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Given the harrowing personal circumstances he has had to confront since the death of his mother last month, there can be few people more able than Frank Lampard to put the heartbreak of a penalty shoot-out defeat in the final of the Champions League into perspective.
The England midfield player’s words may provide little immediate comfort to John Terry, who missed a penalty that would have won the trophy for Chelsea, or Avram Grant, the first-team coach who may lose his job as a result, but there can be no doubting the wisdom of his claim that, in the grand scheme of things, such setbacks do not really matter.
“I feel very emotionally drained,” Lampard said last night. “It’s been very tough. I was trying to prepare for the biggest game of my life, but it’s become almost not that important. I’m just disappointed for my team-mates, who have been fantastic for me throughout these times. I wanted to be a part of them winning the Champions League, but it’s not to be.”
Lampard did not play as if his night’s work was unimportant, at times in the first half driving his team on almost single-handed. The 29-year-old created the chance with which Michael Ballack brought a smart save from Edwin van der Sar, equalised with an opportunistic finish and hit the bar with an exquisite chip before scoring in the shoot-out.
Lampard’s claims that Chelsea dominated the match should be taken with a whole heap of salt, with Uefa statistics showing Manchester United to have had 58 per cent of possession, although Chelsea grew stronger as the second half progressed and looked the only team capable of winning during extra time. “The manager spoke at half-time and everyone spoke,” Lampard said. “We were frustrated because we got this far and were sloppy in the first half-hour. Once we started to pass the ball we started to dominate. I felt comfortable and I thought if anyone was going to score it would be us.
“I think we dominated the game. Credit to Man United. They took control in the first half and maybe could have gone more than one up, but once we woke up and started playing, I don’t know how many shots we had. We hit the bar and the post and we were in the driving seat on the penalties until John missed. It’s cruel, but we know that’s football.”
Grant said that Chelsea would return to this stage after reaching the first Champions League final in their history, although he does not know if he will be at the helm. The Israeli refused to answer questions regarding his future, which could become clearer today, although he accepted that it could take a long time for players less philosophical than Lampard to recover from this setback.
“My future is the last thing I’m thinking about now,” Grant said. “Not now. Now I’m going to the hotel. I don’t know what I’ll do tomorrow. It will take a long time to recover now. One penalty can make the difference between happiness to some. I cannot tell you that I’m happy now and I don’t think I will be for the next days. But I’m more than proud of what we did and in the way we did it.
“I told the players that I’m proud of them. They’ve worked hard all year, even when some situations were not so easy. They played the final as the better team except in the first 30 minutes.
“Now we need to continue. It’s not the last time you will see Chelsea in the final. You will see us back and we will win the final.”
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Come on asher. Lampard was, by a squillions miles, the best player on the pitch. after 30 mins, he bombed into live and from then on, carrick or scholesy could do nothing about lampard. if u look at the stats, lampard struck three shots. 2 of which were destined goalwards, only one snucked in..
Steve Rodney, west london, UK
MU were lucky to win .The two shots by Chelsea which hit the goal posts had van der Sar well beaten .Chelsea were not destined to win . Add to Terry's penalty miss when he wasn't fuuly fit add to my view..SAF better not think he can dominate as before.
James Wong, Penang, Malaysia
G Burke you would have been devasted if you missed to, and he was already on the floor from slipping!
James, Burnley,
So G. Burke this is begrudging is it. "Credit to Man United. They took control in the first half and maybe could have gone more than one up, " Anyone who watched the game could see that is a reasonable assessment. Pretty much what Sir Alex said. Put your petty prejudices to one side.
Mike, Ham burg,
I honestly don't know which game matt hughes was watching. Lampard and Ballack were both non-existent in the first half. He didn't pull of any of his diagonal passes or through balls and only passed sideways. And how on earth was that a chip? He was 6 yards out and should have scored.
Asher Gilani, London, United Kingdom
Typically unsporting begrudgery from Chelsea. The game was well-balanced with chances and periods of dominance for both sides. It was decided by Drogba's justified expulsion and the team's collapse after Terry's defeatist reaction to missing a penalty. They lost it...but couldn't lose with grace.
G.Burke, Waterford, Ireland