2009–10 Chelsea F.C. season

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Chelsea
2009–10 season
Chairman Bruce Buck
Owner Roman Abramovich
Manager Carlo Ancelotti
Stadium Stamford Bridge
Premier League 1st
FA Cup Winners
League Cup Fifth round
FA Community Shield Winners
UEFA Champions League Round of 16
Top goalscorer League:
Didier Drogba (29)
All:
Didier Drogba (37)
Highest home attendance 41,836 (vs. Manchester United, 8 November 2009)
Lowest home attendance 37,781 (vs. Queens Park Rangers, 23 September 2009)
Home colours
Away colours
Third colours

The 2009–10 season was Chelsea Football Club's 95th competitive season, 18th consecutive season in the Premier League, 104th year in existence as a football club and the first season coached by Carlo Ancelotti. Despite disappointment in the Champions League, the club had the most successful season in its history, winning the Premier League for a third time and retaining the FA Cup for the first time, therefore becoming the seventh English club to complete the "Double".

Season summary

Chelsea won the F.A. Cup and the English Premier League to complete the Double for the first time in their history, while breaking numerous Premier League records in the amount of goals they managed.

Key dates

  • 01.06.09: Carlo Ancelotti is appointed as the new Chelsea manager following the departure of temporary first team coach Guus Hiddink, with his tenure set to commence on 1 July.
  • 02.07.09: Goalkeeper Ross Turnbull signs a four-year deal on a free transfer from Middlesbrough, along with news that Henrique Hilário has renewed his contract for two more years.
  • 03.07.09: Chelsea finalize a four-year deal for striker Daniel Sturridge after his contract with Manchester City expires.
  • 07.07.09: Winger Yuri Zhirkov signs for Chelsea from CSKA Moscow on a four-year deal for a reported £18 million.
  • 27.07.09: Chelsea wins the inaugural World Football Challenge tournament, beating Internazionale, Milan, and América.
  • 28.07.09: Former Chelsea chairman Brian Mears passes away at the age of 78.
  • 04.08.09: Striker Franco Di Santo joins Blackburn Rovers on loan until 1 January.
  • 06.08.09: Winger Scott Sinclair joins Wigan Athletic on a season-long loan deal.
  • 09.08.09: With their first penalty shootout win in over a decade, Chelsea secure the 2009 Community Shield following a 2–2 draw against Manchester United in normal time. After United's Nani opens the scoring, goals by Ricardo Carvalho and Frank Lampard look to win the game for Chelsea until an injury-time equalizer by Wayne Rooney forces the game to penalties. Chelsea win the shootout 4–1.
  • 13.08.09: Michael Mancienne signs a new four-year deal, keeping him at Chelsea until 2013, then signs on loan with Wolves until the end of the season.
  • 15.08.09: Chelsea's Premier League campaign kicks off with a difficult 2–1 home victory over a defensively resolute Hull City side. After ex-Reading player Stephen Hunt scores against the run of play, a Didier Drogba free-kick makes things even. Although Chelsea dominate the second half of the game, Hull's tenacity and a lack of quality finishing make it look like the game will end a damaging draw for Chelsea, until Drogba's chipped cross in stoppage time loops over the head of Hull keeper Boaz Myhill and serendipitously falls into the corner of the net.
  • 18.08.09: Chelsea sign young Serbian central midfielder Nemanja Matić from MFK Košice for a fee of £1.5 million.
  • 27.08.09: Chelsea are grouped with FC Porto, Atlético Madrid and APOEL Nicosia in the UEFA Champions' League group stage draw at the Grimaldi Forum in Monaco. During the ceremony, John Terry is awarded the UEFA Club Defender of the Year award.
  • 29.08.09: Chelsea claim first place in the Premier League for the first time this season with a 3–0 home win over Burnley. In a game characterised by Chelsea's dominance, after Nicolas Anelka breaks the deadlock from close range before half-time, a quick-fire double at the start of the second half via a Michael Ballack header and an Ashley Cole volley secures a comfortable victory. During the match, Chelsea are paired with fellow Londoners Queens Park Rangers in the League Cup third round draw.
  • 03.09.09: For inducing reserve player Gaël Kakuta into breaching his contract with his previous club Lens, FIFA ban Chelsea from signing any new players nationally or internationally until January 2011, and demand the club to pay Lens £113,500 training compensation. Kakuta is fined £680,000 and banned from playing officially for four months.[1]
  • 15.09.09: After a hard fought 2–1 win away against Stoke City in the Premier League, a lone Nicolas Anelka goal kicks off Chelsea's Champions League campaign with a tight 1–0 win in Group D over Porto. With mainstays Didier Drogba and José Bosingwa suspended for their protests in last year's semi-final, along with the difficulty caused by constant rainfall on the pitch, the Chelsea performance is unusually sloppy, but a solid performance by goalkeeper Petr Čech guides the team to victory. Atlético Madrid draw 0–0 at home with APOEL, leaving Chelsea two points clear at the top of the group after one game played.
  • 20.09.09: With a 3–0 win at home against London rivals Tottenham Hotspur with goals from Ashley Cole, Michael Ballack and Didier Drogba, Chelsea set a new club record of 11 consecutive Premier League victories, surpassing the record of ten games set during the 2005–06 season.
  • 23.09.09: Chelsea kick off their League Cup challenge with a low-key 1–0 home victory over Queens Park Rangers in the third round. Salomon Kalou notches the only goal, set up by Joe Cole in his first game since January. Yuri Zhirkov, Sam Hutchinson and Fabio Borini all make their first starts for the club.
  • 26.09.09: Although Didier Drogba scores his 100th Chelsea goal against Wigan Athletic to briefly equalise, Chelsea look strangely uninspired in a 1–3 loss at the DW Stadium, having gone down to ten men after Petr Čech's sending off six minutes after half time following a penalty-worthy challenge on Hugo Rodallega. Chelsea relinquish their Premier League lead to Manchester United, falling into second place on goals scored.
  • 04.10.09: In their first "Big Four" clash of the season, Chelsea edge a typically tight game at Stamford Bridge with a 2–0 Premier League victory over title rivals Liverpool. Didier Drogba sets up both Chelsea goals from wide positions, first from the left for Nicolas Anelka, and then from the right for Florent Malouda to seal the win in stoppage time. Henrique Hilário proves a solid deputy for the suspended Petr Čech, as the goalkeeper produces excellent saves from Albert Riera and Steven Gerrard to keep the clean sheet, assisted by a horrendous miss from Yossi Benayoun towards the end of the game. Manchester United's fortuitous 2–2 draw with Sunderland at Old Trafford the day before means Chelsea return to the top of the league.
  • 17.10.09: Chelsea are beaten by Aston Villa 2–1 away at Villa Park. Following Didier Drogba's early strike, James Collins and Richard Dunne score the goals which inflict Chelsea's second successive away defeat under Carlo Ancelotti.
  • 24.10.09: Chelsea thrash Blackburn Rovers 5–0 at Stamford Bridge in their most emphatic Premier League victory so far this season, only a few days after humbling Atletico Madrid in the Champions League by one goal less. Joe Cole enjoys a sparkling performance at the top of the midfield diamond in his first league start since January, with a Gaël Givet own goal opening the scoring. A thirty-yard Michael Essien drive sandwiches two goals by Frank Lampard, and Didier Drogba completes the rout with a simple header from a corner. The next day, Liverpool break their four-game losing streak with a 2–0 victory over Manchester United at Anfield. After losing their lead again the previous week, this result leaves Chelsea two points clear.
  • 4.11.09: Chelsea qualify for the Champions League knockout round after sharing the points in a 2–2 draw with Atlético Madrid at the Vicente Calderón Stadium that burst into life into the last ten minutes. After Sergio Agüero volleyed home midway through the second half, a quickfire double in the last ten minutes by the in-form Didier Drogba gives Chelsea a perhaps undeserved 2–1 lead, canceled out by a Sergio Agüero free-kick.
  • 8.11.09: Chelsea beat Manchester United 1–0 at Stamford Bridge in the Premier League in a typically tight contest, decided by John Terry's header from an inswinging Frank Lampard free-kick after Darren Fletcher was controversially judged to have bundled over Ashley Cole on the left-hand side. Despite arguably controlling the game with their 4–3–3 formation, a late rally by United could not salvage them a point against a resolute Chelsea defence. Chelsea increase their lead at the top of the league by five points while Arsenal leapfrog United into second place with a game in hand.
  • 22.11.09: Despite having key players like Frank Lampard, Michael Ballack and Didier Drogba missing through injury, Chelsea romp to a comfortable 4–0 victory at home to Wolves in the Premier League with goals from Florent Malouda, Joe Cole and two from a rampant Michael Essien. While Nemanja Matić makes his Chelsea debut from the bench, Gaël Kakuta also makes a flair-filled first appearance for the club.
  • 29.11.09: Chelsea continue their 100% record in "Big Four" matches this season with an emphatic 3–0 away win against Arsenal at the Emirates Stadium in the Premier League. Two goals from Didier Drogba and an own goal from Thomas Vermaelen secure the victory, agreed by many to be the pinnacle of Chelsea's season thus far.
  • 16.12.09: Chelsea end their run of four straight games without a win in all competitions, which began with their penalty shootout elimination by Blackburn away in the League Cup fifth round, with a closely fought 2–1 victory over Portsmouth, led by former Chelsea manager Avram Grant, at Stamford Bridge in the Premier League. After Nicolas Anelka scores from close-range in the first half, Portsmouth equalize early in the second when a Jamie O'Hara free kick ricochets off two players in the Chelsea wall, falling to Frédéric Piquionne who slots home. This typifies Chelsea's recent problem of conceding from set-pieces. The game is won ten minutes from time when Frank Lampard converts the penalty kick conceded when Marc Wilson takes out Branislav Ivanović in the Portsmouth area.
  • 04.01.10: Having ended December with two away draws against West Ham United and Birmingham and a tense 2–1 home victory against Fulham in the west London derby, Chelsea begin the New Year in style with a 5–0 home demolition of Watford in the FA Cup third round, despite losing their African players to the African Cup of Nations. While Daniel Sturridge scores his first two goals for the club, Chelsea also score via a Florent Malouda deflection, a John Eustace own goal and a trademark Frank Lampard piledriver.
  • 28.01.10: Chelsea end January on a high after winning all five matches in the month, demolishing Sunderland 7–2 at Stamford Bridge in the Premier League. Following that, they continue to score with a 3–0 win at home over Birmingham before a laboured 2–1 win away at Burnley, with John Terry scoring a late header to win the game amidst his affair scandal. They also progress in the FA Cup thanks to a 2–0 win away at Preston North End.
  • 02.02.10: Despite an excellent January, February does not start well with Chelsea succumbing to a 1–1 draw at Hull City. Didier Drogba equalises for Chelsea late in the first-half with a free-kick after Hull's Steven Mouyokolo gave the home side the lead with a header from a corner. Chelsea go two points clear of Manchester United but missed a chance to go four points clear after failing to win their game in hand.
  • 04.02.10: FIFA's suspended transfer ban on Chelsea regarding the Gaël Kakuta tapping-up case is lifted by the Court of Arbitration for Sport, along with all other sanctions.[2]
  • 27.02.10: Chelsea lose at home for the first time in the Premier League under Carlo Ancelotti as Manchester City win 4–2. The game is given extra spice as it is the first time that John Terry and Wayne Bridge have come together following allegations of Terry's affair with Bridge's girlfriend Vanessa Perroncel, which leads to him rejecting Terry's outstretched hand in the pre-match handshake. Frank Lampard opens and closes the scoring, but braces from Carlos Tevez and Craig Bellamy in between are enough to secure a Manchester City victory.
  • 16.03.10: Chelsea are eliminated from the Champions League before the semi-finals for the first time in four years as a 3–1 aggregate loss to Internazionale in the first knockout round sees them crash out of the tournament. A 2–1 defeat at the San Siro on 24.02.10 is compounded by a 1–0 loss at home in the second leg, with Samuel Eto'o scoring the only goal. The match marks Mourinho's first return to Stamford Bridge as an opposition manager since his departure from Chelsea in September 2007.
  • 21.03.10: Chelsea complete a disappointing week with a draw to Blackburn at Ewood Park in the Premier League. After Didier Drogba opens the scoring early on, the game looks to yield a comfortable victory for Chelsea, but a game-ending injury to Branislav Ivanovic proves costly as El Hadji Diouf equalises with twenty minutes to play, beating substitute right back Paulo Ferreira to a header at the far post. The result sees them slip to third place, four points behind Manchester United with a game in hand.
  • 27.03.10: After bouncing straight back with a 5–0 victory against Portsmouth at Fratton Park in midweek, Chelsea complete their recovery from the previous week by recording their biggest win of the season with a 7–1 thrashing of Aston Villa at Stamford Bridge. In a game that sees John Terry captain the side for a record 325th time, Frank Lampard scores four times for the second time in his Chelsea career, moving him into third place in the list of Chelsea's all-time highest scorers with 151 goals, above both Peter Osgood and Roy Bentley. Florent Malouda also nets a brace and Salomon Kalou scores his first Premier League goal of the season.
  • 03.04.10: Chelsea gain a crucial victory in the Premier League title race by defeating top-of-the-table Manchester United 2–1 at Old Trafford, returning to first place by two points with five games to play. The victory ensures that Chelsea maintain their 100% record in "Big Four" matches this season. After Joe Cole caps off a comfortable Chelsea first half with a clever near-post back-heel from Florent Malouda's cross to open the scoring, United begin to gain a foothold in the game in the second half. Didier Drogba comes off the bench to score the winning goal late on from an offside position, but Federico Macheda's disputedly handball goal for United minutes later sets up a nervy finish. In a game marked by a poor performance by referee Mike Dean, ignoring plausible penalty shouts by both sides, Chelsea hold on for three emphatic points.
  • 10.04.10: Chelsea defeat Aston Villa at Wembley in the FA Cup semi-final to book a place in their third FA Cup Final in four years. After referee Howard Webb turns down a strong penalty appeal from Gabriel Agbonlahor in the first half following a trip from John Obi Mikel, Didier Drogba, Florent Malouda and Frank Lampard score in the second half to secure a 3–0 victory.
  • 17.04.10: A 2–1 loss to Tottenham Hotspur sees Chelsea's lead in the Premiership cut to one point with Manchester United securing a late winner against Manchester City. Despite losing, Chelsea become the first English team to qualify for the 2010-11 UEFA Champions League.
  • 24.04.10: Chelsea defeat Stoke City 7–0 at Stamford Bridge to record their biggest home win of the season thus far. Salomon Kalou scores his first hat-trick in English football, and a brace from Frank Lampard, coupled with goals from Florent Malouda and Daniel Sturridge, ensure the Blues cruise comfortable.
  • 02.05.10: Chelsea defeat Liverpool 2–0 at Anfield in the penultimate week of the season. Didier Drogba opens the scoring following a sloppy backpass from Steven Gerrard in the first half, and Frank Lampard doubles the lead after the interval. The win ensures that Chelsea end their season with a 100% record against "Big Four" opponents, and means that victory over Wigan on the final day of the season will guarantee Premier League success.
  • 06.05.10: Chelsea FC's Player of the Year Award goes to Didier Drogba, who claims the gong for the first time in his Chelsea career. Florent Malouda picks up the Samsung Players' Player Award, while the Young Player of the Year is awarded to the entire Chelsea U18 team after their triumph in the FA Cup Youth Final. Ashley Cole's goal against Sunderland earns him the Goal of the Season Award.
  • 09.05.10: Chelsea trounce Wigan 8–0 in their final game of the season, setting a new club record for their biggest ever League win in the process as well as breaking numerous scoring records. They end the league campaign having scored 103 goals, the most in the club's history, the first Premier League side to score 100 goals in a season and the first team since Tottenham Hotspur in 1961 to score 100 goals in the top flight. They also become the first team in English football history to score seven goals or more in a game on four occasions in a league season. They also finish with an English record goal difference of +71, beating Liverpool's +69 set in 1979. Didier Drogba's second half hat-trick ensures he finishes the season with the Premier League Golden Boot, having scored 29 goals, three more than the 26 scored by second-placed Wayne Rooney. Nicolas Anelka bags a brace while Frank Lampard, Salomon Kalou and Ashley Cole grab the other goals. Most significantly, the win means that Chelsea finish the season as Premier League champions with a total of 86 points, one point more than Manchester United, who finish runners-up.
  • 15.05.10: In their final game of the season, Chelsea face relegated Portsmouth in an entertaining 2010 FA Cup Final at Wembley Stadium. Despite their stark difference in position in the end-of-season table and extended Chelsea pressure, with Chelsea hitting the woodwork five times in the first half, the two sides go in level at half-time. Soon after Portsmouth's Kevin-Prince Boateng's penalty is saved by Petr Čech early in the second half, Chelsea finally make their pressure count when Didier Drogba fires in a 59th minute free-kick, his 37th goal of the season. Although Frank Lampard uncharacteristically squanders a penalty of his own late on, Chelsea remain superior, the game eventually ending 1–0. Chelsea consequently end their season as only the seventh club to complete the Double, making it the most successful season in Chelsea history.

Kit

Supplier: Adidas / Sponsor: Samsung

Home
Home alt.
Away
Third
Goalkeeper 1
Goalkeeper 2
Goalkeeper alt.
Goalkeeper alt.
Goalkeeper 3

Kit information

The kit was first worn against Blackburn Rovers in the second to last Premier League game of the 2008–09 season. The away kit which was revealed at Chelsea's website on 25 June uses a tonal hoop design in dark navy and new navy with neon yellow highlights. The third kit is white with horizontal grey pin stripes and dark blue, almost black accents. They also wore the third kit with dark navy shorts. A new goalkeeper kit was brought in which was navy blue with fluro green accents. The fluro orange from the previous season stays on as the away goalkeeper shirt for this season. Chelsea will wear their 2010–11 home kit in the FA Cup final.

Squad

First team squad

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 Czech Republic GK Petr Čech
2 Serbia DF Branislav Ivanović
3 England DF Ashley Cole
5 Ghana MF Michael Essien
6 Portugal DF Ricardo Carvalho
8 England MF Frank Lampard (vice-captain)
10 England MF Joe Cole
11 Ivory Coast FW Didier Drogba
12 Nigeria MF John Obi Mikel
13 Germany MF Michael Ballack
15 France MF Florent Malouda
17 Portugal DF José Bosingwa
18 Russia MF Yuri Zhirkov
19 Portugal DF Paulo Ferreira
20 Portugal MF Deco
No. Position Player
21 Ivory Coast FW Salomon Kalou
22 England GK Ross Turnbull
23 England FW Daniel Sturridge
24 Serbia MF Nemanja Matić
26 England DF John Terry (captain)
33 Brazil DF Alex
35 Brazil DF Juliano Belletti
39 France FW Nicolas Anelka
40 Portugal GK Henrique Hilário
41 England DF Sam Hutchinson
43 Netherlands DF Jeffrey Bruma
44 France FW Gaël Kakuta
45 Italy FW Fabio Borini
46 Italy MF Jacopo Sala
50 Czech Republic GK Jan Šebek

Reserve squad[3]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
Wales GK Rhys Taylor
Germany GK Niclas Heimann
England DF Nana Ofori-Twumasi
England DF Carl Magnay
Netherlands DF Jeffrey Bruma
England DF Ben Gordon
England DF Ryan Bertrand (on loan at Reading)
Netherlands DF Patrick van Aanholt
England MF Jack Cork (on loan at Burnley)
No. Position Player
England MF Liam Bridcutt
Republic of Ireland MF Conor Clifford
England MF Jacob Mellis
England MF Michael Woods
Italy MF Jacopo Sala
England MF Danny Philliskirk
France FW Gaël Kakuta
Slovakia FW Miroslav Stoch (on loan at Twente)
Italy FW Fabio Borini

Youth squad[4]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
Kosovo GK Aldi Haxhia
England GK Sam Walker
Czech Republic GK Jan Šebek
Sri Lanka DF Nikki Ahamed
England DF Tom Hayden
England DF Daniel Pappoe
England DF Aziz Deen-Conteh
England DF George Saville
England DF Nathaniel Chalobah
England DF Ben Sampayo
England DF Kenny Strickland
England DF Billy-Joe King
Portugal MF Aliu Djaló
No. Position Player
England MF Billy Clifford
England MF James Ashton
Turkey MF Gökhan Töre
Republic of Ireland MF Anton Rodgers
England MF Billy Knott
England MF Josh McEachran
Italy MF Jacopo Sala
England MF Jordan Tabor
Austria FW Philipp Prosenik
Slovakia FW Milan Lalkovič
Sweden FW Marko Mitrović
Kenya FW Bobby Devyne
England FW Adam Phillip

UEFA Champions League squad[5]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 Czech Republic GK Petr Čech
2 Serbia DF Branislav Ivanović
3 England DF Ashley Cole
5 Ghana MF Michael Essien
6 Portugal DF Ricardo Carvalho
8 England MF Frank Lampard (vice-captain)
10 England MF Joe Cole
11 Ivory Coast FW Didier Drogba
12 Nigeria MF John Obi Mikel
13 Germany MF Michael Ballack
15 France MF Florent Malouda
17 Portugal DF José Bosingwa
18 Russia MF Yuri Zhirkov
20 Portugal MF Deco
No. Position Player
21 Ivory Coast FW Salomon Kalou
22 England GK Ross Turnbull
23 England FW Daniel Sturridge
26 England DF John Terry (captain)
33 Brazil DF Alex
35 Brazil DF Juliano Belletti
39 France FW Nicolas Anelka
40 Portugal GK Henrique Hilário
41 England DF Sam Hutchinson
43 Netherlands DF Jeffrey Bruma (from List B)
44 France FW Gaël Kakuta (from List B)
45 Italy FW Fabio Borini (from List B)
47 Sri Lanka DF Nikki Ahamed (from List B)
48 England MF Danny Philliskirk (from List B)

Club

Coaching staff

Position Staff
Manager Italy Carlo Ancelotti
Assistant Manager (Technical) England Ray Wilkins
Assistant Manager (Scientific) Italy Bruno Demichelis
Assistant Manager England Paul Clement
Goalkeeping Coach France Christophe Lollichon
First Team Fitness Coach England Glen Driscoll
Head Scout Nigeria Michael Emenalo
Match Observer Scout England Mick McGiven
Club Doctor England Dr. Bryan English
Reserve Team Manager England Steve Holland
Youth Team Manager England Dermot Drummy
Academy Manager England Neil Bath

Source: Chelsea FC

Other information

Owner/Chairman Russia Roman Abramovich
Chairman United States Bruce Buck
Chief Executive England Ron Gourlay
Sporting Director and Director of Youth Development Denmark Frank Arnesen
Ground (capacity and dimensions) Stamford Bridge (42,055 / 103x67 metres)

Source: Chelsea FC

Transfers

In

Summer

No. Pos Player Transferred From Fee Date Source
22 GK England Ross Turnbull Middlesbrough Free 2 July 2009[6]
23 FW England Daniel Sturridge Manchester City £3.5–6.5M[7] 3 July 2009[8]
18 MF Russia Yuri Zhirkov CSKA Moscow £18M 7 July 2009[9]
24 MF Serbia Nemanja Matić MFK Košice £1.5M 18 August 2009[10]

Winter

No transfers were completed in the winter transfer window.

Out

Summer

No. Pos Player Transferred To Fee Date Source
FW Israel Ben Sahar Espanyol £850,000 22 June 2009[11]
27 MF Brazil Mineiro Schalke 04 Released 30 June 2009
MF England Jimmy Smith Leyton Orient Free 9 July 2009[12]
FW England Frank Nouble West Ham United Free 22 July 2009[13]
FW Denmark Morten Nielsen AZ Mutual agreement 23 July 2009[14]
MF Spain Sergio Tejera Mallorca Free 24 July 2009[15]
14 FW Peru Claudio Pizarro Werder Bremen 10,000,000 18 August 2009[16]
7 FW Ukraine Andriy Shevchenko Dynamo Kyiv Free 28 August 2009[17]
DF England Shaun Cummings Reading Undisclosed 2 September 2009[18]
MF England Lee Sawyer Barnet Contract terminated 12 November 2009[19]
No. Pos Player Transferred To Fee Date Source
MF England Tom Taiwo Carlisle Undisclosed 6 January 2010[20]

Loaned out

No. Pos Player Loaned To Start End Source
4 DF Serbia Slobodan Rajković Twente 1 July 2009 1 July 2010[21]
MF England Tom Taiwo Carlisle United 9 July 2009 1 January 2010[22]
MF England Lee Sawyer Southend United 24 July 2009 27 October 2009[23][24]
43 MF Slovakia Miroslav Stoch Twente 15 July 2009 1 July 2010[25]
DF England Ryan Bertrand Reading 17 July 2009 1 July 2010[26]
9 FW Argentina Franco Di Santo Blackburn Rovers 4 August 2009 1 January 2010[27]
16 FW England Scott Sinclair Wigan Athletic 6 August 2009 1 July 2010[28]
DF Netherlands Patrick van Aanholt Coventry City 7 August 2009 1 January 2010[29]
42 DF England Michael Mancienne Wolverhampton Wanderers 13 August 2009 1 July 2010[30]
MF England Liam Bridcutt Stockport County 14 August 2009 1 January 2010[31]
MF England Jacob Mellis Southampton 14 August 2009 1 July 2010[32]
DF England Shaun Cummings West Bromwich Albion 17 August 2009 2 September 2009[18][33]
DF England Jack Cork Coventry City 21 August 2009 1 January 2010[34]
30 GK Wales Rhys Taylor Queens Park Rangers 20 November 2009 4 January 2010[35]
52 DF Netherlands Patrick van Aanholt Newcastle United 29 January 2010 28 February 2010[36]
MF England Jack Cork Burnley 1 February 2010 31 May 2010[37]
DF England Ben Gordon Tranmere Rovers 25 March 2010 25 April 2010[38]

Overall

This section displays the club's financial expenditure's in the transfer market. Because all transfer fees are not disclosed to the public, the numbers displayed in this section are only based on figures released by media outlets.

Competitions

2009 Community Shield Winners

Overall

Competition Started round Final
position / round
First match Last match
FA Community Shield Winner 9 August 2009
Premier League Winner 15 August 2009 9 May 2010
UEFA Champions League Group stage Round of 16 15 September 2009 16 March 2010
Football League Cup 3rd round Fifth Round 23 September 2009 2 December 2009
FA Cup 3rd round Winner 3 January 2010 15 May 2010

Source: Competitions

Pre-season

World Football Challenge

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Team Pld W WPk LPk L GF GA GD Pts
England Chelsea 3 3 0 0 0 6 1 +5 15
Mexico América 3 1 1 0 1 3 4 −1 8
Italy Internazionale 3 1 0 1 1 3 3 0 7
Italy Milan 3 0 0 0 3 2 6 −4 2

Return to England

FA Community Shield

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Premier League

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Chelsea's eighteenth consecutive season in the Premier League began on 15 August 2009 and ended on 9 May 2010. Chelsea won their fourth national league title on 86 points, one point ahead of Manchester United.

League table

Pos
Team
Pld
W
D
L
GF
GA
GD
Pts
Qualification or relegation
1 Chelsea (C) 38 27 5 6 103 32 +71 86 Group stage
2 Manchester United 38 27 4 7 86 28 +58 85
3 Arsenal 38 23 6 9 83 41 +42 75
4 Tottenham Hotspur 38 21 7 10 67 41 +26 70 Play-off round
5 Manchester City 38 18 13 7 73 45 +28 67 2010–11 UEFA Europa League Play-off round
6 Aston Villa 38 17 13 8 52 39 +13 64
7 Liverpool 38 18 9 11 61 35 +26 63 2010–11 UEFA Europa League Third qualifying round
8 Everton 38 16 13 9 60 49 +11 61

Source: Barclays Premier League
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored
(C) = Champion; (R) = Relegated; (P) = Promoted; (E) = Eliminated; (O) = Play-off winner; (A) = Advances to a further round.
Only applicable when the season is not finished:
(Q) = Qualified to the phase of tournament indicated; (TQ) = Qualified to tournament, but not yet to the particular phase indicated; (RQ) = Qualified to the relegation tournament indicated; (DQ) = Disqualified from tournament.

Results summary

Overall Home Away
Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts W D L GF GA GD W D L GF GA GD
38 27 5 6 103 32  +71 86 17 1 1 68 14  +54 10 4 5 35 18  +17

Source: Barclays Premier League

Results by round

Round 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38
Ground H A A H A H A H A H A H H A A H H A A H H H A A H A A H H A A H A H A H A H
Result W W W W W W L W L W W W W W L D W D D W W W W D W L W L W D W W W W L W W W
Position 6 2 2 1 1 1 2 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 3 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1

Source: Matches
Ground: A = Away; H = Home. Result: D = Draw; L = Loss; W = Win; P = Postponed.

Matches

FA Cup

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League Cup

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UEFA Champions League

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Group stage

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Group D
Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
England Chelsea 6 4 2 0 11 4 +7 14
Portugal Porto 6 4 0 2 8 3 +5 12
Spain Atlético Madrid 6 0 3 3 3 12 −9 3
Cyprus APOEL 6 0 3 3 4 7 −3 3

Knockout phase

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Round of 16

Statistics

Appearances and goals

No. Pos Nat Player Total Premier League Champions League FA Cup League Cup
Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
1 GK Czech Republic Petr Čech 42 0 34+0 0 6+0 0 2+0 0 0+0 0
2 DF Serbia Branislav Ivanović 40 1 25+3 1 6+0 0 3+0 0 3+0 0
3 DF England Ashley Cole 34 4 25+2 4 4+0 0 2+0 0 0+1 0
5 MF Ghana Michael Essien 21 4 13+1 3 5+1 1 0+0 0 0+1 0
6 DF Portugal Ricardo Carvalho 28 0 22+0 0 5+0 0 1+0 0 0+0 0
7 FW Ukraine Andriy Shevchenko* 1 0 0+1 0 0+0 0 0+0 0 0+0 0
8 MF England Frank Lampard 50 26 36+0 22 6+1 1 6+0 3 0+1 0
10 MF England Joe Cole 39 2 14+12 2 2+3 0 3+2 0 3+0 0
11 FW Ivory Coast Didier Drogba 43 37 31+1 29 5+0 3 4+0 3 0+2 2
12 MF Nigeria John Obi Mikel 34 0 21+4 0 4+0 0 3+0 0 2+0 0
13 MF Germany Michael Ballack 44 5 26+6 4 5+1 0 3+1 1 2+0 0
15 MF France Florent Malouda 50 15 26+7 12 7+1 0 4+2 2 3+0 1
17 DF Portugal José Bosingwa 8 0 8+0 0 0+0 0 0+0 0 0+0 0
18 MF Russia Yuri Zhirkov 27 0 10+7 0 3+1 0 4+0 0 2+0 0
19 DF Portugal Paulo Ferreira 20 1 11+2 0 0+0 0 4+0 0 3+0 1
20 MF Portugal Deco 28 3 14+5 2 2+2 0 3+0 0 2+0 1
21 FW Ivory Coast Salomon Kalou 36 12 11+12 5 5+1 3 2+2 1 3+0 3
22 GK England Ross Turnbull 5 -2 2+0 0 2+0 -2 0+0 0 0+1 0
23 FW England Daniel Sturridge 20 5 2+11 1 0+2 0 3+1 4 1+0 0
24 MF Serbia Nemanja Matić 3 0 0+2 0 0+0 0 0+1 0 0+0 0
26 DF England John Terry 51 3 37+0 2 8+0 0 5+0 1 0+1 0
33 DF Brazil Alex 25 1 13+3 1 2+0 0 6+0 0 1+0 0
35 DF Brazil Juliano Belletti 22 0 4+7 0 4+1 0 2+1 0 3+0 0
39 FW France Nicolas Anelka 44 15 31+2 11 6+1 3 3+1 1 0+0 0
40 GK Portugal Henrique Hilário 11 -3 2+1 0 0+1 0 4+0 0 3+0 -3
41 DF England Sam Hutchinson 3 0 0+2 0 0+0 0 0+0 0 1+0 0
43 DF Netherlands Jeffrey Bruma 3 0 0+2 0 0+0 0 0+0 0 0+1 0
44 FW France Gaël Kakuta 4 0 0+1 0 1+0 0 0+1 0 0+1 0
45 FW Italy Fabio Borini 8 0 0+4 0 0+1 0 0+2 0 1+0 0
52 DF Netherlands Patrick van Aanholt 2 0 0+2 0 0+0 0 0+0 0 0+0 0

Notes:

  • * = Player is no longer with the club but still made an appearance during the season.

Top scorers

Includes all competitive matches. The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.

Rnk No. Player Premier League Champions League League Cup FA Cup Community Shield Total
1 11 Ivory Coast Drogba 29 3 2 3 0 37
2 8 England Lampard 22 1 0 3 1 27
3 15 France Malouda 12 0 1 2 0 15
39 France Anelka 11 3 0 1 0 15
5 21 Ivory Coast Kalou 5 3 3 1 0 12
6 13 Germany Ballack 4 0 0 1 0 5
23 England Sturridge 1 0 0 4 0 5
8 3 England Cole 4 0 0 0 0 4
5 Ghana Essien 3 1 0 0 0 4
10 20 Portugal Deco 2 0 1 0 0 3
26 England Terry 2 0 0 1 0 3
12 10 England Cole 2 0 0 0 0 2
13 2 Serbia Ivanović 1 0 0 0 0 1
6 Portugal Carvalho 0 0 0 0 1 1
19 Portugal Ferreira 0 0 1 0 0 1
33 Brazil Alex 1 0 0 0 0 1
Own goals 4 1 0 1 0 6
TOTALS 103 12 8 17 2 142

Disciplinary record

Includes all competitive matches. Players with 1 card or more included only.

Position Nation Number Name Premier League Champions League League Cup FA Cup Total (FA Total)
Booked Red card Booked Red card Booked Red card Booked Red card Booked Red card
GK Czech Republic 1 Petr Čech 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 (0) 1 (1)
DF Serbia 2 Branislav Ivanović 6 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 7 (6) 0
DF England 3 Ashley Cole 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 (4) 0
MF Ghana 5 Michael Essien 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 4 (2) 0
DF Portugal 6 Ricardo Carvalho 4 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 5 (5) 0
MF England 10 Joe Cole 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 (2) 0
FW Ivory Coast 11 Didier Drogba 7 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 8 (7) 1 (0)
MF Nigeria 12 John Obi Mikel 3 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 4 (4) 0
MF Germany 13 Michael Ballack 4 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 5 (4) 1 (1)
MF France 15 Florent Malouda 5 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 7 (5) 1 (1)
MF Russia 18 Yuri Zhirkov 4 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 5 (4) 0
DF Portugal 19 Paulo Ferreira 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 (2) 0
MF Portugal 20 Deco 4 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 5 (5) 0
FW Ivory Coast 21 Salomon Kalou 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 4 (2) 0
MF Serbia 24 Nemanja Matić 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 (1) 0
DF England 26 John Terry 7 1 2 0 0 0 2 0 11 (9) 1 (1)
DF Brazil 33 Alex 2 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 4 (3) 0
DF Brazil 35 Juliano Belletti 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 3 (2) 1 (1)
DF Netherlands 43 Jeffrey Bruma 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 (1) 0
TOTALS 58 5 14 1 1 0 9 0 82 (68) 6 (5)

Overall

Games played 55 (38 Premier League, 8 UEFA Champions League, 3 Football League Cup, 6 FA Cup)
Games won 39 (27 Premier League, 4 UEFA Champions League, 2 Football League Cup, 6 FA Cup)
Games drawn 7 (5 Premier League, 2 UEFA Champions League)
Games lost 9 (6 Premier League, 2 UEFA Champions League, 1 Football League Cup)
Goals scored 142
Goals conceded 44
Goal difference +98
Clean sheets 29
Yellow cards 82
Red cards 6
Worst discipline England John Terry (11 Booked, 1 Red card)
Best result(s) 8–0 (H) v Wigan Athletic – Premier League – 9 May 2010
Worst result(s) 2–4 (H) v Manchester City – Premier League – 27 February 2010
3–1 (A) v Wigan AthleticPremier League – 23 September 2009
Most appearances John Terry with 51 appearances
Top scorer Ivory Coast Didier Drogba (37 goals)
Points 124/165 (75.15%)

Source: Chelsea FC

Honours

Individuals

Player

No. Player Award Source
1 Czech Republic Petr Čech 2009 Czech Footballer of the Year,[39] 2009–10 Barclays Golden Glove
2 Serbia Branislav Ivanović PFA Team of the Year (2010)
3 England Ashley Cole Goal of the Season (2009–10) v Sunderland (Premier League) 16 January 2010
8 England Frank Lampard 2010 Football Writers' Association Tribute Award
11 Ivory Coast Didier Drogba 2009 BBC African Footballer of the Year, 2009 African Footballer of the Year, PFA Team of the Year (2010), Chelsea Player of the Year (2009–10), 2010 Barclays Golden Boot Winner
15 France Florent Malouda Player of the Month (March 2010), Samsung Players' Player of the Year (2009–10)
26 England John Terry UEFA European Club Defender of the Year (2009), FIFPro World XI (2008–09)

Manager

Manager Award Source
Italy Carlo Ancelotti Manager of the Month (November 2009)

See also

References

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  3. The Reserves Chelseafc.com
  4. The Academy Chelseafc.com
  5. The Champions League squad UEFA.com
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  7. Daniel Sturridge to cost Chelsea an initial £3.5m BBC Sport. 14 January 2010
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  39. http://www.uefa.com/memberassociations/association=eng/news/newsid=1457060.html Čech voted Czech player of the year

External links