Carlo Ancelotti on Monday said Real Madrid will not underestimate Chelsea in the second leg of their Champions League quarter-final and dismissed Thomas Tuchel’s suggestion the tie is over.
After Madrid’s 3-1 victory over the defending champions at Stamford Bridge last week, a furious Tuchel said, “No, not at the moment” when asked if the tie was still alive, although the German was more optimistic on Monday.
But Ancelotti insisted Madrid will be taking nothing for granted at the Santiago Bernabeu on Tuesday against his former club as they try to finish the job to reach the semi-finals.
“Chelsea are here to bring the fight to us. It will be tough for them, of course, but they will try. Good teams never give up,” Ancelotti said in a news conference.
Chelsea delivered the perfect response last weekend by thrashing Southampton 6-0 in the Premier League and might take encouragement from Barcelona thrashing Madrid 4-0 only three weeks ago.
“I know my players very well,” said Ancelotti. “They are well aware of what happened a few weeks ago [against Barca] and what is required tomorrow. We won’t be underestimating anyone. This is a great opportunity to reach the semis but Chelsea are a very good team. We have to respect them.
“It’s the only way we can prepare for this game, thinking that Chelsea will be better tomorrow and be ready. There is no other way. We are ready. We know we will have to suffer and we are ready to suffer,” Ancelotti added.
Real Madrid midfielder Casemiro said he thought they delivered their “best 90 minutes of our season” against Chelsea in the first leg. “But we can’t afford to be overconfident,” he added.
Ancelotti’s future at Real Madrid was thrown into doubt after the Clasico humiliation but three wins in a row since, including the victory over Chelsea, has eased the pressure. Real Madrid are 12 points clear at the top of LaLiga.
Asked if he expects still to be coach next season, Ancelotti said: “I hope so. I have a relatively long contract [until 2024] but that’s not what I’m thinking about right now. If the club are happy with me, great. If not, I will be grateful for the opportunity I got to manage Real Madrid again.”
‘Modern striker’
Karim Benzema scored a hat-trick against Chelsea last week, with the Frenchman now on 42 goals in 42 games this season.
His scintillating form comes in stark contrast to Chelsea’s Romelu Lukaku, who cost the club €115 million ($125m) last summer but has fallen out of favour under Tuchel.
“Karim has to be a modern striker,” Ancelotti said. “In the old days, strikers would hang around the box and just tap the ball in when they could. Now they have to do more.
“Modern strikers don’t just score the tap-ins. They have to defend. They have to fight. In my opinion, Karim is the model modern striker.”
Asked if Madrid rely too heavily on Benzema, Ancelotti said: “I have nothing to hide. We rely on him and I’m happy about that.”
Casemiro said Benzema is an “historic player for the club” and “perhaps right now the most important player we have”.
Casemiro also leapt to the defence of Gareth Bale, who was whistled by a section of the Real Madrid fans on Saturday as he came off the bench against Getafe to make his first appearance at the Santiago Bernabeu since February 2020.
“We’re all affected when one player is whistled,” said Casemiro. “I heard Bale being whistled the other day and I didn’t like that. He’s an historic player and when you whistle him, you’re whistling the history of this club.”