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A great article about John Terry


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Once again the tabloids are full of negativity about our captain, John Terry. The story is repeating itself every time, something's happened involving Terry and the media makes him look like the bad guy every time (not saying he isn't). It's been so much negativity about Terry the latest years, it is hard to imagine a positive article about him. But what do you know. Here is an article written by Martin Samuel for Daily Mail. It was written after the match against Man Utd, so it might've been posted before. I recomend everyone to read it. Enjoy:

MARTIN SAMUEL: Terry stands tall and delivers for Chelsea

It would not have been the best of mornings for John Terry. He would have woken up to more lurid headlines. He must be getting used to the scenario by now.

His mum and mother-in-law accused of shoplifting, his dad accused of drug dealing . . . there are times when he must wonder if there is not a long lost uncle somewhere who will turn out to be responsible for the crisis in world banking, and it will land at his door in large type over breakfast.

And some think this makes Terry a poor choice as England captain, or as the figurehead of Carlo Ancelotti's Chelsea team; that his frequent appearances on the front pages, even unwittingly by proxy, have a negative effect on his status as a leader and role model.

In fact, the opposite is true. Here is a man who rises above adversity. Here is a man who overcomes. Here is a man who would have studied a seedy tale about his father selling cheap cocaine in an Essex public house, before going out and doing his job superlatively, winning a crucial match for his team.

Terry thought he had scored the winning goal, steering the ball in the direction of Manchester United's net before the head of Nicolas Anelka gave it unwitting.

Both men wheeled away in celebration before Terry generously handed Anelka the credit in the post-match interview. It would have been easy to make capital of that moment, to use it to deflect from his personal difficulties, but Terry is less needy than that.

Chelsea's John Terry (left) celebrates with Frank Lampard

He crowned Anelka the hero of the day, and prepared to take the England team to play Brazil. He stood before the television cameras as if this was any other Sunday. He did not hide. He never does.

Meetings with Manchester United have special, and painful, significance to Terry, since a certain match in Moscow in 2008. He did not slip into the shadows that night, either, standing up to take the last penalty in the Champions League final shoot-out, then falling over and breaking down when his miss cost his team the trophy.

Every fibre in Terry's body must have ached for the revenge of a winning goal against Manchester United, particularly this day, when he would have known the ground was alive with mockery and whispers, yet he let the moment pass.

This is captaincy of the highest order, Terry putting his mind on the line, as much as his body. He sacrifices, the way Tony Adams once did for Arsenal and Roy Keane for Manchester United, and that level of commitment takes its toll in the end.

John Terry celebrates after beating Manchester United

All things considered, it is a wonder Terry remains relatively untroubled by demons. His record is not entirely unblemished but the majority of indiscretions took place early in his career and there seems to be evidence of maturity arriving with age.

Anyway, he would not be the first England captain, past or present, to make the odd mistake: think of Steven Gerrard, Rio Ferdinand — or Bobby Moore.

George Graham, the Arsenal manager, used to say that there were games when he would look on from the touchline and thank God that Adams was his captain, and this was a game that may have teased similar emotions from Ancelotti.

The Italian knows a defender and it speaks volumes that Ancelotti and Fabio Capello, the England manager, have come to rely on Terry. With his partner Ricardo Carvalho, he was immense in the heart of Chelsea's defences in a way that his Manchester United equivalent Ferdinand, and his partner Nemanja Vidic, have not been this season.

Ferdinand injured and Vidic dropped, the task of repelling Chelsea yesterday fell to Wes Brown and Jonny Evans and, while they acquitted themselves well, it was Chelsea's home record that extended to more than 14 hours without a goal conceded. Stephen Hunt of Hull City was the last opponent to score at Stamford Bridge after 28 minutes on the opening day of the season.

Burnley, Porto, Tottenham Hotspur, Queens Park Rangers, Liverpool, Atletico Madrid, Blackburn Rovers, Bolton Wanderers and now Manchester United have subsequently visited without success.

In this way, Ancelotti increasingly resembles the last coach to fashion a great Chelsea team, Jose Mourinho. He created a title-winning Chelsea side on a home fortress — he never lost here, and neither has Ancelotti so far — and on a team built from the back on the reliability of his captain, Terry.

The Italian talks up the influence of Didier Drogba — although he was quiet by his standards yesterday — but Terry is his leader, as he has been for every Chelsea and England manager since 2006.

That time span does not appear long, but in those three years a total of seven managers, whose honours include a World Cup, five European Cups, two Copa Americas and close to two dozen domestic titles, have all made him their captain.

They do so because they see beyond the headlines, beyond the scandals and celebrity soap operas, beyond the sensation and the sneers.

They do so because, when all that baggage is removed, what remains, quite simply, is one hell of a footballer.

http://www.dailymail...rs-Chelsea.html

Thought it would be nice to read an article honouring our captain.

Note: This is not to push the focus away from what John Terry has done.

Edited by Toft
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Once again the tabloids are full of negativity about our captain, John Terry. The story is repeating itself every time, something's happened involving Terry and the media makes him look like the bad guy every time (not saying he isn't). It's been so much negativity about Terry the latest years, it is hard to imagine a positive article about him. But what do you know. Here is an article written by Martin Samuel for Daily Mail. It was written after the match against Man Utd, so it might've been posted before. I recomend everyone to read it. Enjoy:

emo3.gif thanks ..remembered that ,,,

most unusual fot that rag

http://www.dailymail...rs-Chelsea.html

Thought it would be nice to read an article honouring our captain.

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Great Read!

Terry's commitment and never-say-die attitude is untouched by everybody in world football. He has blue blood coursing through his veins. He epitomises everything that is Chelsea. He is Chelsea.

In my opinion, when this man retires he will retire as the biggest Chelsea legend there is... and ever will be.

JT... Captain. Leader. Legend.

Come on the Chels!

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