with a sigh, “Can’t trust this failing old memory.” She walks off, presumably to find the exit.
Camera cuts to a low-angle of Inae. She looks to the wall and asks, “Why wouldn’t the door be there, though?” Nozomi replies from off-screen, “This new-age modern architecture would stump anyone.” Inae looks down as if in thought. Her attention is brought back up by Ki-chan yelping in pain, Mazushi having gotten her in some kind of hold. She’s pulling her arm back while holding her back down with her bare foot. “Either keep quiet or I rip it off,” Mazushi says in a rough voice. Ki is exaggeratedly begging her to stop. It’s clearly being played for laughs. Tora-chan then exits her stall, it being in the middle of the shot between Mazushi and Ki-chan. Tora-chan is sizeably larger than any of the women shown so far. Their eyes meet and Tora simply says, “Quit it or I’ll rip both arms off.” Mazushi immediately backs off.
Ki starts complaining to Tora about being beat up, and Mazushi and Tora seem to be about to enter an argument, until Kaiyo walks in from off-screen and asks, “Do any of you know where the door out is?”
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2020.04.04 17:03 TomAto314 Post Pull Depression - Rapish Thief Zidane
Hello and welcome to Post Pull Depression, the only thread that wants these 6-unit banners to STOP!
Oh wow! I thought we were just skipping over the FF9 banner. Fun(?) fact: The last FF9 banner was about 2 months late as well. March 2018 was when it released, it’s been over 2 years since. If you want to read the PPD for it you can
here. Or to save you the time, I’ll just give you some highlights!
do not google image search “guro” at work, or at home, or anywhere really…
I said this specifically so you would!
Fuck you Beer Steiner for making me pull for you just to get 10 more ATK on my Orlandu
Yes, it was that long ago.
The “I Let My Queen Die And Now Have a Misnamed Sword” Club?
Maybe her TMR should be (I Didn’t) Save the Queen?
Since there’s 6 of these fucking units, let’s just get right to it!
S/he A young "Qu" from the distant world of Gaia. Quina joined Zidane on his adventures to broaden hehis palate, and regardless of what situation he finds himself in, prioritizes learning about cuisine over everything else. He has a--
Whoa there! HE!? Did you just assume Quina’s gender? You did so well Goomie, and then fucked it up in the middle! How very Goomie of you.
TMR: Free Hat Head Chef's Hat - DEF+16, MAG+16, SPR+16, MAG+40%, HP Regen
40% MAG on a hat is pretty good. Although hats are one of the most common MAG boosting types out there. Maybe this would be better if it were an accessory? But how crazy would that be making something called Head Chef’s Hat an accessory?
STMR: May the Fork be with you Bistro Fork - Spear ATK+76, MAG+150, LB Fill+100, Wind/Earth Resist+20%
In case you haven’t noticed by now Quina has a whole food motif going on. S/he actually gains blue magic by eating the enemies once their HP drops.
Quina’s normal attacks in FF9 are actually heavily randomized. I guess now Goomie decides not to care about lore. RIP in Peace Angel Slayer.
Depression: WORLD ONLY HAVE TWO THINGS: THINGS YOU CAN EAT AND THINGS YOU NO CAN EAT
Quina was quite the treat in FF9. While most the characters were going about their angsty way and caring about the “plot” Quina just said fuck all this and runs around licking things.
Quina: “Aiya! What big stone! Why you all watch stone? Is stone edible? Or is for barbecue? No answer...I think I lick it.”
I think we all need to step back from our lives a bit and just lick things. Probably not literally lick them with the whole coronavirus thing, but figuratively lick things.
Zorn & ThornEvery Rose Has its Zorn & Thorn
Send in the clowns God these two suck. Both in FF9 as characters and in FFBE as a unit. Goomie didn’t even give a shit enough about them to update their CW skill to CWA. Yeah, they get the free MK unit treatment.
Light Flare - Fire magic damage (4x) to all enemies Chain=Chaos Wave
Btw, you have to unlock that and it can’t be multi-casted. So enjoy not even being able to hit max chain with it ever! I’m actually a little mad that they are a 4* base. This is 3* base shit here.
TMR: Sucks too Court Jesters - Increase MAG (40%); Increase resistance to poison (100%)
Thank god! Finally I can get some MAG while dealing with that pesky poison status! I do recall dying once from poison though, but then I was able to raise A.Fry and it brought back her triple cast, so uh thanks poison!
Depression: NOT EVEN THEIR FINAL FORM
If you were wondering if at any time these two merge together into some sort of monstrosity… well of course they do! This is a JRPG!
Meltigemini Sexy!
One time at the Earth Shrine… Fratley: “Hey everybody, why are there five of you?”
Beatrix: “whap-whap”
Beatrix: “whap-whap”
Beatrix: “...”
Beatrix: “...”
Beatrix: “...”
Fratley:
dead Beatrix: 13.6
Beatrix: 15.4
Beatrix: 14.6
Beatrix: 12.0
Beatrix: 11.2
TMR: MPee Burmecia's Strongest Dragon Knight - Increase ATK (40%) and MP (30%) when equipped with a spear
The 40% MAIN STAT HERE WITH SIDE THING meta is long past us now. And 30% MP? Seriously? Why isn’t this with 30% jump damage or something relevant to the unit?
Depression: VERTICAL
Fratley has quite the
vertical jump on his win animation. I want to pair him with Setzer and see if I can get him to jump into the airship propeller.
HALFTIME
I’ll be honest, these 6 unit banners are really starting to kill me--
You stand before the final dimension, and I am the darkness of eternity… Oh for fuck’s sake! Necron! What are you doing here? This is the middle of the post not the end!
People got mad at me for being at the end so now I think I’ll just surprise people on a bridge. I think Warmech already did that...
What if I hang out underwater and have unsuspecting people drive their sub into me. That’s Emerald Weapon. Have you thought about being a tutorial boss maybe?
I exist for one purpose... To teach new players the mechanics. This is the world that all life desires. There ya go, buddy. Good talk.
Black Mage For being an iconic job class in the FF series, there seems to be very few full on black mage characters in the series. It’s basically Vivi, Lulu, Palom and maybe Rydia? Like that’s it.
As for White Mages we have, Minwu, Rosa, Parom, Aerith, Eiko, Yuna and maybe Garnet and Vanille.
Confirmed that the FF series is racist but that’s why we all play it, right?
Every day is Doomsday! Doomsday - Dark magic damage (7.5x) with ignore SPR (50%) to all enemies and allies
Yes, this does hit your party too. It was like that in FF9 as well and even original Vivi has the skill which I’m sure you all noticed because we’ve used original Vivi extensively!
What you might not have known though is that this spell is called Jihad in JP, thus confirming my suspicions all along that Vivi is a terrorist!
Also, the Crusader esper in FF6 was originally named Jihad as well and attacked the party too. Naming it Jihad was obviously a no-go back on the SNES so they went with something crusade related instead which has zero negative connotations whatsoever!
TMR: HAT! Black Mage's Potential - Increase MAG (50%) when equipped with a robe rod; Increase fire, ice and lightning resistance (20%) when equipped with a wizard hat
I like how a Black Mage’s potential is conditional on the hat. Years of study? No. Innate ability? No. A hat? YES!
STMR: Mace Rod Mace of Zeus (FFIX) - Rod ATK+21, MAG+172, Doomsday +5x
If Mace of Zeus sounds a little familiar that’s because it’s one of the 12 Arms fights in FFBE. And it’s kinda shitty.
Mace of Zeus - Mace ATK+110, MAG+98, enables Ultima Blow
The FFBE version is an actual mace, while the FF9 version is a rod. Not confusing at all!
Depression: SAD!
“How do we prove that you exist…? Maybe we don’t exist?” Yeah, and how can mirrors be real if our eyes aren’t real?
The original Japanese line (Vivi’s, not Jaden’s) is better translated as "If you can't show proof that you're living/alive, it might as well be the same thing as being dead.” Which I think is a much better line. It goes from being some existential nonsense to being about living your life while you can.
Or Vivi can just equip Madam Edel’s STMR and be immortal!
Maybe he’s just not that into you… Always nice to see a strong female lead in video games. Not some wimpy white mage who needs protecting, but a strong warrior who’s entire existence is based on tracking down the man in her life that left her! And then when she does find him, he conveniently has amnesia. C’mon Freya, take a hint here ok?
Jumpmanwoman Rain Dragon's Vault - Physical damage (12.5x) to one enemy;Physical damage (25x) with timed jump delay (1 turn) to one enemy Chain=Divine Ruination
Wow, Rain has a vault of dragons. (Note to self: write FFBE dragon sex cult fanfic) Anyways, I’m bringing this up here because Freya’s jump skills are actually fairly unique. They do a single cast of a chaining skill (DR, AMoE, SR) and then she launches into the air like a normal jump and you can time it next turn like normal.
How would this work in practice? Fuck if I know. If you have two Freya’s they can chain but then you’d need support chainers for landing. If she’s tagging along as a finisher only one cast of the skill can go and most chainers do T-cast now so what’s really the point. Don’t get me wrong, I’m glad they tried something new instead of just being jumper #69.
TMR: Meh Master Dragon Knight - Increase HP/MP (20%) and ATK (30%); Increase LB gauge (2) per turn; Increase jump damage (50%)
This is kinda meh. Wind Veritas, a 4* old ass unit, has 25% jump with 50% attack with a spear. Let’s face it, what dragoon is not going to have a spear? You’d lose like 17 different passives not equipping one.
Really though you should just be using Reberta’s STMR. Don’t you all have one like I do?
STMR: Pearl Lance Holy Lance (FFIX) - 2H Spear, Light Elemental, ATK+173, Jump +50%
I’m actually a little surprised they went with Freya’s third best weapon in FF9 and not her second best: Kain’s Lance. I think that would have gone over pretty well!
Depression: FUCK FREYA
Freya was my one and only troll rainbow back in the day when you could still pull 3* units as rainbows. I will hate her eternally for this. Remember back then rainbow rates were 1% and pulls were few and far between!
I also used her to kill Ozma back in the day by relentlessly murdering dragons which powered up her Dragon’s Crest skill. Damage = number of murdered dragons squared. Only had to kill 100 of them!
Fashion Disaster Ok, there’s something I’ve been meaning to say for years now.
Zidane has a stupid fucking outfit. Like seriously fucking stupid. He’s got these oversized cuffs that don’t even connect to his shirt. He took a formal outfit and removed the sleeves and he obviously doesn’t know how belts work. And can someone buy him boots that actually fit? It’s embarrassing, someone help this poor guy.
TMR: Hold on Thievery - Increase ATK (40%) when equipped with a dagger; Increase ATK (30%) when equipped with a sword
Sorry, we can’t continue this until Zidane steals all the boss’ equipment.
CG Zidane: “Couldn’t steal anything.”
Sigh. Vivi, hold on don’t nuke the boss yet.
CG Zidane: “Couldn’t steal anything.”
Sigh. Freya, just like do Reese Pieces Breath or some shit.
CG Zidane: “Couldn’t steal anything.”
FFS.
CG Zidane: “Stole Mithril Sword.”
Oh thank Christ, that’s it right? Please tell me ‘Nothing left to steal.’
CG Zidane: “Couldn’t steal anything.”
And here we go again…
STMR: Caldabog Ultima Weapon (FFIX) - Dagger, ATK+173, TDW +50%
These are actually called ‘Thief Swords’ in FF9. I don’t what these double bladed things should be called, but I’m pretty sure thief swords is not it. Serge in Chrono Cross used a weapon like this and they were called
Spits Swallows. These are likely based on oars that were repurposed to weapons although generally only single bladed. So basically Chrono Cross collab when?
Depression: NOT EMO
After back-to-back emo protags Cloud and Squall, it was great having
rakish ol’ Zidane as the main character. He’s probably the second best FF protag after Vaan of course.
Apparently I have been pronouncing Zidane wrong all these years. It's apparently ze-DAHN, which I guess is better because ze-DAYNE sounds like something some
yuppie white couple would name their kid like Kashton or Jaxxon.
Post Pull Depression
What I remember most from my last playthrough of FF9 was not how I re-evaluated what the story meant through the eyes of an adult, but instead my characters just randomly dropping dead. They would occasionally glow orange and then just die. Turns out they were being inflicted with the “heat” status and any action taken in that status causes them to die, but here’s the thing: I was never taking any action with them. I'd be sitting there on the command input and poof! DEAD! Sometimes right away, sometimes it took a few seconds.
The answer to the mystery: I had regen on all my characters throughout the whole game and that regen counted as an action and killed the unit! Seems like a bit of an oversight. Kinda neat though that attacking them with water or ice cures the heat status. Still, that can fuck right off!
See ya next banner!
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2020.01.30 21:16 AnnieIWillKnow [REVIEW] January round-up - the perfect start to 2020!
Chelsea FC Women January round-up - the perfect start to 2020!
Welcome to the fifth Chelsea FC Women round-up of 2019/20, and the first of this calendar year! These reviews will be posted on a monthly basis throughout the season, featuring a summary of the exploits of Emma Hayes' Chelsea side, as well as a brief preview of the month ahead.
This post is a long read, so feel free to skip to the end for a brief overview, and the February preview.
Introduction
Following the winter break, Chelsea FC Women resumed their 2019/20 season in the new year sitting third in the WSL, and with a quarter final in the Continental Tyres Cup to be played. With FA Cup action also beginning for WSL teams, at the fourth round stage, Chelsea had a busy month in prospect, as Emma Hayes and her side looked to close the gap on Arsenal and Man City in the WSL, and progress in both domestic cups.
January would also see the arrival of new signing Sam Kerr - the Australian forward is widely-regarded as one of the best players in the world, and biggest stars of the game. Her arrival is a massive coup for Chelsea and English women's football, and could be a big boost for Chelsea in the title race. Chelsea also signed young Scottish forward Jamie-Lee Napier, from Hibernian, to add even more depth to the squad - depth that would be tested in the busiest month of Chelsea's season so far.
Chelsea 3-1 Reading (WSL)
The first Chelsea FC Women game of 2020 saw the Blues host Reading, in the WSL. Chelsea last faced Reading shortly before Christmas, in the Continental Tyres Cup - with Chelsea already having qualified for the knock-out stages, the two sides played out a 1-1 draw, before Reading went on to win the subsequent penalty shoot-out.
With Fran Kirby still recovering from illness, new singing Sam Kerr came straight into the team, with our other January signing Jamie-Lee Napier starting on the bench. Kerr nearly got off to the perfect start when she got in behind the Reading defence within the first 2 minutes, but the Aussie blazed over - potentially a two month break from competitive action playing a part.
Chelsea dominated early doors, but went 1-0 down when Reading's main dangerwomen Fara Williams finished well past Ann-Katrin Berger, after Chelsea had failed to clear their lines. Kerr was involved just minutes later in the biggest turning point of the game, when Reading keeper Maloney came out of her box to absolutely clatter the Aussie - and was rightfully sent off for the challenge. With Chelsea a player up, the Blues began to turn the screw and threaten the Reading goal more and more. Substitute keeper Laws pulled off a series of saves to maintain Reading's lead, before Chelsea finally broke the Reading resistance. Sam Kerr was involved again, flicking brilliantly into Beth England's path - and Chelsea's top scorer this season made no mistake, rounding Laws in the Reading goal to finish confidently, and put Chelsea back on level terms going into half time.
Chelsea continued to attack in numbers after the break, and soon another sensational goal gave Chelsea the lead, when Reiten netted a superb lob to put Chelsea 2-1 up. Substitute Erin Cuthbert made it 3 not long after, to give a Chelsea a comfortable lead. Sam Kerr made way with no goals to her name in her Chelsea debut, but after definitely having made a significant impact - and Chelsea saw the game out with little trouble. Jamie-Lee Napier came on for the final few minutes, to also make her Chelsea bow.
Elsewhere Man City and Arsenal both won comfortably against Spurs and Birmingham respectively, so all was as it were in the WSL, with Chelsea able to navigate a tricky fixture to keep the pace with our title rivals.
Chelsea 6-1 Bristol City (WSL)
Next up for Chelsea were WSL strugglers Bristol City. The West Country side sat second-bottom in the table going into this game and have only picked up 6 points all season. However, their only league win this year did come in their most recent fixture - massive victory over 4th placed Man United, in one of the shocks of the season. Nonetheless, City would not have been optimistic of coming away with anything from their trip to Kingsmeadow.
As expected, Chelsea dominated the game from the off. Emma Hayes (in her milestone 200th game in charge) rested Sam Kerr, who started from the bench, with Erin Cuthbert getting the nod in her place. Hayes also rotated the defence, with Jess Carter and Hannah Blundell coming into the side.
However, despite Chelsea creating chances and dominating possession, Bristol City took a surprise lead in the 15th minute, completely against the run of play - with Salmon capitalising on an error in possession from Erin Cuthbert. For the second time in two weeks Chelsea found themselves 1-0 down at home - and another comeback was essential against a team who had lost 11-1 to Arsenal back in December.
Fortunately, the team were not fazed by the set back, and soon drew level through Beth England, who continued her superb goal scoring form this season with a headed finish.
Chelsea then, to put it mildly, took it up a gear - Blundell put the Blues into the lead with a deflected strike, before Carter bundled over the line following a corner to score her first-ever Chelsea goal, making the score 3-1. Ji So-Yun added a fourth shortly before the break to put Chelsea firmly in the ascendency, with a fine finish from the outside of the box that is typical of the South Korean. Ji netted again just after half-time, and Chelsea showed no signs of slowing down, with Baggaley making several important saves to prevent more being added to the tally. entered the foray as a substitute, and was unlikely to see her attempt cleared of the line to deny her a first goal in a blue shirt. England eventually added a sixth to round off the afternoon and complete a comprehensive victory that for 10 first half minutes, had looked slightly in doubt. Not one to rest on her laurels, Hayes drew attention to Chelsea's need to improve defensively, in her post-match interview - being all too aware that although we can get away with such lapses against teams like Bristol City, we will less fortunate against stronger sides.
Man City and Arsenal continued their winning ways in their fixtures, meaning all was as it was in the WSL standings, heading into a crunch fixture for Chelsea, away to Arsenal.
Chelsea 3-1 Aston Villa (CTC QF)
Before facing Arsenal, Chelsea were to host Aston Villa in the quarter finals of the Continental Tyres Cup. Aston Villa are flying high in the Championship, sitting 6 points clear at the top - meaning that although Hayes had an opportunity to rotate ahead of the aforementioned crucial league game just 4 days later, this was not a side to be dismissed. As such, Ramona Bachmann, Deanna Cooper, and Sam Kerr came into the side, with Magda Eriksson also restored to the starting line-up. Ramona Bachmann has widely been thought to be the player who may give way with the new signings Chelsea have made, but was the first Chelsea player to go close, with a shot that went just wide of the post. Kerr and Beth England continued their burgeoning partnership by linking up well, leading to England hitting the crossbar, and Cuthbert then had an effort cleared off the line as Chelsea went closer and closer to establishing a lead against the second tier side. Kerr had a goal disallowed in the first half, and Villa just about managed to hold the Blues to 0-0 at the break.
Immediately after half time, Chelsea were knocking on the door again when Ramona Bachmann hit the post - the second time that night the Blues had struck the wood work.
It would have been easy to grow frustrated, but the Blues didn't let up, and found their reward in the 55th minute, when an Erin Cuthbert corner was met by the head of captain Magda Eriksson, to finally give Chelsea the lead. Once in the ascendency, Hayes took the opportunity to make changes - bringing on academy player Emily Murphy for Sam Kerr, and introducing our other January singing Jamie-Lee Napier in place of Erin Cuthbert. It was our third substitute, the tried and tested Ji So-Yun, who had the most immediate impact, scoring Chelsea's second within minutes of coming on in place of Bachmann.
With Chelsea looking like comfortably progressing, Aston Villa caused some late excitement by pulling a goal back 5 minutes from time, to bring the score line to 2-1 and test Chelsea's nerve. Chelsea responded in the best possible way, however, when Murphy became the second substitute of the game to net, bundling home a rebound after the Villa keeper had fumbled a Millie Bright course - to score her first goal for Chelsea, at the age of just 16.
Man City, Man United and Arsenal all won their quarter final ties, to complete an all-star semi-final line up - Chelsea were subsequently drawn away to Man United, whereas Man City will travel to Arsenal.
Arsenal 1-4 Chelsea (WSL)
With progress in the Conti Cup assured, the next matter for Chelsea FC Women was the short trip around the M25 to Boreham Wood, for one of the biggest fixtures of the season - Arsenal away. Last season's champions sat four points above Chelsea going into this game, with the Blues having a game in hand.
In the reverse fixture at Kingsmeadow earlier this season, Chelsea came from 1-0 down to earn a massive 3 points in this season's title race. Those remain the only points Arsenal have dropped all season, and whilst Chelsea remain unbeaten in the league, disappointing draws against Brighton and Liverpool see our London rivals sit above us in the league standings.
Both teams came into this game following league wins, but it was arguably Arsenal in the better form, with Emma Hayes having drawn attention to Chelsea's poor concentration in the defensive third in recent matches. A team like Arsenal will mercilessly exploit any vulnerabilities, and Chelsea needed to step it up.
What was to follow was certainly that step up. Chelsea dominated possession from the off, and after 10 minutes were deservedly 1-0 up thanks to a fantastic Bethany England goal, with the in-form forward cutting in from the right to curl a long-range strike past Arsenal keeper Zinsberger. Better was to come, as just two minutes later Sam Kerr nodded a Jonna Andersson cross home to score her first ever Chelsea goal - Arsenal (and the entire stadium) were then left utterly stunned by a sensational Sophie Ingle volley, which saw the Blues leading the champions 3-0 after just 20 minutes. Arsenal were thoroughly rattled, and were barely able to muster a meaningful attack in the first half, with Chelsea looking very befitting of the 3-0 lead.
Arsenal needed to respond in the second half, but Chelsea refused to let them into the game, and one Miedema chance aside, barely threatened. It was instead Chelsea who next found the net, when our careful build-up play eventually led to a cross from Andersson, and a Guro Reiten headed finish - to put the 3 points surely beyond doubt. An error from Berger in the Chelsea goal saw Arsenal's Beth Mead claw one back for the Gunners - Hayes responded by bringing on Blundell and Spence to sure things up defensively, and the Blues saw the game out with little alarm.
A remarkable Chelsea performance, in which we were confident, clinical, committed, and simply better in every aspect than our London rivals. The win sees us narrow the gap to just 1 point to the top of the table, with a game in hand, although it is now Man City who sit top, above Arsenal on goal difference. Chelsea have won all 3 of our games against fellow title contenders in the league so far this season - making a strong case to be considered favourites for the WSL.
Charlton 0-4 Chelsea (FA Cup)
Another London derby was to follow for Chelsea, as the Blues travelled to Charlton in the fourth round of the FA Cup - our first participation this season. Charlton were once powerhouses of the women's game, but were controversially disbanded (and then re-formed) in 2007, when their men's side were relegated from the Premier League. Over the past decade, Charlton have worked their way back up the league system, but currently sit eleventh in the Championship, failing to register a single win this season.
Notable absentees for Chelsea included Ji So-Yun and Sam Kerr, with the attacking duo set for international duty with South Korea and Australia, in their confederation's Olympic qualifiers. The Blues have reached three FA Cup finals under Emma Hayes, winning in 2015 and 2018. Last season, Chelsea fell in the semi-final to Manchester City, who went on to lift the cup.
Hayes made nine changes from the side that had defeated Arsenal, with Jamie-Lee Napier and Emily Murphy making their first starts for the club.
The Championship side held out for the first 45 minutes and pressed aggressively - Chelsea's attacking lacked its customary bite, with the Addicks proving a tougher nut to crack than was expected. Drew Spence made the breakthrough with almost the last kick of the half, striking home a pass from academy player Charlotte Fleming to give us a 1-0 lead at the break.
Murphy showed her forwards' instinct to bag us our second goal within a minute of the restart. The young England international brought down a cross from captain Eriksson and fired, triggering a fine save from Charlton keeper Startup - only for Murphy to bury the rebound. Spence stepped up to the penalty spot 10 minutes later after an Addicks defender brought Fleming down in the box, sending Startup the wrong way for our third. Fleming and Napier were denied in quick succession by Startup, and Reiten almost scored another wonder goal - but the wind had other ideas and pulled her shot too high. Another goal was on the cards, and it was Murphy who slid home her second of the game to seal the deal and Chelsea's ticket to the next round.
A 4-0 victory saw us comfortably through to the next round, and earned the Blues defence their first clean sheet since November!
Man United 0-1 Chelsea (CTC SF)
Chelsea's final game of a jam-packed January saw the Blues travel up north for our Conti Cup semi-final against Manchester United. Chelsea had edged a close game 1-0 at Kingsmeadow, earlier in the WSL this season, courtesy of a Maren Mjelde penalty. Both Chelsea and Man United have never before reached the final of this competition, so history was up for grabs.
After having been able to rest players at the weekend, Hayes named a strong team - with Telford over Berger in goal the most notable selection decision, with Hayes seeing fit to stand by her 'cup' goalkeeper'. Kerr and Ji remained absent, on international duty.
It was a slow start to the game, with Chelsea edging possession but neither side able to create anything of real significance. Chelsea came closest, with United keeper Mary Earps producing a fine save to tip a Millie Bright header onto the bar. With nothing to separate the sides, the score remained locked at 0-0 at the break.
The game livened up after half time, and some strong challenges from both sides got the crowd fired up, too. The referee was not a popular figure amongst the home fans - especially after waving away appeals for a United penalty, when Bright dispossessed Sigsworth in the box. Finally, it was Chelsea who struck the first blow - an excellent Erin Cuthbert through ball found Maren Mjelde on the right flank, who put a superb finish from a narrow angle past Mary Earps, to give Chelsea the lead. United struggled to muster a response, with Chelsea managing to keep control of the game and see out the remaining time - meaning Chelsea are through to our first ever Continental Tyres Cup final!
Elsewhere, Arsenal beat Man City 2-1, in Nick Cushing's last game in charge of City, before leaving to take up an assistant manager role for NYCFC - meaning February's final in Nottingham will be a London derby. The game is to be played on the Saturday 29th February, at Nottingham Forest's City Ground, and will be on live television - an excellent opportunity for Chelsea to get their hands on some early silverware, and add a trophy to our cabinet which we have never won before.
Summary
Six games for Chelsea FC Women in January - and six wins, as the Blues marched on in our pursuit of silverware. A victory over Charlton saw us progress into the fifth round of the FA Cup, and Aston Villa and then Man United were bested as Chelsea advanced to the club's first ever Continental Tyres Cup final. The biggest victory of the month, however, was a sensational 4-1 win over last season's champions, Arsenal, in the WSL - the win gives Chelsea the opportunity to inch above our title rivals in the standings, and although we currently still sit third, a game in hand means Chelsea are arguably in the best position in the title race.
The defence will have been a concern for manager Emma Hayes - the Blues conceded in each of our first four games of the month, with Hayes drawing attention to a lack of concentration. The month ended with back to back clean sheets, as Chelsea started to show signs of improvement.
Sam Kerr also made a successful start to her Chelsea career - earning an assist in her first game, against Reading, but was made to wait for her first Chelsea goal. When the goal did come, it was a massive one, against Arsenal. The forward missed the final two games of the month due to international duty, but what she has shown so far has excited Chelsea fans - especially how well the Aussie is already linking up with top scorer, Beth England, who netted four goals this month.
A mention must also be made for academy player Emily Murphy - the 16 year old scored three times for Chelsea this month, in just two appearances, and is a hugely exciting prospect for the future.
January results in brief:
Fixture | Result | Competition | Goal scorers |
Reading (H) | 3-1 | WSL | England, Reiten, Cuthbert |
Bristol City (H) | 6-1 W | WSL | England x 2, Blundell, Carter, Ji x 2 |
Aston Villa (H) | 3-1 W | CTC QF | Eriksson, Ji, Murphy |
Arsenal (A) | 4-1 W | WSL | England, Kerr, Ingle, Reiten |
Charlton (A) | 0-4 W | FA Cup | Spence x 2, Murphy x 2 |
Man United (A) | 0-1 W | CTC SF | Mjelde |
Looking ahead to February
Chelsea start February at home to West Ham, in the WSL - with Man City and Arsenal set to play each other, and the former having just lost their manager Nick Cushing to MLS side NYCFC, Chelsea could potentially go top. We then travel to face Man United, for the second time in just two weeks, following our 1-0 Conti Cup semi-final win, at the end of January, before hosting Birmingham. FA Cup action then resumes, with Chelsea having been drawn to face Liverpool in the fifth round.
February is another busy month for the Blues, and Chelsea end the month with another big fixture in the title race, away to Man City. Chelsea have had a poor record against City in recent years, but secured our first victory since 2014 against them, before Christmas.
The month comes to a close with the small matter of Chelsea's first ever Continental Tyres Cup Final, on Saturday 29th February - Chelsea will face Arsenal, who have won the competition a record 5 times, at Nottingham Forest's City Ground. The match will be televised live, and could see Chelsea earn their first silverware of the season, and make history for the club.
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2020.01.30 21:15 AnnieIWillKnow Chelsea FC Women January round-up - the perfect start to 2020!
Chelsea FC Women January round-up - the perfect start to 2020!
Welcome to the fifth Chelsea FC Women round-up of 2019/20, and the first of this calendar year! These reviews will be posted on a monthly basis throughout the season, featuring a summary of the exploits of Emma Hayes' Chelsea side, as well as a brief preview of the month ahead.
This post is a long read, so feel free to skip to the end for a brief overview, and the February preview.
Thank you to
PresidentRaggy, on her report on the Charlton game!
Introduction
Following the winter break, Chelsea FC Women resumed their 2019/20 season in the new year sitting third in the WSL, and with a quarter final in the Continental Tyres Cup to be played. With FA Cup action also beginning for WSL teams, at the fourth round stage, Chelsea had a busy month in prospect, as Emma Hayes and her side looked to close the gap on Arsenal and Man City in the WSL, and progress in both domestic cups.
January would also see the arrival of new signing Sam Kerr - the Australian forward is widely-regarded as one of the best players in the world, and biggest stars of the game. Her arrival is a massive coup for Chelsea and English women's football, and could be a big boost for Chelsea in the title race. Chelsea also signed young Scottish forward Jamie-Lee Napier, from Hibernian, to add even more depth to the squad - depth that would be tested in the busiest month of Chelsea's season so far.
Chelsea 3-1 Reading (WSL)
The first Chelsea FC Women game of 2020 saw the Blues host Reading, in the WSL. Chelsea last faced Reading shortly before Christmas, in the Continental Tyres Cup - with Chelsea already having qualified for the knock-out stages, the two sides played out a 1-1 draw, before Reading went on to win the subsequent penalty shoot-out.
With Fran Kirby still recovering from illness, new singing Sam Kerr came straight into the team, with our other January signing Jamie-Lee Napier starting on the bench. Kerr nearly got off to the perfect start when she got in behind the Reading defence within the first 2 minutes, but the Aussie blazed over - potentially a two month break from competitive action playing a part.
Chelsea dominated early doors, but went 1-0 down when Reading's main dangerwomen Fara Williams finished well past Ann-Katrin Berger, after Chelsea had failed to clear their lines. Kerr was involved just minutes later in the biggest turning point of the game, when Reading keeper Maloney came out of her box to absolutely clatter the Aussie - and was rightfully sent off for the challenge. With Chelsea a player up, the Blues began to turn the screw and threaten the Reading goal more and more. Substitute keeper Laws pulled off a series of saves to maintain Reading's lead, before Chelsea finally broke the Reading resistance. Sam Kerr was involved again, flicking brilliantly into Beth England's path - and Chelsea's top scorer this season made no mistake, rounding Laws in the Reading goal to finish confidently, and put Chelsea back on level terms going into half time.
Chelsea continued to attack in numbers after the break, and soon another sensational goal gave Chelsea the lead, when Reiten netted a superb lob to put Chelsea 2-1 up. Substitute Erin Cuthbert made it 3 not long after, to give a Chelsea a comfortable lead. Sam Kerr made way with no goals to her name in her Chelsea debut, but after definitely having made a significant impact - and Chelsea saw the game out with little trouble. Jamie-Lee Napier came on for the final few minutes, to also make her Chelsea bow.
Elsewhere Man City and Arsenal both won comfortably against Spurs and Birmingham respectively, so all was as it were in the WSL, with Chelsea able to navigate a tricky fixture to keep the pace with our title rivals.
Chelsea 6-1 Bristol City (WSL)
Next up for Chelsea were WSL strugglers Bristol City. The West Country side sat second-bottom in the table going into this game and have only picked up 6 points all season. However, their only league win this year did come in their most recent fixture - massive victory over 4th placed Man United, in one of the shocks of the season. Nonetheless, City would not have been optimistic of coming away with anything from their trip to Kingsmeadow.
As expected, Chelsea dominated the game from the off. Emma Hayes (in her milestone 200th game in charge) rested Sam Kerr, who started from the bench, with Erin Cuthbert getting the nod in her place. Hayes also rotated the defence, with Jess Carter and Hannah Blundell coming into the side.
However, despite Chelsea creating chances and dominating possession, Bristol City took a surprise lead in the 15th minute, completely against the run of play - with Salmon capitalising on an error in possession from Erin Cuthbert. For the second time in two weeks Chelsea found themselves 1-0 down at home - and another comeback was essential against a team who had lost 11-1 to Arsenal back in December.
Fortunately, the team were not fazed by the set back, and soon drew level through Beth England, who continued her superb goal scoring form this season with a headed finish.
Chelsea then, to put it mildly, took it up a gear - Blundell put the Blues into the lead with a deflected strike, before Carter bundled over the line following a corner to score her first-ever Chelsea goal, making the score 3-1. Ji So-Yun added a fourth shortly before the break to put Chelsea firmly in the ascendency, with a fine finish from the outside of the box that is typical of the South Korean. Ji netted again just after half-time, and Chelsea showed no signs of slowing down, with Baggaley making several important saves to prevent more being added to the tally. entered the foray as a substitute, and was unlikely to see her attempt cleared of the line to deny her a first goal in a blue shirt. England eventually added a sixth to round off the afternoon and complete a comprehensive victory that for 10 first half minutes, had looked slightly in doubt. Not one to rest on her laurels, Hayes drew attention to Chelsea's need to improve defensively, in her post-match interview - being all too aware that although we can get away with such lapses against teams like Bristol City, we will less fortunate against stronger sides.
Man City and Arsenal continued their winning ways in their fixtures, meaning all was as it was in the WSL standings, heading into a crunch fixture for Chelsea, away to Arsenal.
Chelsea 3-1 Aston Villa (CTC QF)
Before facing Arsenal, Chelsea were to host Aston Villa in the quarter finals of the Continental Tyres Cup. Aston Villa are flying high in the Championship, sitting 6 points clear at the top - meaning that although Hayes had an opportunity to rotate ahead of the aforementioned crucial league game just 4 days later, this was not a side to be dismissed. As such, Ramona Bachmann, Deanna Cooper, and Sam Kerr came into the side, with Magda Eriksson also restored to the starting line-up. Ramona Bachmann has widely been thought to be the player who may give way with the new signings Chelsea have made, but was the first Chelsea player to go close, with a shot that went just wide of the post. Kerr and Beth England continued their burgeoning partnership by linking up well, leading to England hitting the crossbar, and Cuthbert then had an effort cleared off the line as Chelsea went closer and closer to establishing a lead against the second tier side. Kerr had a goal disallowed in the first half, and Villa just about managed to hold the Blues to 0-0 at the break.
Immediately after half time, Chelsea were knocking on the door again when Ramona Bachmann hit the post - the second time that night the Blues had struck the wood work.
It would have been easy to grow frustrated, but the Blues didn't let up, and found their reward in the 55th minute, when an Erin Cuthbert corner was met by the head of captain Magda Eriksson, to finally give Chelsea the lead. Once in the ascendency, Hayes took the opportunity to make changes - bringing on academy player Emily Murphy for Sam Kerr, and introducing our other January singing Jamie-Lee Napier in place of Erin Cuthbert. It was our third substitute, the tried and tested Ji So-Yun, who had the most immediate impact, scoring Chelsea's second within minutes of coming on in place of Bachmann.
With Chelsea looking like comfortably progressing, Aston Villa caused some late excitement by pulling a goal back 5 minutes from time, to bring the score line to 2-1 and test Chelsea's nerve. Chelsea responded in the best possible way, however, when Murphy became the second substitute of the game to net, bundling home a rebound after the Villa keeper had fumbled a Millie Bright course - to score her first goal for Chelsea, at the age of just 16.
Man City, Man United and Arsenal all won their quarter final ties, to complete an all-star semi-final line up - Chelsea were subsequently drawn away to Man United, whereas Man City will travel to Arsenal.
Arsenal 1-4 Chelsea (WSL)
With progress in the Conti Cup assured, the next matter for Chelsea FC Women was the short trip around the M25 to Boreham Wood, for one of the biggest fixtures of the season - Arsenal away. Last season's champions sat four points above Chelsea going into this game, with the Blues having a game in hand.
In the reverse fixture at Kingsmeadow earlier this season, Chelsea came from 1-0 down to earn a massive 3 points in this season's title race. Those remain the only points Arsenal have dropped all season, and whilst Chelsea remain unbeaten in the league, disappointing draws against Brighton and Liverpool see our London rivals sit above us in the league standings.
Both teams came into this game following league wins, but it was arguably Arsenal in the better form, with Emma Hayes having drawn attention to Chelsea's poor concentration in the defensive third in recent matches. A team like Arsenal will mercilessly exploit any vulnerabilities, and Chelsea needed to step it up.
What was to follow was certainly that step up. Chelsea dominated possession from the off, and after 10 minutes were deservedly 1-0 up thanks to a fantastic Bethany England goal, with the in-form forward cutting in from the right to curl a long-range strike past Arsenal keeper Zinsberger. Better was to come, as just two minutes later Sam Kerr nodded a Jonna Andersson cross home to score her first ever Chelsea goal - Arsenal (and the entire stadium) were then left utterly stunned by a sensational Sophie Ingle volley, which saw the Blues leading the champions 3-0 after just 20 minutes. Arsenal were thoroughly rattled, and were barely able to muster a meaningful attack in the first half, with Chelsea looking very befitting of the 3-0 lead.
Arsenal needed to respond in the second half, but Chelsea refused to let them into the game, and one Miedema chance aside, barely threatened. It was instead Chelsea who next found the net, when our careful build-up play eventually led to a cross from Andersson, and a Guro Reiten headed finish - to put the 3 points surely beyond doubt. An error from Berger in the Chelsea goal saw Arsenal's Beth Mead claw one back for the Gunners - Hayes responded by bringing on Blundell and Spence to sure things up defensively, and the Blues saw the game out with little alarm.
A remarkable Chelsea performance, in which we were confident, clinical, committed, and simply better in every aspect than our London rivals. The win sees us narrow the gap to just 1 point to the top of the table, with a game in hand, although it is now Man City who sit top, above Arsenal on goal difference. Chelsea have won all 3 of our games against fellow title contenders in the league so far this season - making a strong case to be considered favourites for the WSL.
Charlton 0-4 Chelsea (FA Cup)
Another London derby was to follow for Chelsea, as the Blues travelled to Charlton in the fourth round of the FA Cup - our first participation this season. Charlton were once powerhouses of the women's game, but were controversially disbanded (and then re-formed) in 2007, when their men's side were relegated from the Premier League. Over the past decade, Charlton have worked their way back up the league system, but currently sit eleventh in the Championship, failing to register a single win this season.
Notable absentees for Chelsea included Ji So-Yun and Sam Kerr, with the attacking duo set for international duty with South Korea and Australia, in their confederation's Olympic qualifiers. The Blues have reached three FA Cup finals under Emma Hayes, winning in 2015 and 2018. Last season, Chelsea fell in the semi-final to Manchester City, who went on to lift the cup.
Hayes made nine changes from the side that had defeated Arsenal, with Jamie-Lee Napier and Emily Murphy making their first starts for the club.
The Championship side held out for the first 45 minutes and pressed aggressively - Chelsea's attacking lacked its customary bite, with the Addicks proving a tougher nut to crack than was expected. Drew Spence made the breakthrough with almost the last kick of the half, striking home a pass from academy player Charlotte Fleming to give us a 1-0 lead at the break.
Murphy showed her forwards' instinct to bag us our second goal within a minute of the restart. The young England international brought down a cross from captain Eriksson and fired, triggering a fine save from Charlton keeper Startup - only for Murphy to bury the rebound. Spence stepped up to the penalty spot 10 minutes later after an Addicks defender brought Fleming down in the box, sending Startup the wrong way for our third. Fleming and Napier were denied in quick succession by Startup, and Reiten almost scored another wonder goal - but the wind had other ideas and pulled her shot too high. Another goal was on the cards, and it was Murphy who slid home her second of the game to seal the deal and Chelsea's ticket to the next round.
A 4-0 victory saw us comfortably through to the next round, and earned the Blues defence their first clean sheet since November!
Man United 0-1 Chelsea (CTC SF)
Chelsea's final game of a jam-packed January saw the Blues travel up north for our Conti Cup semi-final against Manchester United. Chelsea had edged a close game 1-0 at Kingsmeadow, earlier in the WSL this season, courtesy of a Maren Mjelde penalty. Both Chelsea and Man United have never before reached the final of this competition, so history was up for grabs.
After having been able to rest players at the weekend, Hayes named a strong team - with Telford over Berger in goal the most notable selection decision, with Hayes seeing fit to stand by her 'cup' goalkeeper'. Kerr and Ji remained absent, on international duty.
It was a slow start to the game, with Chelsea edging possession but neither side able to create anything of real significance. Chelsea came closest, with United keeper Mary Earps producing a fine save to tip a Millie Bright header onto the bar. With nothing to separate the sides, the score remained locked at 0-0 at the break.
The game livened up after half time, and some strong challenges from both sides got the crowd fired up, too. The referee was not a popular figure amongst the home fans - especially after waving away appeals for a United penalty, when Bright dispossessed Sigsworth in the box. Finally, it was Chelsea who struck the first blow - an excellent Erin Cuthbert through ball found Maren Mjelde on the right flank, who put a superb finish from a narrow angle past Mary Earps, to give Chelsea the lead. United struggled to muster a response, with Chelsea managing to keep control of the game and see out the remaining time - meaning Chelsea are through to our first ever Continental Tyres Cup final!
Elsewhere, Arsenal beat Man City 2-1, in Nick Cushing's last game in charge of City, before leaving to take up an assistant manager role for NYCFC - meaning February's final in Nottingham will be a London derby. The game is to be played on the Saturday 29th February, at Nottingham Forest's City Ground, and will be on live television - an excellent opportunity for Chelsea to get their hands on some early silverware, and add a trophy to our cabinet which we have never won before.
Summary
Six games for Chelsea FC Women in January - and six wins, as the Blues marched on in our pursuit of silverware. A victory over Charlton saw us progress into the fifth round of the FA Cup, and Aston Villa and then Man United were bested as Chelsea advanced to the club's first ever Continental Tyres Cup final. The biggest victory of the month, however, was a sensational 4-1 win over last season's champions, Arsenal, in the WSL - the win gives Chelsea the opportunity to inch above our title rivals in the standings, and although we currently still sit third, a game in hand means Chelsea are arguably in the best position in the title race.
The defence will have been a concern for manager Emma Hayes - the Blues conceded in each of our first four games of the month, with Hayes drawing attention to a lack of concentration. The month ended with back to back clean sheets, as Chelsea started to show signs of improvement.
Sam Kerr also made a successful start to her Chelsea career - earning an assist in her first game, against Reading, but was made to wait for her first Chelsea goal. When the goal did come, it was a massive one, against Arsenal. The forward missed the final two games of the month due to international duty, but what she has shown so far has excited Chelsea fans - especially how well the Aussie is already linking up with top scorer, Beth England, who netted four goals this month.
A mention must also be made for academy player Emily Murphy - the 16 year old scored three times for Chelsea this month, in just two appearances, and is a hugely exciting prospect for the future.
January results in brief:
Fixture | Result | Competition | Goal scorers |
Reading (H) | 3-1 | WSL | England, Reiten, Cuthbert |
Bristol City (H) | 6-1 W | WSL | England x 2, Blundell, Carter, Ji x 2 |
Aston Villa (H) | 3-1 W | CTC QF | Eriksson, Ji, Murphy |
Arsenal (A) | 4-1 W | WSL | England, Kerr, Ingle, Reiten |
Charlton (A) | 0-4 W | FA Cup | Spence x 2, Murphy x 2 |
Man United (A) | 0-1 W | CTC SF | Mjelde |
Looking ahead to February
Chelsea start February at home to West Ham, in the WSL - with Man City and Arsenal set to play each other, and the former having just lost their manager Nick Cushing to MLS side NYCFC, Chelsea could potentially go top. We then travel to face Man United, for the second time in just two weeks, following our 1-0 Conti Cup semi-final win, at the end of January, before hosting Birmingham. FA Cup action then resumes, with Chelsea having been drawn to face Liverpool in the fifth round.
February is another busy month for the Blues, and Chelsea end the month with another big fixture in the title race, away to Man City. Chelsea have had a poor record against City in recent years, but secured our first victory since 2014 against them, before Christmas.
The month comes to a close with the small matter of Chelsea's first ever Continental Tyres Cup Final, on Saturday 29th February - Chelsea will face Arsenal, who have won the competition a record 5 times, at Nottingham Forest's City Ground. The match will be televised live, and could see Chelsea earn their first silverware of the season, and make history for the club.
If you are interested in learning a bit more about Chelsea FC Women, and keeping a closer eye on the progress of our women's team, then check out our subreddit, /chelsealadiesfc!
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2019.11.28 21:32 AnnieIWillKnow [REVIEW] November round-up - the winning streak continues!
Chelsea FC Women November round-up - the winning streak continues
Welcome to the third Chelsea FC Women round-up of 2019/20! These reviews will be posted on a monthly basis throughout the season, featuring a summary of the exploits of Emma Hayes' Chelsea side, as well as a brief preview of the month ahead.
This post is a long read, so feel free to skip to the end for a brief overview, and a preview of the month ahead.
Introduction
Chelsea began November sitting top of the WSL for the first time since we last won the league, in 2018, courtesy of a crucial win in early October over title rivals Arsenal. A win in the Continental Tyres Cup against Crystal Palace meant Chelsea also sat top of their Conti Cup group, and maintained an undefeated start to the 2019/20 season. Manager Emma Hayes was recognised for Chelsea's fine form in October, winning the WSL Manager of the Month award.
November was to begin for Chelsea with a return to Continental Tyres Cup action, with Blues travelling to face second tier Lewes in the third group stage fixture of the season, before domestic football was to take a break with a round of international fixtures. England were set to host Germany at Wembley, in front of a record-breaking, sell-out crowd. Fran Kirby misses out on the England squad, with both Chelsea manager Emma Hayes and England boss Phil Neville confirming in press that this exclusion is part of a long-term plan to manage Kirby's minutes, due to a chronic knee condition.
Following the international break, Chelsea were scheduled to play Manchester United Women for the first time in women's football history. Man United have impressed so far this season in their debut year in the WSL, and even claimed Man City's scalp in their Continental Tyres Cup group - setting up an intriguing game. Chelsea then close out the month with a Continental Tyres Cup home tie against Tottenham, before travelling to face Birmingham in the WSL.
Sam Kerr signs for Chelsea FC Women
The month of November was also significant due to some absolutely huge transfer news, with Chelsea announcing the signing of striker Sam Kerr. The Aussie is widely regarded as one of the best players in the world, and has a phenomenal scoring record - make no mistake, she is a bona fide super star of the women's game- the Aussie captain is the all-time leading goal scorer in the American NWSL, and the Australian W-League, and her arrival is a massive statement of intent from Chelsea FC Women. The signing not only signals Chelsea's big ambitions going forward, but is also a sign of how far we've come as a club - according to Chelsea boss Emma Hayes, Kerr had her pick of the top European clubs and chose the project at Kingsmeadow, an idea that would have been unfathomable just a few short years ago.
Kerr will be eligible to play from January, meaning she has some time to bed in to the team before making her debut. She will be under massive pressure, with unprecedented hype - but Kerr is used to delivering in high-stakes circumstances, and is a genuinely world class player who Chelsea will be greatly improved by. The competition is already intense at Chelsea for starting spots, with Hayes having easily the deepest squad in the WSL - the arrival of Kerr will increase that competition, and hopefully spur Chelsea on to new heights. You can read more about our new signing on the official club website, here.
International break round-up
November featured yet another international break, with the Chelsea players went their (temporary) separate ways for another round of European qualifiers, and friendliesErin Cuthbert scored for Scotland in a 5-0 qualifying win over Albania, whilst Guro Reiten scored for Norway as they beat Northern Ireland 6-0. No Chelsea players featured as 78,000 watched England lose 2-1 to Germany at Wembley. Millie Bright, Carly Telford and Beth England all came into the team for England's subsequent friendly against the Czech Republic, with England scoring her second goal in five England appearances in a 3-2 win for the Lionesses. Sophie Ingle captained Wales as they drew 0-0 with Northern Ireland in their qualification campaign, but the definite star of the international break for Chelsea was Ramona Bachmann, who scored a hat trick for Switzerland in their 6-0 thrashing of Romania.
Lewes 1-2 Chelsea (CTC)
Second-tier side Lewes are arguably most famous for their achievements off the field than on it, due to their reputation as the only football club worldwide to have an equal financial budget for both their men's and women's teams. Lewes sat sixth in the Championship going into this tie, and were winless in the Continental Tyres Cup so far, having lost to Crystal Palace and Reading in this season's group stage.
Playing at the delightfully-named Dripping Pan ground, Emma Hayes rotated heavily for this game, as she continued to make smart use of the resources at her disposal - and even gave a debut to academy player, Charlotte Fleming, in midfield. The Chelsea boss recently made her thoughts on the second cup competition in English women's football clear to the media - criticising its weekend fixtures, as it means that English sides have to take regular breaks from the league season.
Chelsea started on the front foot, and went ahead in the 10th minute, when Fran Kirby played a delicious through ball for the onrushing Erin Cuthbert to score her first of the season, and it looked set to be a relatively comfortable afternoon for Chelsea in truly miserable conditions - the driving wind and rain made producing anything of real quality very difficult for both sides. However, Lewes sprung a massive surprise when a sensational strike from ex-Juventus midfielder Katie Rood levelled the scores - entirely against the run of play. Chelsea dominated proceedings, but as in many games this season struggled to capitalise on the chances created, and the scores remained level at the break.
It was much the same in the second half, until finally, in the 80th minute, captain Magda Eriksson was first to a low cross, and slammed the ball home to give Chelsea the lead again. This time, Chelsea kept the lead, and earnt another 3 points to maintain a 100% winning record in the Conti Cup.
Chelsea 1-0 Man United (WSL)
Whilst the men's game paused for an international break, the women's game held the first (officially and heavily-promoted) 'Women's Football Weekend', designed to take advantage of the temporary lack of men's domestic games to boost attendances at WSL games. The first-ever top flight North London derby was held at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, and the Merseyside Derby was played at Anfield - with a WSL record 38,000 fans in attendance for Arsenal's 2-0 win over their rivals, and 23,500 in at Anfield to see Liverpool lose their fifth game of the league season.
Meanwhile, Chelsea FC Women were also breaking records, with 4790 fans turning up to Kingsmeadow (a record for a WSL game not played at a men's stadium) for the club's highly-anticipated first-ever fixture against Manchester United. Casey Stoney's team have given a fine account of themselves in their debut top-flight season, and sat fourth in the table going into this game. The match did not disappoint - an evenly-matched and high-quality affair in which both teams had several chances, and with standout performances from players of both teams, including Lauren James for Man United… a certain Reese's younger sister.
Both goalkeepers (Ann-Katrin Berger for Chelsea and Mary Earps for Man United) had to pull off crucial saves to protect their clean sheets, but when second-half sub Fran Kirby was fouled for a penalty, Maren Mjelde squeezed it past Earps to put Chelsea into a 1-0 lead that was simultaneously deserved, but a bit harsh on a Man United side who had competed so well. Kirby could have made the match more comfortable when fellow substitute Drew Spence set her up with just Earps to beat, but the United keeper made a fine stop to deny the Chelsea forward - Berger was then called into action to brilliantly tip Ella Toone's volley over the Chelsea bar, and then showed excellent command of her area to help Chelsea navigate several late United corners, and ensure Chelsea claimed another 3 points on a historic weekend for the WSL.
With Man City comfortable 5-0 winners over West Ham, and Arsenal's aforementioned derby victory over Spurs, this win for Chelsea was crucial to maintain the 1 point at the top of the WSL.
Chelsea 5-1 Tottenham Hotspur (CTC)
On the day that Jose Mourinho was announced as the new Spurs manager, Chelsea Women took on Spurs Women at Kingsmeadow, in a Continental Tyres Cup group stage fixture. Hayes handed a debut to 16 year old Charlotte Wardlaw at right back, amongst six changes from the weekend's game. Notably, Hannah Blundell also started, making a return to full fitness following a quadriceps injury sustained in the opening game of the season - also against Spurs.
An early wonder strike from Beth England in the game ensured that Chelsea have already beaten Spurs once this season, in an historic fixture at Stamford Bridge. Spurs gave a very good account of themselves that day, in what was a 1-0 win for the Blues, and Spurs have continued to impress in their debut WSL season. Chelsea sat top of their Conti Cup group, after three games, and progression into the quarter finals was likely to be relatively straightforward.
Chelsea dominated from the off, with Blundell (who was playing as a winger, and not in her usual full back position) having a very decent penalty appeal turned down, but Spurs were able to keep the Blues at bay, with the score level at the break. It didn't take long for Chelsea to take the lead in the second half, however, when Drew Spence finished off the rebound from an England shot, and soon after Blundell's continuing endeavour rewarded was when she won a penalty, which Erin Cuthbert duly converted. England added Chelsea's third soon after, following some wonderful exchanges with Ji So-Yun. Left back Deanna Cooper got a fourth, before former Chelsea striker Rosella Ayene got a consolation back for Spurs. Chelsea weren't finished yet, though, and England added a late fifth, after a thumping Magda Erikkson free kick struck the bar to set the forward up nicely for the rebound.
The game ended 5-1 to Chelsea, thanks to a superb second half performance - extending Chelsea's winning run to eight games on the bounce, and to secure qualification for the knockout stage of the competition, with one group game to spare.
Birmingham 0-6 Chelsea (WSL)
Chelsea travelled to struggling Birmingham for the next WSL fixture. Birmingham have long been a stalwart in English women's football, but the investment of other teams, and the loss of star players (such as Ellen White to Man City this summer) have left the Midlands outfit behind - and they sat second bottom of the table going into this game.
Chelsea got off to the perfect start when Ji So-Yun curled in a sumptuous free kick after just 2 minutes, which set the tone for a match which the Blues utterly dominated, outclassing Birmingham in every aspect. Millie Bright added a second, finishing off a move which she started with a charging run through from defence all the way into the Birmingham box. Bright then turned provider, with a stunning diagonal ball from defence which Beth England superbly brought down in the box before finishing past the Birmingham keeper to put Chelsea 3-0 up at half time.
The Chelsea dominance continued after the break - Drew Spence added a fourth, scoring in a second consecutive game, finishing a clever flick from Beth England. At this point it was far too easy for Chelsea, and Spence got Chelsea's fifth of the afternoon with a headed finish from a Ji cross - the Birmingham defence had absolutely no answer to the Chelsea attacking threat. England compounded the Birmingham misery with her second of the day, finishing off a Maren Mjelde through ball to complete a 6-0 rout for Chelsea - her ninth of the season in all competitions, for Chelsea. Man City and Arsenal both won to keep the pressure up, with the Blues maintaining their narrow 1 point advantage at the top of the WSL.
Summary
November results in brief:
Fixture | Result | Competition | Goal scorers |
Lewes (A) | 2-1 W | CTC | Cuthbert, Eriksson |
Man United (H) | 1-0 W | WSL | Mjelde |
Spurs (H) | 5-1 W | CTC | England x 2, Spence, Cuthbert, Cooper |
Birmingham (A) | 6-0 W | WSL | England x 2, Spence x 2, Ji, Bright |
Another perfect month for Chelsea FC Women - four wins from four, which saw us secure qualification to the quarter final stage of the Continental Tyres Cup, stay top of the WSL, and remain unbeaten in the 2019/20 season. Chelsea's winning run now stands at nine games in all competitions, as we look to re-establish ourselves as the dominant force in English women's football.
Perhaps the biggest win of the month was the announcement of the signing of global super star Sam Kerr, who will join the Blues in January. The Australian striker is one of the legitimately best players in the game, and her signing is a massive coup for the Blues. Not only will Kerr's firepower be a huge boost to Chelsea's title challenge in the second half of the season, but her star quality will bring added interest and engagement with the women's game in England - which has already made some massive strides this season in terms of attendances, in a month which saw several WSL attendance records broken.
Man City and Arsenal remain hot on Chelsea's heels - and with three such strong teams competing for the title, the room for error is minuscule. As leaders of the pack, Chelsea are under additional pressure, but Chelsea have won titles before as front runners, and are used to being favourites.
Looking ahead to December
Chelsea have a busy first half to December, ahead of a short winter break over the festive period. First up for the Blues is another away game, against Everton in the WSL - the Merseyside outfit have made an excellent start to the season, and sit fourth in the table, making this a very tough away fixture. Even tougher will be to come, however, when Chelsea host second-placed Man City at Kingsmeadow on December 8th, in a match which will likely be absolutely pivotal in this season's title race. Chelsea see out the month with our final Conti Cup group stage fixture, home to Reading, with the luxury of having already qualified, before hosting Bristol City in the final WSL game of 2019.
It will be a big ask, but if Chelsea can extend the unbeaten run throughout December, then we'll likely have put ourselves into an excellent position in the league going into the second half of the season - and given the tricky fixtures to Everton and Man City, this could prove a pivotal month in the Blues' season.
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2019.11.28 21:31 AnnieIWillKnow [Chelsea FC Women] November round-up - the winning streak continues
Chelsea FC Women November round-up - the winning streak continues
Welcome to the third Chelsea FC Women round-up of 2019/20! These reviews will be posted on a monthly basis throughout the season, featuring a summary of the exploits of Emma Hayes' Chelsea side, as well as a brief preview of the month ahead.
This post is a long read, so feel free to skip to the end for a brief overview, and a preview of the month ahead.
Introduction
Chelsea began November sitting top of the WSL for the first time since we last won the league, in 2018, courtesy of a crucial win in early October over title rivals Arsenal. A win in the Continental Tyres Cup against Crystal Palace meant Chelsea also sat top of their Conti Cup group, and maintained an undefeated start to the 2019/20 season. Manager Emma Hayes was recognised for Chelsea's fine form in October, winning the WSL Manager of the Month award.
November was to begin for Chelsea with a return to Continental Tyres Cup action, with Blues travelling to face second tier Lewes in the third group stage fixture of the season, before domestic football was to take a break with a round of international fixtures. England were set to host Germany at Wembley, in front of a record-breaking, sell-out crowd. Fran Kirby misses out on the England squad, with both Chelsea manager Emma Hayes and England boss Phil Neville confirming in press that this exclusion is part of a long-term plan to manage Kirby's minutes, due to a chronic knee condition.
Following the international break, Chelsea were scheduled to play Manchester United Women for the first time in women's football history. Man United have impressed so far this season in their debut year in the WSL, and even claimed Man City's scalp in their Continental Tyres Cup group - setting up an intriguing game. Chelsea then close out the month with a Continental Tyres Cup home tie against Tottenham, before travelling to face Birmingham in the WSL.
Sam Kerr signs for Chelsea FC Women
The month of November was also significant due to some absolutely huge transfer news, with Chelsea announcing the signing of striker Sam Kerr. The Aussie is widely regarded as one of the best players in the world, and has a phenomenal scoring record - make no mistake, she is a bona fide super star of the women's game- the Aussie captain is the all-time leading goal scorer in the American NWSL, and the Australian W-League, and her arrival is a massive statement of intent from Chelsea FC Women. The signing not only signals Chelsea's big ambitions going forward, but is also a sign of how far we've come as a club - according to Chelsea boss Emma Hayes, Kerr had her pick of the top European clubs and chose the project at Kingsmeadow, an idea that would have been unfathomable just a few short years ago.
Kerr will be eligible to play from January, meaning she has some time to bed in to the team before making her debut. She will be under massive pressure, with unprecedented hype - but Kerr is used to delivering in high-stakes circumstances, and is a genuinely world class player who Chelsea will be greatly improved by. The competition is already intense at Chelsea for starting spots, with Hayes having easily the deepest squad in the WSL - the arrival of Kerr will increase that competition, and hopefully spur Chelsea on to new heights. You can read more about our new signing on the official club website, here.
International break round-up
November featured yet another international break, with the Chelsea players went their (temporary) separate ways for another round of European qualifiers, and friendliesErin Cuthbert scored for Scotland in a 5-0 qualifying win over Albania, whilst Guro Reiten scored for Norway as they beat Northern Ireland 6-0. No Chelsea players featured as 78,000 watched England lose 2-1 to Germany at Wembley. Millie Bright, Carly Telford and Beth England all came into the team for England's subsequent friendly against the Czech Republic, with England scoring her second goal in five England appearances in a 3-2 win for the Lionesses. Sophie Ingle captained Wales as they drew 0-0 with Northern Ireland in their qualification campaign, but the definite star of the international break for Chelsea was Ramona Bachmann, who scored a hat trick for Switzerland in their 6-0 thrashing of Romania.
Lewes 1-2 Chelsea (CTC)
Second-tier side Lewes are arguably most famous for their achievements off the field than on it, due to their reputation as the only football club worldwide to have an equal financial budget for both their men's and women's teams. Lewes sat sixth in the Championship going into this tie, and were winless in the Continental Tyres Cup so far, having lost to Crystal Palace and Reading in this season's group stage.
Playing at the delightfully-named Dripping Pan ground, Emma Hayes rotated heavily for this game, as she continued to make smart use of the resources at her disposal - and even gave a debut to academy player, Charlotte Fleming, in midfield. The Chelsea boss recently made her thoughts on the second cup competition in English women's football clear to the media - criticising its weekend fixtures, as it means that English sides have to take regular breaks from the league season.
Chelsea started on the front foot, and went ahead in the 10th minute, when Fran Kirby played a delicious through ball for the onrushing Erin Cuthbert to score her first of the season, and it looked set to be a relatively comfortable afternoon for Chelsea in truly miserable conditions - the driving wind and rain made producing anything of real quality very difficult for both sides. However, Lewes sprung a massive surprise when a sensational strike from ex-Juventus midfielder Katie Rood levelled the scores - entirely against the run of play. Chelsea dominated proceedings, but as in many games this season struggled to capitalise on the chances created, and the scores remained level at the break.
It was much the same in the second half, until finally, in the 80th minute, captain Magda Eriksson was first to a low cross, and slammed the ball home to give Chelsea the lead again. This time, Chelsea kept the lead, and earnt another 3 points to maintain a 100% winning record in the Conti Cup.
Chelsea 1-0 Man United (WSL)
Whilst the men's game paused for an international break, the women's game held the first (officially and heavily-promoted) 'Women's Football Weekend', designed to take advantage of the temporary lack of men's domestic games to boost attendances at WSL games. The first-ever top flight North London derby was held at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, and the Merseyside Derby was played at Anfield - with a WSL record 38,000 fans in attendance for Arsenal's 2-0 win over their rivals, and 23,500 in at Anfield to see Liverpool lose their fifth game of the league season.
Meanwhile, Chelsea FC Women were also breaking records, with 4790 fans turning up to Kingsmeadow (a record for a WSL game not played at a men's stadium) for the club's highly-anticipated first-ever fixture against Manchester United. Casey Stoney's team have given a fine account of themselves in their debut top-flight season, and sat fourth in the table going into this game. The match did not disappoint - an evenly-matched and high-quality affair in which both teams had several chances, and with standout performances from players of both teams, including Lauren James for Man United… a certain Reese's younger sister.
Both goalkeepers (Ann-Katrin Berger for Chelsea and Mary Earps for Man United) had to pull off crucial saves to protect their clean sheets, but when second-half sub Fran Kirby was fouled for a penalty, Maren Mjelde squeezed it past Earps to put Chelsea into a 1-0 lead that was simultaneously deserved, but a bit harsh on a Man United side who had competed so well. Kirby could have made the match more comfortable when fellow substitute Drew Spence set her up with just Earps to beat, but the United keeper made a fine stop to deny the Chelsea forward - Berger was then called into action to brilliantly tip Ella Toone's volley over the Chelsea bar, and then showed excellent command of her area to help Chelsea navigate several late United corners, and ensure Chelsea claimed another 3 points on a historic weekend for the WSL.
With Man City comfortable 5-0 winners over West Ham, and Arsenal's aforementioned derby victory over Spurs, this win for Chelsea was crucial to maintain the 1 point at the top of the WSL.
Chelsea 5-1 Tottenham Hotspur (CTC)
On the day that Jose Mourinho was announced as the new Spurs manager, Chelsea Women took on Spurs Women at Kingsmeadow, in a Continental Tyres Cup group stage fixture. Hayes handed a debut to 16 year old Charlotte Wardlaw at right back, amongst six changes from the weekend's game. Notably, Hannah Blundell also started, making a return to full fitness following a quadriceps injury sustained in the opening game of the season - also against Spurs.
An early wonder strike from Beth England in the game ensured that Chelsea have already beaten Spurs once this season, in an historic fixture at Stamford Bridge. Spurs gave a very good account of themselves that day, in what was a 1-0 win for the Blues, and Spurs have continued to impress in their debut WSL season. Chelsea sat top of their Conti Cup group, after three games, and progression into the quarter finals was likely to be relatively straightforward.
Chelsea dominated from the off, with Blundell (who was playing as a winger, and not in her usual full back position) having a very decent penalty appeal turned down, but Spurs were able to keep the Blues at bay, with the score level at the break. It didn't take long for Chelsea to take the lead in the second half, however, when Drew Spence finished off the rebound from an England shot, and soon after Blundell's continuing endeavour rewarded was when she won a penalty, which Erin Cuthbert duly converted. England added Chelsea's third soon after, following some wonderful exchanges with Ji So-Yun. Left back Deanna Cooper got a fourth, before former Chelsea striker Rosella Ayene got a consolation back for Spurs. Chelsea weren't finished yet, though, and England added a late fifth, after a thumping Magda Erikkson free kick struck the bar to set the forward up nicely for the rebound.
The game ended 5-1 to Chelsea, thanks to a superb second half performance - extending Chelsea's winning run to eight games on the bounce, and to secure qualification for the knockout stage of the competition, with one group game to spare.
Birmingham 0-6 Chelsea (WSL)
Chelsea travelled to struggling Birmingham for the next WSL fixture. Birmingham have long been a stalwart in English women's football, but the investment of other teams, and the loss of star players (such as Ellen White to Man City this summer) have left the Midlands outfit behind - and they sat second bottom of the table going into this game.
Chelsea got off to the perfect start when Ji So-Yun curled in a sumptuous free kick after just 2 minutes, which set the tone for a match which the Blues utterly dominated, outclassing Birmingham in every aspect. Millie Bright added a second, finishing off a move which she started with a charging run through from defence all the way into the Birmingham box. Bright then turned provider, with a stunning diagonal ball from defence which Beth England superbly brought down in the box before finishing past the Birmingham keeper to put Chelsea 3-0 up at half time.
The Chelsea dominance continued after the break - Drew Spence added a fourth, scoring in a second consecutive game, finishing a clever flick from Beth England. At this point it was far too easy for Chelsea, and Spence got Chelsea's fifth of the afternoon with a headed finish from a Ji cross - the Birmingham defence had absolutely no answer to the Chelsea attacking threat. England compounded the Birmingham misery with her second of the day, finishing off a Maren Mjelde through ball to complete a 6-0 rout for Chelsea - her ninth of the season in all competitions, for Chelsea. Man City and Arsenal both won to keep the pressure up, with the Blues maintaining their narrow 1 point advantage at the top of the WSL.
Summary
November results in brief:
Fixture | Result | Competition | Goal scorers |
Lewes (A) | 2-1 W | CTC | Cuthbert, Eriksson |
Man United (H) | 1-0 W | WSL | Mjelde |
Spurs (H) | 5-1 W | CTC | England x 2, Spence, Cuthbert, Cooper |
Birmingham (A) | 6-0 W | WSL | England x 2, Spence x 2, Ji, Bright |
Another perfect month for Chelsea FC Women - four wins from four, which saw us secure qualification to the quarter final stage of the Continental Tyres Cup, stay top of the WSL, and remain unbeaten in the 2019/20 season. Chelsea's winning run now stands at nine games in all competitions, as we look to re-establish ourselves as the dominant force in English women's football.
Perhaps the biggest win of the month was the announcement of the signing of global super star Sam Kerr, who will join the Blues in January. The Australian striker is one of the legitimately best players in the game, and her signing is a massive coup for the Blues. Not only will Kerr's firepower be a huge boost to Chelsea's title challenge in the second half of the season, but her star quality will bring added interest and engagement with the women's game in England - which has already made some massive strides this season in terms of attendances, in a month which saw several WSL attendance records broken.
Man City and Arsenal remain hot on Chelsea's heels - and with three such strong teams competing for the title, the room for error is minuscule. As leaders of the pack, Chelsea are under additional pressure, but Chelsea have won titles before as front runners, and are used to being favourites.
Looking ahead to December
Chelsea have a busy first half to December, ahead of a short winter break over the festive period. First up for the Blues is another away game, against Everton in the WSL - the Merseyside outfit have made an excellent start to the season, and sit fourth in the table, making this a very tough away fixture. Even tougher will be to come, however, when Chelsea host second-placed Man City at Kingsmeadow on December 8th, in a match which will likely be absolutely pivotal in this season's title race. Chelsea see out the month with our final Conti Cup group stage fixture, home to Reading, with the luxury of having already qualified, before hosting Bristol City in the final WSL game of 2019.
It will be a big ask, but if Chelsea can extend the unbeaten run throughout December, then we'll likely have put ourselves into an excellent position in the league going into the second half of the season - and given the tricky fixtures to Everton and Man City, this could prove a pivotal month in the Blues' season.
If you are interested in learning a bit more about Chelsea FC Women, and keeping a closer eye on the progress of our women's team, then check out our subreddit, /chelsealadiesfc!
UTC!
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2019.11.16 10:50 PresidentRaggy [MATCH THREAD] Manchester United Women vs. Chelsea Women (H) - 14:00 GMT, 17/11 (WSL)
DATE: 17 November 2019
KO: 14:00 GMT
Competition: FA WSL
Venue: Kingsmeadow
Attendance: 4,790 (a record!)
Welcome to the /chelsealadiesfc match thread as top-of-the-table Chelsea host newly promoted Manchester United for the first time!
PREVIEW
Chelsea have won their last six games in all competitions, and remain the only unbeaten team left in the division.
New blood United have won five out of their last six but have not conceded since 16 September in a 1-0 loss against Arsenal in the league. United are fourth in the table, behind their sky-blue neighbours. They’ve performed well so far in their debut season in the top flight.
NEWS, NOTES, AND QUOTES
This match is part of FA’s Women’s Football Weekend. With men’s teams on international break, the push this weekend is for people to get out to their local stadiums and support the women’s game. Four women’s games are being played at bigger stadiums elsewhere in the WSL: The Merseyside clubs clash at Anfield and are expected to draw upwards of 10,000 on Sunday at 4. Arsenal visit Spurs at the new Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, also at 4pm. Brighton host Birmingham City at the AMEX at 1pm, and Reading welcomes Bristol City to Madejski Stadium at 3pm.
Chelsea have a busy seven days ahead. Tottenham visit for a Conti Cup group fixture on Wednesday evening, then the Blues head to Birmingham for a WSL match next Sunday.
We had huge news midweek as Australian powerhouse Sam Kerr signed for Chelsea. She will join the squad in January. Check out her first interview on the club website.
Fun facts: Reece James' sister Lauren is in the starting 11 for United. United manager Casey Stoney played for Chelsea for 4 years.
Players were on international break this past week -- check out this recap from the Chelsea site.
Fran Kirby sat out her England duties as she is still recovering from injury. Our star forward has yet to score this season for the Blues. She spoke to the Chelsea site about Sunday’s match and her fitness:
I’m feeling really good, I’m working really hard in training and I’m feeling really good when I play. . . . I’m fit to train and play games but everything else on top of it would be a bit too much at the moment. For me I want my season and career to go up for a while rather than go up and then back down, I want it to keep building and keep going right so hopefully I can get myself back in form. But I am feeling good and fitter than I have been for a long time, I’m building my confidence up in training around the girls and I’m ready to go for Sunday.
On United:
I’m really looking forward to it, they have been doing well this year. I think they have shown what qualities they have in their games that they have come through, but we have had a good start to the season and we want to continue and build on that.
HOW TO FOLLOW:
This match will be featured on The FA Player, which is a free service streaming women’s football matches this season.
The Chelsea FCW Twitter page will also have updates.
LINE-UPS:
CHELSEA: Berger; Mjelde, Bright, Eriksson (c), Andersson; Cuthbert, Ingle, Ji; Bachmann, England, Reiten.
Subs: Telford, Blundell, Carter, Cooper, Spence, Kirby.
UNITED: Earps, A. Turner, McManus, M. Turner, Harris, Zelem, Ladd, Groenen, Hanson, James, Galson.
Subs: Mikalsen, Okvist, Toone, Sigsworth, Arnot, Ross, Smith.
MATCH EVENTS
1' And away we go! Come on you Blues!
5' United muscle out a Chelsea attack. First Chelsea corner of the contest!
7' Eriksson takes a shot but it flies way north of the bar.
7' James earns United a corner. Chelsea defend rather sloppily and Berger is forced to make an awkward coverage near the goal line.
10' Ji goes to unleash a shot but she's closed down. England tries to backheel to Cuthbert but the ball gets caught under some United defenders.
13' James works the ball well for United but Bright is close enough on her to prevent her doing anything too dangerous.
16' A nice ball in from Reiten sails over the goal.
17' Yellow card for Turner (MUN) for a handball several minutes earlier. She later executes a great tackle to stop Beth England surging forward.
18' James makes a shot but doesn't finish it very well.
20' United posing Chelsea a decent challenge here at Kingsmeadow, keeping the pressure on. Berger makes a rather easy save after a shot from Groenen.
24' Bright makes a lovely run from defense and sets us up for a corner kick.
25' United on their second corner down the other end of the pitch.
27' Berger needs some treatment after James appears to knee her in the forehead.
29' Berger back up after some checks from the med staff. Down the other end, Ji shoots first-time but can't hit the target.
33' The final touch eludes the Blues again - this certainly has been a game with some missed chances on both sides.
40' Great stop from Mjelde to cut out a ball from James across the face of goal. Utd corner is away to safety.
41' Reiten is off down the field and McMannis is given a yellow card for chopping down Guro Reiten. Free kick is given. Amy Turner already has a card but was involved in the incident.
45' Nice shot from Eriksson with plenty of power, but it doesn't test Earps too harshly.
45' +1' Cuthbert given a yellow card.
45' +2' United have a corner at the break and it's ushered out of the box as the whistle blows.
HALFTIME: CHELSEA 0-0 MANCHESTER UNITED
46' Back underway at a darkening Kingsmeadow.
47' Reiten sends in a free kick that United deals with easily.
49' Good run up the left side from Beth England. United's keeper manages to take control of the situation.
50' United offside down the left flank.
52' Bit of a soft free kick given against Ji, who has fought hard this run of play. It's off to the left of the top corner of the box. It's put in almost right at Ann-Katrin Berger.
54' Again quick hands from Berger to collect a cross. United playing quick off any ball they get.
55' Ball goes behind for a Chelsea corner! Delivery is aimed at Bright but United are on a counter again. Ji does her best to hold off James, who is eventually fouled by Bachmann.
56' MUN free kick near the left goal line corner. Eriksson heads away, it becomes nothing for United.
58' Cuthbert chases a ball but doesn't have the legs to pick up a pass from Reiten down United's end.
59' Sigworth (MUN) on for Hanson.
60' Cuthbert has a great chance, hitting the ball on the half volley but it goes left of the goal.
62' Chelsea corner, Reiten takes and United boot it out. Chelsea take it all the way back to Berger to bring it forward again.
63' Kirby (CHE) on for Reiten.
64' McMannus penalized for a foul on Kirby near the goal line. Fran looks a bit in pain but she's back up. Mjelde to take it...........
65' GOOOOOALLLL! Mjelde's shot finds the bottom corner and the Blues are ahead 1-0 with 25 minutes to go.
68' Bachmann takes another Chelsea corner. Amy Turner touches it behind for another corner on the opposite corner. Bright whiffs a first attempt and winds up a volley -- it's knocked behind for another corner.
70' Chelsea still on the attack - Ji pulls off a particularly beautiful pass. Cuthbert draws a free kick and a yellow card is given against Ladd. Ball comes back to United.
74' Toone (MUN) on for captain Zelem.
75' England working hard to control the ball in United's box.
77' James has a shot that flies over the bar.
78' Spence (CHE) on for Bachmann.
80' Spence feeds Kirby, who takes a shot that's very close to the keeper.
80' Ross (MUN) on for James.
81' Kirby is off and tries to round the goalkeeper, but a United defender closes her down before she can get a finish.
82' Berger appears to tip a shot against the bar and it bounces out, United appeal for a goal but the ball goes behind instead for a corner.
85' Chelsea corner after a battle for a shot in the box. United keeper collects it confidently and distributes quickly.
87' Carter (CHE) on for Ji.
88' Good defending from Eriksson. United corner. Berger gets something on it and the ball ultimately sails behind.
90' Chelsea draw a free kick on the ride side of the pitch, in a great area to send a ball in.
90' Four minutes stoppage time.
92' Berger grabs a corner with confidence.
90+4' FULL TIME: CHELSEA 1-0 MANCHESTER UNITED! A brilliant save from Berger kept a clean sheet and Chelsea stay on top of the WSL. Maren Mjelde's penalty was the difference in this exciting first meeting between these clubs at Kingsmeadow. Who was your player of the match?
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2019.09.28 17:54 PresidentRaggy MATCH THREAD: Bristol City Women vs. Chelsea FC Women (A) 14:00 BST (29/09)
Chelsea FC Women vs. Bristol City Women FC
Date: September 29, 2019
KO: 15:00 BST/14:00 GMT
Venue: Stoke Gifford Stadium
Competition: FA WSL
MATCH PREVIEW:
This is the third FA WSL match this season for Chelsea, who won their opening match against Tottenham 1-0 at Stamford Bridge and settled for a 1-1 draw in Brighton. The draw on the south coast was a bit frustrating for the Blues, who went behind after a late goal from Aileen Whelan and had a point saved when Adelina Engman scored in stoppage time.
Last weekend, Chelsea welcomed West Ham to KT1 for a Continental Tyres Cup group stage match. The Hammers kept Chelsea on their toes and off the scoresheet in the first half, though the Blues looked sharp in the first 10 minutes. Both teams had a number of chances in that opening 45 minutes. Shortly after the break, Bethany England settled a long pass from Magda Eriksson and finished the ball crisply into the net of Anna Moorhouse. On 70 minutes, Guro Reiten’s corner kick dipped into the goal, and the Norwegian was credited for her first goal in Blue! (There is some discussion on if Moorhouse punched it into her own net but at the moment, it remains Reiten’s.)
Bristol City won their Conti Cup match 3-0 against London Bees last weekend. So far in the FA WSL they drew against Brighton and lost 2-0 to Everton, who sit top of the table currently.
Chelsea have played some very special games with the Vixens, including the game at Stoke Gifford Stadium that clinched the 2017/18 WSL title. We also opened that season against Bristol City, in our first game at Kingsmeadow, with a 6-0 victory.
NEWS, NOTES, AND QUOTES
Fran Kirby returned as a substitute against the Hammers last weekend after battling a knee injury for some time.
Sophie Ingle, who spent two years at Bristol City, has an interview on the Chelsea website about what to expect from the Vixens.
‘I think Bristol will be hard-working, they will probably go into a mid-block and try to limit our space, but on a counter-attack they have fast players going forward and that’s what they play upon. We’ve got the strength and character throughout the squad to deal with that. We need to be patient, we need to try and move their block with late runs going into the box and limit our touches as I think that will be important. We’ll make sure that we work smartly to get those three points on the board.'
Ingle also shared her thoughts on Chelsea's on-field tactics.
‘Obviously as a defensive minded player I like to keep clean sheets, but as a whole I think we need to be better in the final third and we’ve worked on that a lot over the last two to three weeks so that’s important for us. Like I said it is important to keep clean sheets because we’re going to pick up points as long as we can nick a goal or two then we’re get the three points.’
‘I don’t think we’re going to try and change the way we play, we try and stick to our philosophy. But depending on who we are going to come up against and now teams are getting a bit better overall, we have to slightly adapt things during games and sometimes at half-time. We may end up tweaking a few more things than we would have last season.'
LOOKING AHEAD After this fixture, a number of Blues will join their national squads for Women’s Euro 20201 qualifiers or international friendlies. The Lionesses (featuring Kirby, England, Bright, and Telford) have already qualified and have friendlies against Brazil (5/10) and Portugal (8/10). Erin Cuthbert will travel with Scotland for training camp. Ji So-Yun and South Korea face the United States of America in a pair of friendlies across the pond (4 October and 6 October).
Sophie Ingle will lead Wales in a qualifier against Belarus on 8 October. Our Swedish defenders Eriksson and Andersson have been selected for matches against Hungary (4/10) and Slovakia (8/10). Norway (represented by Mjelde, Thorisdottir, and Reiten) face Belarus on 4 October and Faroe Islands on 8 October. Ramona Bachmann’s Swiss side will play Lithuania on 4 October and Croatia on the 8th.
The next Chelsea fixture will be 13 October at Kingsmeadow, against Arsenal.
HOW TO FOLLOW:
The FA Player will have this fixture live, so you can watch here with a free subscription! The Chelsea FCW Twitter will, as always, provide you with match updates.
LINE-UPS:
CHELSEA: Berger, Bright, Ingle, Reiten, Ji, Kirby, Eriksson (c), Mjelde, Andersson, Cuthbert. (Emma Hayes making five changes from last week's lineup)
Subs: Orman, Asante, Carter, Thorisdottir, Spence, Bachmann.
BRISTOL CITY: Baggaley, Dykes (c), Evans, Matthews, Brown, Humphrey, Daniels, Wellings, Sargeant, Harrison, Chance.
Subs: Cumings, Van der Linden, Salmon, Allen, Reilly, Robinson, Wilson.
MATCH EVENTS:
The teams are out in the rain at Stoke Gifford Stadium.
We are underway!
1' Bristol with some early possession and a hit on goal -- It's blocked and Ji clears.
2' Reiten streaks up the left side and tries to find England in the box, but a defender blocks it -- it doesn't go far enough to clear the danger, and --
4' GOOOOOOOOOALLL!!!!!!!! Reiten arrives in the box and smashes it home!!
8' Chelsea looking confident and our supporters are in fine voice!
10' GOOOOOALLL! Reiten volleys in a lovely cross from Erin Cuthbert with her left foot. 2-0 Chelsea!!
12' Cuthbert hustles to keep the ball in play down Bristol City's end but it goes out for a goal kick.
16' Kirby sets up some great interplay but Bristol snuff out a third goal in 15 minutes for the Blues. For now...
17' GOOOOOLLLLLLLL!!! WOW! Ji sets herself up for a laserbeam shot into Bristol City's goal from the left side of the box. Chelsea up 3-0!!
28' Lovely cross from Kirby and it looks as if England might get a goal on, but the keeper scoops the ball in.
29' Chelsea corner after a shot from Kirby is blocked -- a bit of a scrum in the box but the Vixens get it away...
38' Chelsea corner
41' Matthews chases Ji down and it's a Chelsea corner again!
44' Bristol City free kick - no problem for the Blues.
45+1' Into stoppage and Chelsea looking to bang one more in....
45+2' Halftime!! An incredible display from Emma Hayes' side. Chelsea strolling up and down the pitch at Stoke Gifford Stadium and take a 3-0 lead into the locker room after scoring a trio of goals in 17 minutes!
46' Back underway, and we can see some sunshine though the wind persists. COME ON, YOU BLUES!
46' Kirby tries to find Ingle but the Welsh international appears to stumble a bit.
48' Baggaley stops an angled shot from England, and it's out for a Chelsea corner. Bright attacks it and it's shunted out by Bristol City. Corner from the other side now is played short. Chelsea feed the ball back to calm play down.
49' Bright charges forward for a loose ball now but Baggaley gets it away.
53' Kirby now tries her luck but it's blocked.
53' Bristol City have a corner--Berger needs to touch the looping ball over so it's back out. Berger collects.
54' Yellow card issued to BCFCW's Harrison.
57' Cuthbert takes a shot and it's blocked, so the ball falls behind for a Chelsea corner.
58' Ji tries a back and forth with Kirby but Bristol City get a foot on it.
59' Kirby chases the ball forward and Chelsea win another corner. Baggaley collects it easily.
60' England rushes into the box for a pass after a rather poor clearance from the Vixens goalkeeper, but she's called offside.
63' Ji tries to thread a ball into the box but her efforts are cut short. Chelsea play it back and move forward again. Ji tries a shot from distance, but it's wide and skips out.
64' Wilson (BRI) on for Daniels.
65' Bachmann and Thorisdottir (CHE) on for Kirby and Ji. Chelsea pressing for this fourth goal, and for that clean sheet!
70' Ramona Bachmann has a shot! Baggaley catches it easily.
72' Chelsea corner! Baggaley just gets a fingertip to a low shot and it falls to Cuthbert, who has a shot and then takes another off a deflection. The ball is booted over for a goal kick.
74' Spence (CHE) on for England.
78' Salmon (BCI) on for Harrison
78' GOOAALLL! That's four!! A simple tap-in for Sophie Ingle, against her former club.
81' Great patience by Chelsea to dispossess Salmon.
82' Bachmann has a go, and hits the side netting.
85' Spence surges forward and the resulting challenge pushes the ball over the line for a goal kick.
87' Another good spell of attacking play by Chelsea as the minutes tick down.
88' Baggaley makes a stop and Chelsea have another corner. Baggaley manages to collect as the ball approaches her net.
90' Two minutes added time.
90+2' That's it!! A dominant performance from Chelsea on this Sunday afternoon. Three goals in the first 17 minutes, and Sophie Ingle scores a second-half goal against her old club to sweeten the deal. It finishes Chelsea 4, Bristol City 0!
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2019.04.23 02:34 PKBrad 190317 Guro Fansign by Wind Cloud Rain
2019.04.21 23:52 PKBrad 190317 Guro Fansign by Wind Cloud Rain
2018.06.09 16:19 PjPantsInception Seha’s Father (Spoilers)
For starters, we already know his mom Jisu. We learn more about her, especially when we meet Veronica at Reft Ships, but there’s something been nagging me. Who’s Seha’s father? While it probably is gonna end up being some random dude that we don’t know I’ve actually been doing some digging up and for now I did find three likely candidates. J, Lane, and Trainer. What do they all have in common? They all knew Jisu, back when she was in the dimensional war with the wolf pack (J, Veronica, Lane, Trainer, etc.)
Now I’m not saying that these three must be the father. I’m saying there’s a chance.
From what I’ve heard (I haven’t played Seha but a friend has told me) Trainer knew Jisu very well and they were friends. While it might be some what believable and seeing how Seha and Jisu were the most powerful closers, and Trainer also being known for being so powerful he would break his weapons (that’s gotta he fun trying to explain), that would mean Seha would be so powerful that his gunblade would break everytime. Now, he has been sent to a research facility when he was younger (in the anime which could be a totally different canon, but bare with me) so perhaps they did something to lower his phase force?
For lane, I don’t have so much evidence. He says he knew Jisu during the war and how she was cold and a bit shy and such, but really I’d say he’s the least likely canidit (unless you all have evidence to support him being the father), since we don’t get enough backstory or chemistry between the two.
And lastly, J. Now, we do know J and Jisu did know each other back in there Wolfpack days and how J was good friends with her. But, in Guro station, when J talks to sully during a one of his side quests, J tells him a story about how an idiot fell in love with a girl and how they both were going to have a kid, but the idiot wasn’t ready so he ran off. He might have told the story about himself and how Seha might be his kid, but it also could be a story.
Now we’re going to get into genetics. I know it’s summer and bunch of characters have already told how much Seha looks like Jisu or how he’s exactly like a carbon copy of her but I feel like there’s a bigger role here. For instance, maybe Seha not inherited white hair from his mother, but from the father, too. Like J. Or maybe he does have very strong phase force but it got lowered down, but it still is considered very strong, like Trainer. But what I really wanna get into, his how his phase force, could actually show us how is real father is. Phase force is a genetic mutation (if I remember correctly) althat grants the person stronger abilities, stronger resistances to certain this, and having phase that is either these three categories: -Elemental -Physical -Mental Now I could go on about this topic I’m just going to simplify it down for this, since that is not the main subject we are discussing. Now, an unanswered question (that will require a lot of digging in the future) is that, what would happen if phase user parents had two separate phase forces? Would they combine or would there be a dominant phase force trait?
For now for the sake of trying to find who the father is, let’s say the PF could combine. As I was looking at Seha’s attacks, I mainly noticed he used a lot of wind and fire attacks, with some much force he could shatter the ground.
I kept in mind that Jisu had the fire phase force (along with the strength and such), but as I started looking at the candidates who Seha’s father could be, I couldn’t have been anymore surprised. While we don’t know J’s full attacks back in the war, we do know that he uses a bunch of wind attacks with him being able to use so much force he could break the ground with one punch. And I remember Seha doing that too. Also I did do some digging up on Trainer, and while he does look like he could be likely too, they were more physical then elemental. And sadly I couldn’t find any video for Lane’s attacks and such. ——————————————————— But hey, if you guys have any evidence on who Seha’s father could be or it has been confirmed already or something then I’d love to hear it! Honestly this kinda stuff intrigues me and I really do hope we can solve the mystery and in the game somewhere in the future, Seha finally does meet his dad.
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