Mourinho dismisses 'boring Chelsea' chants
Blues manager defends team's style of play
Jose Mourinho has launched a fierce defense of his Chelsea side and rejected any suggestion the champion-elect of England is boring to watch.
Sunday's scoreless draw with Arsenal was greeted with chants of "boring, boring Chelsea" from home fans at the Emirates Stadium, although the point gained took the Blues closer to claiming the Premier League title.
The taunts came after fresh scrutiny on Chelsea's style of play following a run of narrow wins that have helped it establish a 10-point lead at the top of the table.
But Chelsea manager Mourinho said on Monday it was ridiculous to suggest his side lacked flair, pointing to a tally of 65 goals in 33 league games this season - a total bettered only by second-placed defending champion Manchester City, which has scored 70 goals in 34 games - as proof of the Blues' attacking instincts.
"If we are boring, and if the number of goals is what decides if a team is good or bad, boring or not, then we have in the Premier League 18 teams who are more boring than us," Mourinho said during a media conference at Chelsea's Cobham training ground, southwest of London.
"In this criteria, only Manchester City is a team with more quality than us, if soccer is about just the number of goals you score," he said.
"If a good team is the team with more points, we are the best team. If a good team is the team with most victories, we are the best team," said the Portuguese manager.
"If the best team is the side with fewest defeats, we are the best team. If the best team is the champion, not yet ... but the team that leads, we are the best team.
"If the best team is the side with fewest (goals) conceded, we are the joint-best team. In any point of analysis, in any criteria you can find, we are the best team or the second-best team. So it's as simple as that."
Chelsea captain John Terry reacted to the Arsenal draw by saying "possession and tippy-tappy soccer's great", but it takes more than that to win the league.
Mourinho echoed his skipper's views on Monday, saying: "Sometimes I ask myself about the future and maybe the future of soccer is a beautiful, green grass carpet without goals.
"In that beautiful grass pitch, the team with more ball possession wins the game.
"Maybe putting the ball in the net is not the objective, and stopping the goal from going in your own goal also doesn't matter."
Warming to his theme, Mourinho said: "Soccer started a few centuries ago and the objective was one thing. Now it looks like the objective is another one.
"I'm very simple with my analysis. Soccer is about putting the ball in your opponents' net and keeping it out of your own."
Chelsea needs two victories to be crowned champion and it can take the next step toward the title when it travels to face Leicester on Wednesday.
Mourinho confirmed striker Diego Costa remained doubtful but said Oscar will travel with the squad after the Brazilian was taken to hospital with a suspected concussion midway through the Arsenal game.
The manager, meanwhile, endorsed Chelsea playmaker Eden Hazard's success in being named player of the year by England's Professional Footballers' Association on Sunday.
"It is nice and he deserves it. I am happy for him and every player that helped him to achieve the level he is achieving," Mourinho said.
Six Chelsea players - Terry, Branislav Ivanovic, Gary Cahill, Nemanja Matic, Hazard and Costa - were included in the PFA's team of the year and Mourinho believes they should have been joined by Cesc Fabregas.
"The players from the other teams have the right to choose and obviously great players were in that team and great players were outside that team," Mourinho said.
"Just as an example, the season Cesc Fabregas is doing, the number of assists and quality of his game. For him not to be there is a bit strange."