PSG vs Chelsea match report: Edinson Cavani cancels out Branislav Ivanovic opener to leave Champions League tie delicately poised

PSG 1 Chelsea 1

Sam Wallace
Tuesday 17 February 2015 17:36 EST
Comments

Your support helps us to tell the story

From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.

At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.

The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.

Your support makes all the difference.

This was the way Jose Mourinho likes his team to play away in Europe: unyielding, disciplined and gradually introducing in opposition minds a looming sense of despair about their prospects in the London when the final business of this tie will be conducted.

Never a classic European game by any means – these Champions League tie first legs so rarely are – but it would have been the perfect performance for Mourinho’s team had a brief miscalculation not allowed Edinson Cavani in for the equaliser ten minutes into the second half. They needed to Thibaut Courtois to intervene more than once, but there they left Paris in control of this tie.

In this great clash of two of European football’s fossil fuel fortunes, Chelsea still look very much the grown-ups of the piece when it comes to Champions League football. Their performance ebbed a little in the second half and yet for the few chances PSG created Mourinho’s team, and their fine goalkeeper, back in the side, looked in control.

After Branislav Ivanovic had given them the lead in the first half it was not implausible to think they might have gone on to win this match but a scoring draw was no hardship. In the quarter-finals last year they lost 3-1 at the Parc des Princes and then scored two goals without reply at home, and with a much better result against PSG this time, they are the favourites to go through.

By the time they meet again, Mourinho will hope to have the first trophy of his second coming at Stamford Bridge, the League Cup, the final of which divides these two legs, absurdly three weeks apart. Zlatan Ibrahimovic and his team-mates will have to conjure the performance of PSG’s recent Qatari oil-fired history to eliminate Chelsea. Mourinho has never lost a two-leg Champions League tie in which his team secured an away score draw in the first leg

There is a precision to Chelsea’s tactical formation in away games in the Champions League that even the best teams can find themselves confronted by a thousand dead-ends. They were at their obstinate best before half-time tonight even on the occasions when Ibrahimovic pinned Gary Cahill behind him and tried to get PSG’s attacks going.

The Swedish striker is a very hard man to control all of the time, even for a defence as accomplished as Chelsea’s with Cahill back in the side in place of Kurt Zouma. But what they did manage was to limit the damage he could do and when there was no other alternative, Courtois came to the rescue.

Branislav Ivanovic heads in the opening goal
Branislav Ivanovic heads in the opening goal (GETTY IMAGES)

The Belgian was back in the team after Petr Cech’s return against Everton and three times in the first half he made important saves. On 11 minutes, Blaise Matuidi and then Ibrahimovic had headers in quick succession which Courtois left himself as much time as possible to read and succeeded in pushing both away.

That was one of PSG’s best spells in the first half, when they managed to get some traction down the wing and did not find themselves wondering lost into that triangle of pain between Nemanja Matic, John Terry and Cahill. They had found it hard going otherwise and their only other good chance at goal was Cavani’s near post header from Ezequiel Lavezzi’s corner that Courtois thrust a fist at and saved.

Otherwise you always felt that Chelsea were shaping the first half according to their own expectations. Ramires and Matic took care of whatever PSG tried to work through the middle. Eden Hazard found himself fouled, as per usual, most times he had the ball at his feet. It was more frustrating for Diego Costa, but then he knew what he was signing up for as the lone forward in a Mourinho team.

Branislav Ivanovic and his Chelsea team-mates celebrate the opening goal
Branislav Ivanovic and his Chelsea team-mates celebrate the opening goal (GETTY IMAGES)

The goal came from yet another free-kick won by Hazard, for which the likes of Terry and Cahill pushed up to contest. The ball came back to Matic and it was his low ball out to the left that found Terry. There was nothing much in the cross that was waist-high and unpromising until Cahill flicked out a heel and changed pace, direction and trajectory. The PSG defence failed to react and Ivanovic nodded the ball past a stranded Salvatore Sirigu.

This was the classic Chelsea European sucker punch, one that they have made a habit of landing on an opponent’s jaw more than once. They committed their defenders to set-pieces and while on this occasion a goal did not result directly, it was the reason that all three of the central protagonists found themselves in the PSG third together.

It was a dismal outcome for PSG whose efforts had dwindled before the break. They came out for the second half with a lot more impetus and equalised within ten minutes, with only Cavani’s fourth goal since the start of December. The attack had been begun by David Luiz, occupying a deep-lying midfield position against his former club and from him had gone to Matuidi who had crossed for Cavani to head in.

Edinson Cavani celebrates the equaliser
Edinson Cavani celebrates the equaliser (GETTY IMAGES)

The cross from Matuidi had dropped just over the head of the unfortunate Cahill which opened up the angle for Cavani to direct it low and into the corner past Courtois. Chelsea’s defenders are fastidious about the positions they take up in the area – always zonal, never man-for-man – and occasionally there is a cross that is liable to drop beyond both their spheres of influence.

As for Luiz, he had played a familiar game for PSG – strident passing but not much moving off the ball to open up the space for the return. The goal aside, there was a lack of briskness about his and PSG’s passing that permitted Mourinho’s well-drilled men to re-organise and re-form behind the ball.

PSG celebrate Cavani's equaliser
PSG celebrate Cavani's equaliser (GETTY IMAGES)

Luiz got a shove from Cesc Fabregas, back in the team, after one challenge, and then another from Costa later on. He is a good player, but not a great midfielder and you can see why Mourinho would prefer a player with a greater economy of touches in that position.

In the last ten minutes, there was a growing panic among PSG that they would be taking less to London in three weeks’ time than they did one year ago. Cavani opened up some space in the right channel and his shot beat Courtois but was outside the far post. Ibrahimovic had a late header which, Courtois did well to get down to and push over the bar.

Diego Costa and David Luiz come together
Diego Costa and David Luiz come together (GETTY IMAGES)

The final whistle was greeted with grim resignation by the home crowd. PSG had thrown their best at Courtois and Chelsea in the closing stages, and you wonder how much more they can offer in London.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in