Diego Costa provided the lightning conductor as
the longstanding friction between Chelsea and
Arsenal crackled to the fore during his side’s ill-
tempered 2-0 victory in the Premier League.
Costa sparked the incident, late in the first half,
that culminated in the dismissal of Arsenal centre-
back Gabriel, who was goaded into kicking out at
the Chelsea striker following a penalty-box scuffle
involving Laurent Koscielny.
Costa twice appeared to swing his arm at Koscielny
and Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger was
exasperated that referee Mike Dean had sent off
Gabriel and allowed the Spain international to
remain on the pitch.
“He can do what he wants, he stays on. Everybody
else who responds to him has to be sent off,” a
visibly aggravated Wenger told his post-match
press conference at Stamford Bridge on Saturday.
“I think his behaviour is unacceptable. If you look
at the pictures, what he does to Koscielny, before
he pushes him down in the face, he hits him in the
face. And he always get away with it.
“I don’t understand Mike Dean’s decision at all.”
Wenger accepted that Gabriel had been wrong to
react, but he said that Dean’s handling of the
incident had shown “weakness” and “naivety”.
Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho dismissed
Wenger’s claims, however, and used the
opportunity to lecture his long-time adversary on
the importance of “emotional control”.
“I played against Arsenal 12, 15, 18 times, I don’t
know, and only once he (Wenger) didn’t moan,”
said Mourinho, who shared a perfunctory
handshake with his opposite number prior to kick-
off.
“In that day, we lost the game, we lost the cup. It
was not good for us. We behave in a fantastic way.
No excuses, not crying, not moaning, just Mr Jose
Mourinho, my players and Chelsea Football Club.
“I played my first derby on the twenty-something
of September 2000. Benfica against Porto. And I
told my players before the game, to win derbies
you need emotional control.
“Without emotional control, forget it, you don’t
win. It’s a basic thing of the game.”
– ‘Game over’ –
Asked to justify Costa’s behaviour, Mourinho said
that the focus should instead be on Gabriel’s
“mistake” in retaliating.
When pressed on Costa’s apparent assault on
Koscielny, he attempted a joke, telling his
inquisitor: “I can guess that when you were a kid,
you were playing badminton.”
Costa was hit with a retrospective three-game ban
for treading on Liverpool’s Emre Can in a League
Cup tie last season and Wenger invited the
Football Association to look at his latest
indiscretion.
But Mourinho, who left captain John Terry on the
bench, said: “I think he said before the game that I
have to cope with my defeats. Tonight (Saturday),
he has to cope with his defeat.”
After Gabriel’s dismissal, Kurt Zouma headed
Chelsea in front from a Cesc Fabregas free-kick in
the 53rd minute.
Arsenal then lost Santi Cazorla to a second yellow
card before Eden Hazard added the coup de grace
with a deflected strike a minute from time.
Wenger said it was “frustrating” to have conceded
a goal from a set-piece and described Cazorla’s
dismissal, in the 78th minute, as “game over”.
While Arsenal nurse their wounds after back-to-
back defeats, following the mid-week 2-1 loss at
Dinamo Zagreb in the Champions League, Chelsea
are hopeful of a turnaround.
Mourinho’s men began their Champions League
campaign by beating Maccabi Tel Aviv 4-0 and
must now seek to whittle away Manchester City’s
eight-point advantage in the Premier League.
“In these two matches, we improved a lot, in many
aspects,” said Mourinho, whose side launch their
League Cup defence at Walsall on Wednesday.
“Defensively, the team was much better. The
attacking players defended much better than
before. They created a compact zone and reacted
very well when they lost the ball.
“Sometimes against 10 men, teams play bad. We
played very well against 10 men. We gave them no
chance.”


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