Roberto Mancini rates Chelsea narrow favourites to reach the
Champions League quarterfinals despite Galatasaray finishing the better
side in the first-leg 1-1 draw.
The Turkish side's manager was relieved his open tactics in the first 25
minutes on Wednesday did not result in more than the one goal his team
conceded.
But Galatasaray could have stolen victory after Aurelien Chedjou's
equaliser midway through the second half cancelled out Fernando Torres's
ninth-minute opener.
Mancini felt brave enough to suggest his team could finish the job in
London having rated Chelsea's chances of success at 80 percent before
the first leg.
"We should have started more aggressively. During the first 20 minutes
we had too much respect for Chelsea and we made four or five mistakes,
one of which resulted in the goal, but apart from that we played well,"
Mancini said.
"Seeing the second half, I think my players saw what we are capable of
and we now know we can actually go through. It will be very difficult
but we can go through. I think we have a 40 per cent chance."
Torres's early goal was the first scored by an English team in this
last-16 round following Manchester City's 2-0 defeat to Barcelona,
Arsenal's 2-0 loss to Bayern Munich and Manchester United's 2-0 setback
at Olympiakos in other first-leg matches.
That was at least some consolation for Mourinho who was unhappy at his
front line's failure to capitalise. "There are teams that score three
goals when they find three chances. We are a team that scores one goal
out of five chances.
"When it comes to the last choice, the finishing touch, the correct
pass, we are not yet a team that delivers it and kills opponents. It's
not a criticism of the strikers, it's just that's what we are in this
moment."
But he praised Chelsea's fighting spirit. "My team, each and every one
of them, give everything on the pitch, and they fight, they fight for
each other," he said.
Mourinho also had praise for striker Didier Drogba, whose last action of
a highly productive Chelsea career was scoring the penalty that secured
the Champions League title in 2012.
"He is one of the best players in the world. When he comes to London he
will have the best reception of his life, the reception he deserves as a
club legend," said Mourinho before the second leg on March 18.
"But he wants to win and he will not be our friend for those 90 minutes
on the pitch that he wants to win. He is still a striker and not a
coach."
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