
Enzo Maresca ‘very proud' as Chelsea book last-eight berth
Chelsea had been just four minutes away from victory following Reece James's stunning free-kick when the players were taken off the field at the Bank of America Stadium.
Benfica benefited from the break and forced extra-time with a controversial Angel Di Maria penalty after play finally resumed.
Meanwhile, in the dressing room. pic.twitter.com/UZPsVkNvHr
— Chelsea FC (@ChelseaFC) June 28, 2025
The game swung back in Chelsea's favour after the Portuguese giants had Gianluca Prestianni sent off and Christopher Nkunku gave them a decisive lead. Breakaway goals from Pedro Neto and Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall wrapped up the win.
Maresca told DAZN: 'I'm very proud. The performance for me was top until the last five minutes when they stopped the game, and when we restarted (it was) a completely a different game.
'When you are inside for more than one hour it's not easy but, 1-1, we continued to play and, at the end, I think the reward was one that we deserve.'
The players were pictured riding exercise bikes and kicking balls in the dressing room during the enforced break.
Maresca said: 'Especially when it's 85 minutes, five minutes to go, it's very difficult.
Benfica's Angel Di Maria, front, and Chelsea's Moises Caicedo battle for the ball (Nell Redmond/AP)
'But we tried to keep them in the best way we could in that moment and, at the end, we are in the last eight teams here in this competition and we are very happy.'
Chelsea will return to Philadelphia, where they played two group games, to face Brazilian side Palmeiras in the quarter-finals on Friday.
'Now we need to recover players, recover the energy and go again,' said Maresca.
Moises Caicedo delivered an influential performance but will miss the next game after being booked for a second time in the tournament.
Caicedo said of the team's prospects: 'We believe. We know this a tough tournament but, the thing is, we're working hard and doing well. At the end, we're going to see why we (are still) here.'
Reflecting on the weather delay, the Ecuadorian said: 'We were talking in the dressing room. The thing was (to stay) focused the whole game. I'm so happy because we did it.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
25 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Chelsea boss labels Club World Cup win over Benfica 'a joke' as he says the tournament 'is not football' after last-16 clash was suspended for nearly two hours due to lightning
A livid Enzo Maresca blasted Chelsea 's Club World Cup victory over Benfica as 'not football', 'not normal' and 'a joke' as he questioned the United States' suitability for hosting a major summer tournament – a year before FIFA bring the 2026 World Cup to America. Maresca was furious with how in the 86th minute of their match, play was suspended for nearly two hours due to lightning striking nearby. It left the players twiddling their thumbs in the confines of the Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte with scarce updates. Chelsea had controlled this contest up until that stoppage. However, upon returning, they lost their 1-0 lead to a controversial penalty scored by Angel Di Maria after Malo Gusto was deemed to have handled the ball. The Blues managed to go on to win 4-1 in the 30 minutes of extra time as Benfica had Gianluca Prestianni dismissed for a second yellow card. While Maresca was keen to stress that he loves the Club World Cup as a competition, his statement on the number of suspensions being forced on fixtures due to storms was a damning look for FIFA and their president Gianni Infantino. 'For 85 minutes, we were in control of the game,' Maresca told a group of English reporters after their victory in Charlotte. 'We didn't concede nothing. We created enough chances to win the game. And then after the break, the game changed completely. 'For me personally, it's not football. It's already seven, eight, nine games that they suspended. I think it's a joke, to be honest. It's not football. It's not for us. You cannot be inside. If you suspend seven or eight games that means that probably is not the right place to do this competition.' Chelsea will play Palmeiras in the Club World Cup's quarter finals in Philadelphia this Friday. That will see them face their incoming 18-year-old wonderkid, Estevao Willian. Other games suspended due to storms in the United States have been Benfica versus Auckland City in Orlando, Ulsan versus Mamelodi Sundowns in Orlando, Red Bull Salzburg versus Pachuca in Cincinnati, Boca Juniors versus Auckland City in Nashville, and Palmeiras versus Al Ahly in New Jersey. Chelsea travelled back to their Miami training base after this exhausting win in Charlotte and were fortunate that another suspension was not enforced in extra time, as FIFA bodies at the Bank of America Stadium were nervous that their weather trackers had spied a new storm arriving in the area. Continuing, Maresca said: 'The problem is that when the game is suspended, it's not football. Guys, it's not football. You suspend the game, it's not football. It's completely something different. 'The game was very good for 85 minutes. Then we had a two-hour stop. Then it started completely different. It's not the same game. It's not the same game because you break the tempo. 'Two hours inside, people speak with the family outside, if they were good, the security, people eating, people laughing, people talking on the mobile. It's two hours. 'That's why I said it's not football. It's something that you struggle to understand. But we tried to go out, continue in the same way, knowing that it was difficult. It's not random that for 85 minutes, we didn't concede nothing. And then for five minutes, we conceded a few chances. Why? It's because it started a completely different game. It's not normal. It's not football. 'I ask you, if in this competition, they already suspended six, seven, eight games, probably there is something that is not working well. Because in a football game, it's not normal to suspend a game. 'Please don't misunderstand me. It's a fantastic competition. It's a Club World Cup. It's top. We are happy to be in the last eight. But something happens, six, seven games suspended. 'It's not normal to suspend a game. In a World Cup, how many games are suspended? Zero, probably. In Europe, how many games? Zero. We are here two weeks, they've already suspended six, seven games. There is some problem for me personally. 'How can you keep them two hours inside focused? It's a joke. Then we are happy. We are happy to be here. We are happy to be in this competition. But it's something that it's not normal.'


Glasgow Times
an hour ago
- Glasgow Times
Chelsea book Club World Cup quarter-final spot after long weather delay
The Blues were just four minutes away from victory in normal time in Charlotte after a stunning Reece James free-kick when a thunderstorm forced the players off the field. After a stoppage of almost two hours, Angel Di Maria equalised from the penalty spot but Chelsea roused themselves in extra-time after the Portuguese giants had Gianluca Prestianni sent off. Christopher Nkunku struck from close range in the 108th minute before further goals from Pedro Neto and Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall wrapped up a deserved triumph, four hours and 38 minutes after kick-off at the Bank of America Stadium. And breathe. Up the Chels!!! 💙 — Chelsea FC (@ChelseaFC) June 29, 2025 Enzo Maresca's side will face Palmeiras in the last eight in Philadelphia on Friday after their defeat of Brazilian rivals Botafogo earlier on Saturday. Influential midfielder Moises Caicedo will not be available after he was booked in the second half in North Carolina. Chelsea dominated the majority of the game, but failed to make the most of a succession of chances in the first half. Marc Cucurella curled a shot around goalkeeper Anatoliy Trubin but Antonio Silva reacted quickly to head off the line. Trubin then tipped an effort round the post from Cole Palmer before smothering another attempt from Cucurella. Players walk off the field for a weather delay during the Club World Cup round of 16 soccer match between Benfica and Chelsea in Charlotte, North Carolina (Chris Carlson/AP) A rare attack from Benfica was thwarted when James blocked an Andreas Schjelderup shot but Palmer was similarly frustrated by the impressive Silva at the other end. Chelsea carried their momentum into the second half but a Palmer cross was deflected away from goal by Nicolas Otamendi and Caicedo drove wide. Chelsea finally got the reward their superiority deserved as James chanced his arm from a set-piece on 64 minutes. The Blues skipper appeared to be lining up to cross from wide on the left but instead whipped a curling right-foot shot over the two-man wall and inside the near post. Benfica tried to respond and Evangelos Pavlidis appealed for a penalty after a tussle with Benoit Badiashile but nothing was given. Liam Delap put the ball in the net for Chelsea but was flagged offside. The game had largely been played in sweltering heat, but as a storm neared in the closing minutes, play was suspended. Chelsea's Christopher Nkunku scores his side's second goal (Nell Redmond/AP) It became the latest of a series of games in the tournament to be paused due to the weather. The players were pictured during the enforced break kicking a ball and exercising in the dressing room. The stoppage worked to Benfica's benefit as they won a penalty when Otamendi's nod down brushed the arm of Malo Gusto and was harshly ruled as a penalty. Di Maria made no mistake from the spot – his fourth successful penalty of the tournament – to force extra-time. Benfica were reduced to 10 men when Prestianni received a second booking for a foul on Levi Colwill. Chelsea took control and went close when Palmer had a shot saved by Trubin, but Sanchez needed to be alert to deny Di Maria moments later. Nkunku broke through when he struck at the second attempt after an initial effort was blocked by Otamendi and Neto and Dewsbury-Hall added gloss to the scoreline.


Glasgow Times
an hour ago
- Glasgow Times
Sunday's briefing: England Under-21s defend European title and Chelsea advance
Chelsea beat Benfica 4-1 in extra-time after a late weather delay in the match in Charlotte to reach the quarter-finals of the Club World Cup. England boss Sarina Wiegman continues the preparation for Euro 2025 with a friendly against Jamaica in Leicester on Sunday. Young Lions roar again Jonathan Rowe's extra-time header secured England Under-21s back-to-back European Championship titles after beating Germany 3-2 in extra-time in Bratislava. Germany had beaten England in the group stages, but Lee Carsley's side got off to a flying start with early goals from Harvey Elliott and Omari Hutchinson. However, Nelson Weiper struck just before the break and Paul Nebel then dragged Germany back on level terms. Harvey Elliott gave England an early lead (PA Wire) Substitute Rowe made an instant impact after coming off the bench in extra-time, scoring with a diving header which proved decisive despite Germany coming close again late on when Merlin Rohl's effort rattled the crossbar. 'I am so proud of them, so happy for them,' England Under-21s boss Carsley said on Channel 4. 'To be European champions for the second time is a great achievement and I suppose the challenge now is to do it again in two years.' Blues march on at Club World Cup Chelsea captain Reece James (right) scored a free-kick just after the hour (Nell Redmond/AP) Chelsea beat Benfica 4-1 after a weather delay late on in the match in Charlotte to reach the quarter-finals of the Club World Cup, where they will face Brazilian side Palmeiras. The Blues saw first-half efforts from Marc Cucurella and Cole Palmer saved by Benfica goalkeeper Anatolii Trubin. The Ukrainian, though, was caught out in the 64th minute when Reece James fired an angled free-kick from the left past him at the near post. The match was suspended with just four minutes left of normal time because of the risk of lightning in the vicinity of Bank of America Stadium, a break which lasted almost two hours. When the game resumed, Angel Di Maria equalised from the penalty spot to send the game into extra-time. After Benfica's Gianluca Prestianni was sent off, Chelsea regained control and Christopher Nkunku put them ahead from close range. Pedro Neto and Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall added late goals on the break In Saturday's other last-16 tie, Palmeiras beat Brazil rivals Botafogo 1-0 after extra-time in Philadelphia. Palmeiras substitute Paulinho made the decisive breakthrough in the 10th minute of extra-time, before captain Gustavo Gomez was sent off for a second yellow card following an off-the-ball tussle, but his side held out. Lionesses continue Euros countdown England host Jamaica at the King Power Stadium on Sunday for their Euro 2025 send-off friendly. Lauren James is in line for her first appearance since sustaining a hamstring injury in April. The Chelsea forward, 23, has been unable to feature for club or country since limping off midway through England's 5-0 Nations League win against Belgium nearly three months ago, but returned to training last week. England boss Sarina Wiegman said: 'She is doing really well, but of course she hasn't played games yet, but she's in a good place. 'She will likely come off the bench, we can manage that a bit. She showed up on the training session really well.' Cristiano Ronaldo sees a bigger picture Cristiano Ronaldo feels turning down the opportunity to play at the Club World Cup and signing a new two-year deal with Al Nassr gives him a better chance of success next season – and another shot at taking Portugal to World Cup glory. Following Al Nassr's final league game of the season last month, Ronaldo had posted on social media 'the chapter is over', which fuelled speculation the five-time Ballon d'Or winner was to leave the Saudi Pro League club. The 40-year-old revealed teams had 'reached out' over taking part in the Club World Cup in the United States, but he decided instead to extend his stay with Al Nassr. 'I had some offers to play (Club) World Cup, but I think it didn't make sense because I prefer to have a good rest, a good preparation, because this season will be very long, because this is the season of the World Cup at the end,' Ronaldo told Al Nassr TV. 'I want to be ready not only for Al Nassr, but also for the national team, so this is why I decide to play the last game for the Nations League and not listen to nothing (about the offers) and of course to be in this club, which I love.' What's on today? England manager Sarina Wiegman is fine tuning the squad ahead of the defence of their European Championship crown (Nigel French/PA) England host Jamaica in Leicester for their final warm-up fixture ahead of Euro 2025. The Club World Cup knockout stage continues as PSG take on Inter Miami in Atlanta while Bayern Munich face Brazilian side Flamengo in Miami.