Injury prevented the flying Dutchman from ever fulfilling his true potential in west London, but the Blues never found a way to replace the dazzling talent they sold to Madrid
When Chelsea fans at the Allianz Arena peruse the Bayern Munich starting line-up on Saturday, any utterance of the name Arjen Robben will leave a bittersweet taste.
The flying Dutchman exhilarated and
exasperated in equal measure during his three years at Stamford Bridge,
troubling physios as much as he did opposing defenders.
Signed
from under the nose of Manchester United in the summer of 2004, Robben
lit up Chelsea’s maiden Premier League title season for four months
between October and February, until a mistimed Aaron Mokoena tackle
effectively ended his campaign during an ill-tempered clash with
Blackburn at Ewood Park.
During that time, it was the
fleet-footed winger’s dazzling combinations with the equally slick
Damien Duff which attracted the most praise, adding as it did a layer of
devastating gloss to Jose Mourinho’s ruthlessly efficient winning
machine.
DUTCH DELIGHT
ROBBEN AT CHELSEA
GAMES STARTED
GOALS SCORED
ASSISTS
75
19
22
ROBBEN AT REAL MADRID
GAMES STARTED
GOALS SCORED
ASSISTS
44
12
10
ROBBEN AT BAYERN
GAMES STARTED
GOALS SCORED
ASSISTS
72
54
23
Robben’s debut season in England looked to have heralded the emergence
of a new star of European football, and indeed time has proved it so.
Unfortunately for Chelsea, however, they were not destined to be the
main beneficiaries.
For while there may have been more good games
in a blue shirt, and more important goals, fallible fitness levels
prevented Robben from assuming the key role his talent deserved in west
London.
In his absence, other impressive, if less thrilling,
figures went on to became the cornerstones of Mourinho’s Chelsea, and in
time the Special One came to view his fantastic yet fragile wideman as
expendable. When Real Madrid came knocking with around £25million in the
summer of 2007, there was little resistance.
Robben’s departure
was not the primary factor in the end of the Blues’ domestic hegemony –
they had already been edged out by Sir Alex Ferguson’s new United crop
boasting Cristiano Ronaldo and Wayne Rooney in the Dutchman’s final
season – but it did mark a sea change in the style of football on offer
at Stamford Bridge.
Whether operating in a narrow 4-4-2 diamond
midfield with Frank Lampard and Michael Ballack vying for control of the
orchestra, or the tried and trusted 4-3-3 with inferior replacements
Florent Malouda or Nicolas Anelka bulldozing their way down the flanks,
the searing pace, mesmeric skill and direct running Robben had offered
was no longer within the Chelsea armoury.
In its place came the
slower, more deliberate, attritional approach now considered synonymous
with the Roman Abramovich era. It is one which gains few admirers, and
the Russian himself has spent almost £140m in the last two years to try
and change it.
But as ‘Boring, Boring Chelsea’ became a favoured
chant across many top flight English grounds, Robben was dazzling in his
new surroundings.
Along with countryman Wesley Sneijder, he
provided the fantasy in Bernd Schuster’s Madrid side which capitalised
on the implosion of Frank Rijkaard’s Barcelona to win La Liga in his
debut season. The next year he again grew in stature, even as the
resurgent Catalans, now under Pep Guardiola, conquered Spain and Europe.

GOALS SCORED
ASSISTS
19
22
GOALS SCORED
ASSISTS
12
10
GOALS SCORED
ASSISTS
54
23










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