
Chelsea ratings: Nicolas Jackson lets team down with mindless red card as only one player makes an impact
Blues fizzled out in the heat as Flamengo fizzed back with dramatic turnaround
NIC'S EMOTIONS Chelsea ratings: Nicolas Jackson lets team down with mindless red card as only one player makes an impact
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ONLY Pedro Neto had something to celebrate on Nicolas Jackson's nightmare birthday.
Neto's dashing early opener was overturned by Flamengo dancing through for three second-half goals as Chelsea suffered their first Club World Cup defeat.
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Chelsea sub Nicolas Jackson picked up a crazy sending-off
Credit: Alamy
Enzo Maresca's men just about deserved their first-half lead in the Philadelphia heat.
But the Brazilians' revival after the break was rewarded with a quickfire double midway though the period.
Bruno Henrique and Danilo stabbed home two replica far-post goals in the space of three minutes - with Chelsea lacking leaders in their defence.
Jackson then earned the most ridiculous of red cards just four minutes after replacing new £30million striker Liam Delap.
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RAPID RED Nicolas Jackson sent off against Flamengo for horror tackle on his birthday
And Wallace Yan further punished the Blues' collapse by firing a late third for a hungrier, hotter Flamengo side.
Robert Sanchez - 5
Had just two first-half saves to make, both routine, but intervened a few times with kicked clearances.
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Came alive on the hour when Flamengo frontman Plato did just the same himself - flashing a fierce shot that the Spaniard flung upwards to tip over.
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Pedro Neto did everything right to slip his breakthrough goal
Credit: Getty
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But almost immediately he was stranded at the backpost as Henrique arrived to tuck home.
Then watched on helpless three minutes later as Danilo flashed Flamengo in front from almost the same position.
Could also do little with Yan's killer third goal, but was never really a dominating presence.
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Robert Sanchez watched on as Marc Cucurella blocks from Leo Pereira
Credit: Reuters
Malo Gusto - 5
Pushed forward tentatively from right-back in the first period, testing keeper Rossi with a flashing long-ranger on 28 minutes.
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Far more adventurous early in the second period, with dangerous overlaps.
But then faded - along with his side as whole.
Trevoh Chalobah - 6
Precision timing with a block on 26 minutes denied Flamengo striker Plata a gaping chance from 10 yards.
Then nipped in for an important clearing header - underlining how he does the important things for a centre-back right.
Not directly at fault as the Blues conceded two carbon-copy goals, but nonetheless was part of a defence that suddenly appeared dishevelled in the last half hour.
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Trevoh Chalobah initially kept Giorgian De Arrascaeta and Co at bay
Credit: EPA
Levi Colwill - 5
Lucky to escape an early yellow card for a rash challenge.
Safe and unfussy for the first hour - upgrading that contribution dramatically with a piece of superb judgment and athleticism to head off the line shortly before break.
But like his central defensive partner Chalobah, he failed to respond convincingly to Flamengo's purple patch in the second period.
Marc Cucurella - 5
Performed as more of an orthodox left-back than his usual up as much as down role.
Steady enough, but barely broke forward menacingly.
Nipped in to glance a 50th-minute free-kick from James wide - possibly snatching at what was a glaring opportunity rather than realising he had more time.
Reece James - 5
Functional rather than marauding on the right of Caicedo in a two-man midfield anchor.
So for the England star, it was firm but not flair as he filled a tactical berth.
But delivered a magical curving free-kick across the front of the Flamengo defenders that Cucurella wastefully flicked wide.
But James soon slipped to enable Gonzalo Plata to scramble clear through the middle, keeper Sanchez clawing the ball away.
Replaced by Romeo Lavia on 64 minutes
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Reece James got to grips with Chelsea old boy Jorginho
Credit: Reuters
Moises Caicedo - 5
Booked for a wild lunge on 12 minutes.
Showed plenty of energy after that, but more graft than craft as the Blues never really passed their way through and around midfield.
Cole Palmer - 4
Restrained and largely anonymous before the break, perhaps operating more rigidly and often deeper on the right than he'd like.
Prefers to rule by roaming and certainly looking less free to roam than usual.
Occasional flashes in the second period
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Cole Palmer, Chelsea's main man in the Prem, had a quiet game
Credit: Getty
Enzo Fernandez - 4
Threatened little in the opening 45 minutes.
But appealed desperately for a spot-kick when he wriggled into the area and tumbled under slight contact - VAR helping ref Ivan Barton stick by his no-penalty decision.
Pedro Neto - 8
Busy, bustling predator from the left to the centre - just behind Delap.
Showed supreme coolness to surge away from dozy Flamengo defending on halfway and slip home a neat winner from the edge of the box on 13 minutes.
That's two goals from his two high-tempo games here in the US.
Booked midway through the first half for ending Wesley's dangerous run with a tactical trip.
But soon showed fizzing feet again at the other end to snake between two players and almost carve out a clear opportunity for Delap.
Much less prominent after the break, but still the only Chelsea player to make a true impact for any sustained period.
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Pedro Neto completed a long surge by slotting Chelsea's opener
Credit: AFP
Liam Delap - 5
A throwback to the future - with bustling power like an old-fashioned striker. And had a right old tussle with the Brazilian defence.
Couldn't quite get on the end of an inviting cross just before the interval. Promptly booked for a clumsy clattering as he challenged for a loose ball on mid-pitch.
Produced a mediocre pull-back early in the second period when he had the chance to sow he could be a creator.
Harried Pereira into nearly volleying an own goal.
Replaced by Jackson on 64 minutes after a fighting but fitful performance.
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Liam Delap had a good old battle with Leo Pereira and Co
Credit: AFP
SUBS:
Nicolas Jackson (for Delap, 64 mins) - 0
Snappy birthday - as just four minutes after replacing Delap in attack, the Senegal ace saw red for stamping in a mid-pitch tangle.
It was Jackson's 24th birthday - but he blew his cameo rather than candles with a challenge that was reckless, needless, thoughtless.
Romeo Lavia (for James, 64 mins)
Came on just after Flamengo levelled and did little to stem the fierce change in tide.
Noni Madueke (for Fernandez, 84 mins) - 7
Slightly crazy to give him a rating for such a short time on the pitch - but read on!
Curved a half-decent free-kick high at 3-1 down, then hussled the left of the Flamengo defence a few times.
Marc Guiu (for Palmer, 82 mins) - N/A
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The Independent
20 minutes ago
- The Independent
Moises Caicedo says Chelsea will learn from Flamengo defeat
Chelsea midfielder Moises Caicedo insists lessons will be learnt from Friday's loss to Flamengo at the Club World Cup. The Blues capitulated in the second half in Philadelphia, surrendering a lead to lose 3-1 to the Brazilians and finish with 10 men. Most of the damage was done in a torrid six-minute spell in which they conceded twice and had Nicolas Jackson – just four minutes after coming off the bench – sent off for a reckless tackle. The result leaves them second in Group D with a win and a loss and potentially facing a more difficult route through the competition, with a possible clash against Bayern Munich in the last 16. 'It was difficult to take, but now we are focusing on the next game,' said Caicedo. 'For sure, we need to learn from this game. We need to react. 'I think the team played well but you need to be focused for 95 minutes in this game because, in one second, you can lose the game and that was what happened.' Flamengo looked the more energetic side but they lacked a cutting edge in the first half and it was Chelsea who carried the greater threat through some quick counter-attacks. Liam Delap, making his full debut in place of Jackson, forced a good save before Pedro Neto broke from halfway to open the scoring with a well-taken strike in the 14th minute. A feisty contest tilted in Flamengo's favour when Bruno Henrique equalised just after the hour and veteran Danilo followed up with a second three minutes later. The Premier League side were still reeling when Jackson was shown a straight red card for an aggressive studs-up challenge on Ayrton Lucas. It was his second sending off in four appearances for the club and ended their hopes of fighting back. Wallace Yan wrapped up the scoring seven minutes from time. Manager Enzo Maresca partly put the defeat – and a subdued performance from key playmaker Cole Palmer in a wider role – down to experimentation ahead of next season. The Italian said: 'It's not just about Cole. In the last two days we tried something completely different. 'For the first time we played in a different structure, just to prepare also for next season, to have more options. 'I think the plan was quite good for one hour until we conceded the goal, but I think at the end they deserved to win the game. 'Flamengo are a very good team with good players, with a good manager. They played very well.'


The Herald Scotland
22 minutes ago
- The Herald Scotland
Moises Caicedo says Chelsea will learn from Flamengo defeat
Most of the damage was done in a torrid six-minute spell in which they conceded twice and had Nicolas Jackson – just four minutes after coming off the bench – sent off for a reckless tackle. Caicedo expects the Blues to react to the loss (Zac Goodwin/PA) The result leaves them second in Group D with a win and a loss and potentially facing a more difficult route through the competition, with a possible clash against Bayern Munich in the last 16. 'It was difficult to take, but now we are focusing on the next game,' said Caicedo. 'For sure, we need to learn from this game. We need to react. 'I think the team played well but you need to be focused for 95 minutes in this game because, in one second, you can lose the game and that was what happened.' Flamengo looked the more energetic side but they lacked a cutting edge in the first half and it was Chelsea who carried the greater threat through some quick counter-attacks. Liam Delap, making his full debut in place of Jackson, forced a good save before Pedro Neto broke from halfway to open the scoring with a well-taken strike in the 14th minute. A feisty contest tilted in Flamengo's favour when Bruno Henrique equalised just after the hour and veteran Danilo followed up with a second three minutes later. The Premier League side were still reeling when Jackson was shown a straight red card for an aggressive studs-up challenge on Ayrton Lucas. It was his second sending off in four appearances for the club and ended their hopes of fighting back. Wallace Yan wrapped up the scoring seven minutes from time. Manager Enzo Maresca partly put the defeat – and a subdued performance from key playmaker Cole Palmer in a wider role – down to experimentation ahead of next season. Maresca tried out a new system (Jane Barlow/PA) The Italian said: 'It's not just about Cole. In the last two days we tried something completely different. 'For the first time we played in a different structure, just to prepare also for next season, to have more options. 'I think the plan was quite good for one hour until we conceded the goal, but I think at the end they deserved to win the game. 'Flamengo are a very good team with good players, with a good manager. They played very well.'


South Wales Guardian
26 minutes ago
- South Wales Guardian
Moises Caicedo says Chelsea will learn from Flamengo defeat
The Blues capitulated in the second half in Philadelphia, surrendering a lead to lose 3-1 to the Brazilians and finish with 10 men. Most of the damage was done in a torrid six-minute spell in which they conceded twice and had Nicolas Jackson – just four minutes after coming off the bench – sent off for a reckless tackle. The result leaves them second in Group D with a win and a loss and potentially facing a more difficult route through the competition, with a possible clash against Bayern Munich in the last 16. 'It was difficult to take, but now we are focusing on the next game,' said Caicedo. 'For sure, we need to learn from this game. We need to react. 'I think the team played well but you need to be focused for 95 minutes in this game because, in one second, you can lose the game and that was what happened.' Flamengo looked the more energetic side but they lacked a cutting edge in the first half and it was Chelsea who carried the greater threat through some quick counter-attacks. Liam Delap, making his full debut in place of Jackson, forced a good save before Pedro Neto broke from halfway to open the scoring with a well-taken strike in the 14th minute. A feisty contest tilted in Flamengo's favour when Bruno Henrique equalised just after the hour and veteran Danilo followed up with a second three minutes later. The Premier League side were still reeling when Jackson was shown a straight red card for an aggressive studs-up challenge on Ayrton Lucas. It was his second sending off in four appearances for the club and ended their hopes of fighting back. Wallace Yan wrapped up the scoring seven minutes from time. Manager Enzo Maresca partly put the defeat – and a subdued performance from key playmaker Cole Palmer in a wider role – down to experimentation ahead of next season. The Italian said: 'It's not just about Cole. In the last two days we tried something completely different. 'For the first time we played in a different structure, just to prepare also for next season, to have more options. 'I think the plan was quite good for one hour until we conceded the goal, but I think at the end they deserved to win the game. 'Flamengo are a very good team with good players, with a good manager. They played very well.'