
Moises Caicedo says Chelsea will learn from Flamengo defeat
Chelsea midfielder Moises Caicedo insists lessons will be learnt from Friday's loss to Flamengo at the Club World Cup.
The Blues capitulated in the second half in Philadelphia, surrendering a lead to lose 3-1 to the Brazilians and finish with 10 men.
Most of the damage was done in a torrid six-minute spell in which they conceded twice and had Nicolas Jackson – just four minutes after coming off the bench – sent off for a reckless tackle.
The result leaves them second in Group D with a win and a loss and potentially facing a more difficult route through the competition, with a possible clash against Bayern Munich in the last 16.
'It was difficult to take, but now we are focusing on the next game,' said Caicedo. 'For sure, we need to learn from this game. We need to react.
'I think the team played well but you need to be focused for 95 minutes in this game because, in one second, you can lose the game and that was what happened.'
Flamengo looked the more energetic side but they lacked a cutting edge in the first half and it was Chelsea who carried the greater threat through some quick counter-attacks.
Liam Delap, making his full debut in place of Jackson, forced a good save before Pedro Neto broke from halfway to open the scoring with a well-taken strike in the 14th minute.
A feisty contest tilted in Flamengo's favour when Bruno Henrique equalised just after the hour and veteran Danilo followed up with a second three minutes later.
The Premier League side were still reeling when Jackson was shown a straight red card for an aggressive studs-up challenge on Ayrton Lucas.
It was his second sending off in four appearances for the club and ended their hopes of fighting back.
Wallace Yan wrapped up the scoring seven minutes from time.
Manager Enzo Maresca partly put the defeat – and a subdued performance from key playmaker Cole Palmer in a wider role – down to experimentation ahead of next season.
The Italian said: 'It's not just about Cole. In the last two days we tried something completely different.
'For the first time we played in a different structure, just to prepare also for next season, to have more options.
'I think the plan was quite good for one hour until we conceded the goal, but I think at the end they deserved to win the game.
'Flamengo are a very good team with good players, with a good manager. They played very well.'
Hashtags

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


BBC News
23 minutes ago
- BBC News
'I always practise that' - Bellingham fuels Jude comparisons with first Dortmund goal
Jobe Bellingham already knew the comparisons to big brother Jude were inevitable, especially after scoring on his first start for Borussia years, nine months and one week after Jude scored on his first start for the black and yellow - a 5-0 win in the German Cup - Jobe scored on his first 19-year-old scored 45 minutes into his full debut - a 4-3 defeat of Mamelodi Sundowns in the Club World Cup - 15 minutes longer than it took Jude against Duisburg back in September went on to score 24 goals in 132 games for Dortmund before joining Real Madrid in 2023, and Jobe certainly showed signs of his sibling's nack of arriving late in the box to goal in Cincinnati showed anticipation and poise, agility and ruthlessness. After timing his run perfectly, Jobe cushioned the ball away from his marker before firing past the goalkeeper, albeit with the help of a slight capped a fine display on his full debut, and by his own admission, it's something the former Sunderland midfielder has been working on. "It's a really nice bonus. I am glad we won but there are still a lot of things for me to improve on personally and for the team. I am really pleased with it," Bellingham told Dazn."I practise that so many times, not that exact finish, but arriving late on the edge of the box as a midfielder is something you need to be really good at."If you can score, if you can contribute those kind of goals a certain amount per season then you are doing really well. "I was really pleased because it was something I practised as a kid and at Sunderland so many times, during training, after training. So yeah, I am really proud of it." Comparisons to Jude are no doubt tiring for Jobe, but there is a reason they are fact, the timing of his runs into the penalty area are reminiscent of another English midfielder."It's easy sometimes as a midfielder to just pass the ball then stand still," former Chelsea midfielder John Obi Mikel told Dazn. "But no, he wants to arrive late in the box. He wants to be there when the ball drops."He reminds me of a certain player I played with, Frank Lampard. 20-odd goals every season by being there and arriving at the right time. I think he's going to score a lot of goals for Dortmund."What I like about him is he's very direct. Once he has the ball he's looking up, he's passing forwards, running forwards. He wants to arrive at the box at the right time, and that's exactly what he did. "The chest control and the volley - he wouldn't have scored this goal if he hadn't passed and then run forwards."Former Italy and Inter Milan forward Christian Vieri said: "He's going to score a lot of goals because he's always going towards the goal - he looks like his brother, the movements are exactly the same."Should Dortmund and Real Madrid both win their respective Club World Cup groups and win in the last 16, then the Bellingham brothers would face each other in a quater-final clash in New Jersey.


Daily Mail
26 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Shedeur Sanders' speeding violations get shock response from ex-Browns coach Eric Mangini
Two egregious speeding violations and a missed court appearance aren't exactly helping rookie quarterback Shedeur Sanders' case for a roster spot on the 2025 Cleveland Browns. But as one former Cleveland head coach sees it, things could be much, much worse. 'I don't love it from a fifth-round draft pick,' Eric Mangini said of Deion during a recent appearance on FS1's 'The Herd' with Colin Cowherd. 'I don't love that it's happened multiple times.' Mangini, 54, then suggested the 23-year-old Sanders is struggling without the presence of his father and long-time football coach, Pro Football Hall of Famer Deion Sanders. 'I do think this is the first time he's away from his dad and there's going to be some growing pains,' Mangini said of the younger Sanders, who played for the famed 'Coach Prime' at Dallas' Trinity Christian high school, Jackson State and Colorado. Without the elder Sanders' watchful eye, Shedeur has been ticketed within the last few weeks for driving 91mph in a 65mph zone and 101mph in a 60mph zone, the latter of which led to the revelation of the former as well as a missed court appearance. The Browns have said they are handling the situation internally and Shedeur will take care of the tickets, all of which is fine by Mangini. When Cowherd criticized Shedeur's maturity, Mangini dismissed the separate speeding tickets as 'growing pains.' "This is like any kid who's away from home for the first time. There's gonna be a couple hiccups here and there." Eric Mangini and @colincowherd disagree on how big of a deal to make of Shedeur Sanders' speeding ticket. — Herd w/Colin Cowherd (@TheHerd) June 20, 2025 'Would I sell my stock on it like you are? Not because of a couple of speeding tickets,' Mangini said. 'Especially in the light of the problems the Browns quarterback room has had to deal with legally in the last few years — this is nothing.' Mangini didn't specify which Browns quarterback he was referring to, but it the likely signal caller is injured Deshaun Watson, who has settled nearly two dozen sexual misconduct lawsuits in recent years. Shedeur did not back away from his mistake when speaking to reporters at Browns minicamp. 'I've made some wrong choices personally, I can own up to them,' Sanders said. 'I made some not great choices. I learn from them. I learned.' Sanders recently completed his first minicamp with the Browns and is now off until July 18, when rookies are required to report to Cleveland's 2025 training camp. He recently signed a four-year, $4.6 million deal that included his $447,000 signing bonus – which represents the only guaranteed portion of the deal. That's significant, because if Sanders is facing a crowded depth chart at quarterback as he attempts to make the Browns as a rookie. The team currently has veteran Joe Flacco, journeyman backup Kenny Pickett and injured former starter Deshaun Watson, not to mention Shedeur's fellow rookie, Dillon Gabriel.


The Independent
34 minutes ago
- The Independent
Jobe Bellingham scores first Dortmund goal to help down spirited Sundowns in Club World Cup
Borussia Dortmund held off a spirited comeback from South African champions Mamelodi Sundowns to secure a 4-3 victory on Saturday and move closer to the Club World Cup knockout stages. Dortmund were behind after 11 minutes at the TQL Stadium but rallied to win their second game in Group F and move top of the standings with four points, one more than Sundowns. Felix Nmecha, Serhou Guirassy and Jobe Bellingham scored for the Bundesliga club who also profited from an own goal. Lucas Ribeiro had given Sundowns the lead while Iqraam Rayners and Lebo Mothiba scored in the second half as they looked to rally from 4-1 down in a competitive game played in blazing hot conditions with a mid-day kickoff. Ribeiro burst through a static Dortmund defence, picking up the ball on the halfway line and gliding past two opponents to score a shock opener. But the lead last only five minutes before a calamitous error from Sundowns goalkeeper Ronwen Williams, who played a short pass to Nmecha who had an easy tap-in for the equaliser. "We weren't surprised by Sundowns, we expected a strong start from them. but we worked to impose ourselves on the game," Nmecha said. Dortmund went ahead after a slick set of one-two passes between Julian Brandt and Guirassy who powered home with his head. Bellingham, in his second appearance for Dortmund, made it 3-1 on the stroke of halftime as Williams parried Brandt's cross straight at him, and he delayed shooting for a split second before wrong-footing the goalkeeper. Rayners struck the woodwork for Sundowns 10 minutes into the second half but on the hour mark Daniel Svensson's cross from the left took a wicked deflection off Sundowns' fullback Khuliso Mudau as Dortmund extended their lead. Two minutes later, the South African side pulled one back as Teboho Mokoena's free kick was floated to Rayners, who struck the foot of the post but the rebound bounced back onto his head and he did not waste the second opportunity. Mothiba struck in the 90th minute as Sundowns stole away possession and the substitute scored from close range but they could not find an equaliser. "We take away a feeling of disappointment but pride also because we were competitive. I think we earned a lot of respect," Sundowns coach Miguel Cardoso said. Fluminense of Brazil, who drew 0-0 with Dortmund in their opening game, and Ulsan HD of South Korea, who lost 1-0 to Sundowns, meet later on Saturday in New Jersey.