Grant to blame refs if Blues fails to win Prem
Barclays Premier League
| Sun., May 11 | |
| Birmingham 4-1 Blackburn | Recap |
| Chelsea 1-1 Bolton* | Recap |
| Derby County 0-4 Reading | Recap |
| Everton 3-1 Newcastle* | Recap |
| Middlesbrough 8-1 Man City* | Recap |
| Portsmouth 0-1 Fulham | Recap |
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| Tottenham 0-2 Liverpool* | Recap |
| West Ham 2-2 Aston Villa | Recap |
| Wigan 0-2 Manchester United | Recap |
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Grant, whose team must beat visiting Bolton on Sunday and hope that defending champion United slips up at Wigan, is still dwelling on an eight-month-old refereeing decision.
Chelsea played at United in September just four days after Grant succeeded Jose Mourinho as manager. After looking defensively solid, midfielder John Obi Mikel was sent off for a dangerous tackle and Chelsea lost 2-0.
Grant was unhappy about the decision at the time and, with Chelsea now trailing United only on goal difference, thinks it could end up costing his team the title.
"I don't want to come back to this, but I think what the referee did in this game, I never saw in my life," Grant said Friday. "And I see sometimes bad decisions."
Chelsea and United were 0-0 in the 32nd minute at Old Trafford when Mikel lunged to regain control of the ball and caught defender Patrice Evra on the ankle. Mike Dean sent off Mikel to protests from his teammates.
Grant was also upset that a goal by United's Carlos Tevez was allowed to stand even though the allotted two minutes of first-half injury time had been played. Despite the decisions that went against his team, Grant feels the match could have been different had he had longer to prepare his side.
"This was one of my worst moments, if I can say that about Old Trafford," he said. "To come to a game in which I didn't have time to influence the team. I was in charge, but I was an observer of the team."
Grant's opinion looks justified after Chelsea beat United 2-1 in last month's reverse fixture, a result that ensured the title race would go to the wire.
But Grant doesn't believe the title should be decided on goal difference, instead pointing to the system in Italy's Serie A, where teams tied on points enter a winner-takes-all playoff regardless of their scoring records.
"They scored a lot of goals, but I prefer the system in Italy," Grant said. "When you have the same points, you are on the same level, so you need to play to see who is better."
That happens on May 21 anyway, when the teams meet in the Champions League final in Moscow.
Grant didn't say what he thought of the Spanish league, where tied teams are separated by head-to-head records. That system would also leave United above Chelsea.
The Israeli coach still maintained that he always suspected the Premier League could be decided on goal difference, even when his team was beating Derby 6-1 in March.
"I said to one of the players that I didn't like his game because I wanted to score more goals, and he said, 'Why do we need to score more goals?"' Grant said. "I said, 'Maybe at the end of the season we will need it,' and last week he came to me and said, 'How did you know?"'
But many think it's the lack of goals that could end up costing Grant his job.
United's goal difference is 17 greater than Chelsea's, meaning the Red Devils would win the title with even a narrow 1-0 win at Wigan.
Chelsea has scored 12 goals fewer than United at home, where fans have occasionally jeered their team for a lack of adventure.
And club owner Roman Abramovich is rumored to be searching for a high-profile replacement, with Frank Rijkaard and Sven-Goran Eriksson the latest candidates touted by the British press.
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Sun., May 11, 10 a.m. (LIVE) -
Chelsea vs. Bolton
Sun., May 11, 12 p.m. -
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Everton vs. Newcastle
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Regardless, Grant looked relaxed while he spoke at Chelsea's training ground and was happy with his achievements.
"Alex (Ferguson) said two or three months ago that this is the best Manchester United team since he was coach," Grant said. "If they take the championship, which I'm not sure, it will be on goal difference, so we have given them a good battle."
That is, of course, only if Chelsea manages to beat a tough Bolton side that wants a point to make absolutely sure of its place in the Premier League.
But Grant, who may be without key defender Ricardo Carvalho because of a back injury, acknowledged that it will be hard not to keep tabs on the score at Wigan.
"My first year that I was in football, my old coach said to me, 'They pay you money to be worried,"' Grant said. "First, we have a game against Bolton - a very tough game. Second, of course, we will look at Wigan."


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