Chelsea support Jose Mourinho; ...query team’s lack of penalties

Chelsea have addressed the “abnormally low” number of penalties they have received this season in apparent support of José Mourinho’s complaints of a “clear campaign” against the club.

Mourinho was fined £25,000 for the comment made after the 28 December draw at Southampton, when he felt Cesc Fàbregas was denied a spot-kick and the midfielder was instead booked for diving.

On Sunday, following the Premier League leaders’ 1-1 draw at home to the Saints, Mourinho was asked if Chelsea would be awarded another penalty this term. “It’s a question,” Mourinho said.

The response came after Mourinho had felt Nemanja Matic was harshly penalised in Southampton being awarded a penalty, while Branislav Ivanovic had been denied a spot-kick at the other end following a trip by Dusan Tadic.

Chelsea’s website published an article on Wednesday about the Blues receiving just two Premier League penalties this season after 28 games. The article, headlined “Penalty puzzle”, read: “Historically, this figure seems abnormally low. The most recent was four and a half months ago.”

The article makes comparisons with recent seasons, including seven awarded to Chelsea last term, when they finished third, and 12 in the 2009-10 season, the last time they were champions.
It added: “This season’s tally of two unquestionably bucks the recent trend.

“It could be that when teams have played the league leaders they have been particularly careful inside their own area.

“We all have plenty of recollections suggesting this is not the case however.”
The article then identifies examples when Chelsea might have been awarded spot-kicks, but were not.
“From the first half of our very first league game, at Burnley, a number of key penalty-box decisions have not gone our way, Diego Costa the victim that evening after being felled trying to round the keeper,” the story read.
Mourinho on Sunday bit his tongue on the Ivanovic incident, but made his feelings clear.

Put to him that Ivanovic had fallen theatrically, dissuading the referee Mike Dean from pointing to the spot, Mourinho deferred to his media officer sitting alongside, saying: “You have to control me, if not … ”

Without implicating their manager, Chelsea’s article may place scrutiny on Michael Oliver, the referee for Sunday’s match at Hull.

Credit: Guardian Sport

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