Sunday 3 May 2015

▂☆██▀╗║╔╗╦░╔╗╔╗╔╗██▀▀░██▀▀☆☆☆☆☆▂ ▂☆██░╠╣╠═║░╚╗╠═╠╣██▀▀░██░░☆☆☆☆☆▂ ▂☆██░╝║╚╝╚╝╚╝╚╝╝║██░░░██▄▄☆☆☆☆☆▂ ▂☆██▄▄░C1C&Prem.Champions 2014-15░☆☆☆☆☆▂

Sunday 19 October 2014

Chelsea Manor Kings Road Course



Now Available on The Golf Club Game £28.99 from the PSN store or Xbox1 or Steam for PC
The 2015 Champions Edition


And don't forget we have a team on GTA V aswell The Chelsea Boys PS3/Xbox
http://4thechelsea.blogspot.co.uk/2013/09/the-chelsea-boys-on-gta-v.html
Now on PS4, Xbox1 & PC
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjeiUD0z_ZVraOWL8801Pd5NUYjJdtxWq3wsyKsbhJMC_xbjn3k14-3SehqQmi5LJ66pPqcFjS1tg9QG_xw1zOwEhTdr44QhvYEguJHvOnZpwqQINyizJhYgPL9FEJPGbGdZeHZU8fqBUrj/s1600/th_chelsea.gif

Friday 27 June 2014

Chelsea Legend : Jimmy Greaves


With 132 goals in 169 games for Chelsea, Jimmy Greaves will probably never be surpassed as the most prolific goalscorer the club has ever seen.
Greaves was signed as a junior in 1956 and the following year created a club record by scoring 114 goals in the youth team. It was inevitable that he would break through into the first team.
That he did on the opening day of the 1957/58 campaign, scoring in a 1-1 draw at Tottenham at the age of 17. Over the next four years he kept on scoring; 22 in that first season, 37 the next, then 30, and finally 43.
In all Greaves scored 13 hat-tricks for the club, including five in a game on three occasions and four another three times. His hat-trick against Manchester City in November 1960 included his 100th league goal. He was 20 years and 290 days old. This remains a league record.
During this time though we did not win a trophy and the board decided to cash in on their prize asset. They arranged a transfer to Milan against the player's wishes and Greaves last game for Chelsea was the final game of the 1960/61 season. He was made captain for the day and inevitably stole the show scoring all our goals in a 4-3 win.
After an unhappy year in Italy, Greaves wanted to return to Chelsea but the board did not want to get into a bidding war for the player and instead Jimmy signed for Tottenham where he continued to break records.

James Peter "Jimmy" Greaves (born 20 February 1940) is a former England international footballer. He is England's third highest international goalscorer (44 goals), Tottenham Hotspur's highest ever goalscorer (268 goals), the highest goalscorer in the history of English top-flight football (357 goals), and has also scored more hat-tricks (six) for England than anyone else. He finished as the First Division's top scorer in six seasons. He is a member of the English Football Hall of Fame.
Greaves began his professional career at Chelsea in 1957, and played in the following year's FA Youth Cup final. He scored 124 First Division goals in just four seasons before being sold on to Italian club A.C. Milan for £80,000 in April 1961. His stay in Italy was not a happy one and he returned to England with Tottenham Hotspur for a fee of £99,999 in December 1961. Whilst with Spurs he won the FA Cup in 1961–62 and 1966–67, the Charity Shield in 1962 and 1967, and the European Cup Winners' Cup in 1962–63; he never won a league title but did help Spurs to a second place finish in 1962–63. He moved to West Ham United in a player-exchange in March 1970 and retired the following year. After a four-year absence he returned to football at the non-league level, despite suffering from alcoholism. In a five-year spell he played for Brentwood, Chelmsford City, Barnet, and Woodford Town.
Greaves scored 13 goals in 12 England under-23 internationals and scored 44 goals in 57 full England internationals between 1959 and 1967. He played in the 1962 and 1966 FIFA World Cup, but was injured in the group stage of the 1966 World Cup and lost his first team place to Geoff Hurst, who kept Greaves out of the first team in the final.
After retiring as a player Greaves went on to enjoy a career in broadcasting, most notably working alongside Ian St. John on Saint and Greavsie from 1985 to 1992. He worked on a number of other sport shows on ITV during this period, including Sporting Triangles.
Club Career
Chelsea
Though he was born in Manor Park, Greaves was raised in Hainault, and was scouted playing football while a schoolboy by Chelsea's Jimmy Thompson and in 1955 was signed on as an apprentice to become one of "Drake's Ducklings", named after manager Ted Drake in response to Manchester United's "Busby Babes" He soon made an impression at youth level, scoring 51 goals in the 1955–56 season and 122 goals in the 1956–57 season under the tutelage of youth team coach Dickie Foss. Greaves scored in the 1958 FA Youth Cup final, but Chelsea lost the two-legged tie 7–6 on aggregate after Wolverhampton Wanderers turned round a four goal deficit with a 6–1 win in the second leg. He turned professional in the summer of 1957, though spent eight weeks working at a steel company to supplement his income during the summer break.
Aged 17, Greaves scored on his First Division debut on 24 August 1957 against Tottenham Hotspur in a 1–1 draw at White Hart Lane. He was an instant success, as the News Chronicle reported that he "showed the ball control, confidence and positional strength of a seasoned campaigner" and compared his debut to the instant impact the young Duncan Edwards had as a teenager. The "Blues" played attacking football during the 1957–58 campaign, resulting in high-scoring matches, and Greaves ended the season as the club's top scorer with 22 goals in 37 appearances. Drake rested him for six weeks from mid-November as he did not wish the praise Greaves was receiving to go to his head; Greaves marked his return to the first team at Stamford Bridge with four goals in a 7–4 victory over Portsmouth on Christmas Day.
Greaves began the 1958–59 season strongly, and in the third match of the season he scored five goals past league champions Wolverhampton Wanderers in a 6–2 win. Chelsea remained inconsistent, though despite his team finishing in 14th place Greaves managed to finish as the division's top scorer with 32 goals in 44 league games. Greaves scored 30 goals in 42 matches in the 1959–60 campaign, five of which came in a 5–4 victory over Preston North End. Despite his goalscoring exploits, the club could manage only an 18th place finish, three places and three points above the relegation zone.
In the 1960–61 season, Greaves scored hat-tricks against Wolves, Blackburn Rovers and Manchester City; he scored four goals against Newcastle United and Nottingham Forest; and hit five goals in a 7–1 win over West Bromwich Albion. His hat-trick against Manchester City on 19 November included his 100th league goal, making him the youngest player to pass the 100-goal mark, at the age of 20 years and 290 days. However, he became increasingly disillusioned at Chelsea as an inability to defend effectively meant the club were a long way from launching a title challenge and they exited the FA Cup in embarrassing fashion by losing 2–1 at home to Fourth Division side Crewe Alexandra. Club chairman Joe Mears agreed to sell Greaves as Chelsea were in need of extra cash. His last game was the final game of the 1960–61 season on 29 April; he was made captain for the day and scored all four goals in a 4–3 win against Nottingham Forest. This took his tally for the season to a club record 41 goals in 40 league games, making him the division's top scorer.

A.C. Milan

Greaves was signed by Italian Serie A club A.C. Milan for an £80,000 fee, and was given a three-year contract on £140 a week with a £15,000 signing bonus. However, he was unhappy at the thought of leaving London and tried to cancel the move before it was fully confirmed, but "Rossoneri" manager Giuseppe Viani refused to annul the deal. Greaves scored on his debut in a 2–2 draw with Botafogo at the San Siro. However, he did not get on well with new head coach Nereo Rocco, who insisted on keeping the players in a strict training regime with little personal freedom. Greaves scored nine goals in 14 appearances, including one against Inter Milan in the Milan derby. Due to his low morale, Greaves was transfer-listed and Brazilian attacker Dino Sani was signed as his replacement. Both Tottenham Hotspur and Chelsea made £96,500 bids, which were both accepted. After he left, the club went on to win the league title in 1961–62.

Tottenham Hotspur

After protracted negotiations, Bill Nicholson signed Greaves for Tottenham Hotspur in December 1961 for £99,999 – the unusual fee was intended to relieve Greaves of the pressure of being the first £100,000 player in British football. He joined Spurs just after they became the first club in England to complete the First Division and FA Cup double during the 20th century. He played his first game in a Spurs shirt for the reserve team on 9 December 1961, and scored twice in a 4–1 win over Plymouth Argyle Reserves at Home Park. He scored a hat-trick on his first team debut, including a flying scissor kick, in a 5–2 win over Blackpool at White Hart Lane. He went on to feature in the semi-finals of the European Cup, having both a goal disallowed for offside in a 3–1 defeat to Benfica at the Estádio da Luz and another disallowed for offside in the return fixture, a 2–1 win at White Hart Lane. He played in all seven games of the club's FA Cup run, scoring nine goals in the competition as they beat Birmingham City (after a replay), Plymouth Argyle, West Bromwich Albion, Aston Villa and Manchester United to reach the 1962 FA Cup Final against Burnley at Wembley. Greaves opened the scoring against Burnley on 3 minutes when he hit a low shot past goalkeeper Adam Blacklaw from a tight angle, and Spurs went on to win the game 3–1. They finished the league in third place in 1961–62, four points behind champions Ipswich Town.
Greaves scored twice in the 1962 FA Charity Shield, as Spurs secured the trophy with a 5–1 win over Ipswich at Portman Road. Spurs started the 1962–63 season strongly, and Greaves scored hat-tricks in 6–2 and 4–0 victories over Manchester United and Ipswich Town respectively, as well as four goals in a 9–2 win over Nottingham Forest. Spurs ended the season in poor form, despite Greaves scoring a hat-trick in a 5–2 win over Liverpool at Anfield. Spurs finished the league campaign in second place, six points behind champions Everton. Greaves scored 37 goals in 41 league games, finishing as the division's top scorer. In the European Cup Winners' Cup, Tottenham beat Rangers (Scotland), ŠK Slovan Bratislava (Czechoslovakia) and OFK Beograd (Yugoslavia) to reach the final, where they met Spanish club Atlético Madrid at De Kuip. In the first leg of the semi-final against Beograd in Belgrade, Greaves was sent off for violent conduct (his first and only red card) after attempting to punch centre-back Blagomir Krivokuća. Greaves served a one match ban and was able to play in the final, where he opened the scoring after an assist from Cliff Jones and later added a fourth in a 5–1 victory (John White and Terry Dyson getting the other goals). In winning the competition, Tottenham Hotspur became the first British team to win a European trophy.
Manager Bill Nicholson and his assistant Eddie Baily then began a period of transition at White Hart Lane – key players such as Danny Blanchflower, John White and Dave Mackay were reaching their mid-30s and had to be replaced – which hindered the club's ability to win trophies in the short term. Greaves remained a consistent goalscorer though, and in the 1963–64 season he scored hat-tricks in victories over Nottingham Forest, Blackpool, Birmingham City and Blackburn Rovers. Spurs finished in fourth place, six points behind champions Liverpool, and exited the FA Cup and Cup Winners' Cup at the opening stages. Greaves scored 35 goals in 41 league games to again finish as the division's top scorer. Strike partner Bobby Smith left the club in the summer, though Greaves felt the partnership he went on to form with new signing Alan Gilzean was even more effective.
Spurs finished sixth in 1964–65, though Greaves scored 29 goals in 41 league games to finish as the division's joint top scorer (with Andy McEvoy). He also scored two hat-tricks in the FA Cup – against Torquay United and Ipswich Town  – to take his total tally to 35 goals in 45 appearances. He missed three months at the start of the 1965–66 season after being diagnosed with hepatitis, but recovered to end the campaign with 16 goals in 31 matches, remaining the club's top scorer as they finished the league campaign in eighth place whilst failing to make it past the Fifth Round of the FA Cup.
Greaves scored 31 goals in 47 appearances in the 1966–67 campaign, helping Spurs to launch a title challenge that ended with a third place finish, four points behind Manchester United. They also won the FA Cup after knocking out Millwall, Portsmouth, Bristol City, Birmingham City and Nottingham Forest to reach the 1967 FA Cup Final with Chelsea. Though he did not score in the final itself, a 2–1 victory, with six goals in eight games Greaves was the competition's leading scorer. The 1967–68 season was a disappointing one for Spurs following their 3–3 draw with Manchester United at Old Trafford in the 1967 FA Charity Shield. They finished seventh in the league, exited the FA Cup in the Fifth Round and were knocked out of the Cup Winners' Cup in the Second Round. Greaves had a poor season by his own standards, though with 29 goals in 48 appearances he was still the club's top scorer. Nicholson bought Greaves a new strike partner in Martin Chivers from Southampton for a club record £125,000 fee, with Gilzean dropping further back into midfield to accommodate, but Greaves and Chivers were not as effective together as Nicholson had hoped.
In 1968–69, Greaves scored 27 goals in 42 league games to finish as the First Division's leading scorer for the sixth and final time. He scored four of his goals in one match against Sunderland, and also scored hat-tricks against Burnley and Leicester City. His nine goals in cup competitions, including a hat-trick against Exeter City, left him with an overall goal tally of 36 in 52 games. Spurs performed inconsistently in the 1969–70 season, and Greaves was dropped from the first team after playing in an FA Cup defeat to Crystal Palace at Selhurst Park on 28 January 1970. He was never recalled to the starting line-up, but still ended the season as the club's joint top scorer (with Martin Chivers), having scored 11 goals in 33 matches.
Greaves was given a testimonial match by Spurs on 17 October 1972 in a 2–1 win over Feyenoord at White Hart Lane; he made £22,000 from the occasion.

West Ham United

In March 1970, Greaves (valued at £90,000) joined West Ham United in part-exchange in the deal, valued at £220,000, that took Martin Peters to White Hart Lane. Greaves later admitted his regret in making the move to Upton Park. He scored two goals on his "Hammers" debut on 21 March, in a 5–1 win against Manchester City at Maine Road.
In January 1971, with Bobby Moore, Brian Dear and Clyde Best, Greaves was involved in late-night drinking, against the wishes of manager Ron Greenwood, prior to a 4–0 FA Cup away defeat to Blackpool. On arriving in Blackpool, Greaves and his team-mates had been informed by members of the press that the game, the following day, was unlikely to go ahead due to a frozen pitch and the likelihood of frost that night. Believing that there would be no game the following day, Greaves drank 12 lagers in a club owned by Brian London and did not return to the team hotel until 1.45am. Although they lost the game, Greaves claimed it was not as a result of the late night, the drinking or the frozen pitch, but because the West Ham team in which he was playing was not good enough. As a result, the players were fined and dropped by the club. Greaves was struggling with his fitness and his motivation. He felt he had become a journeyman footballer and lost motivation as he believed that apart from Moore, Geoff Hurst, Billy Bonds and Pop Robson, few of his team-mates could play good football. Towards the end of his career with West Ham Greaves began to drink more and more alcohol, often going straight from training in Chadwell Heath to a pub in Romford, where he would remain until closing time. He later admitted that he was in the early stages of alcoholism. His final game came on 1 May 1971 in a 1–0 home defeat to Huddersfield Town. Greaves scored 13 goals in 40 games in all competitions for West Ham.

Later career and alcoholism

After leaving West Ham, Greaves left football and for two years did not attend a match and he put on weight. Drinking formed a large part of his life and he became an alcoholic; at times he was drinking 20 pints of lager during the day and consuming a bottle of vodka in the evening. He was also regularly driving whilst drunk. Seeking an answer to his alcoholism, Greaves decided to return to football at a lower level where he would not be required to be as fit as he had been whilst playing in the Football League. He started playing for his local side, Brentwood, and made his debut on 27 December 1975 in a 2–0 defeat to Witham Town.
His return to football was successful enough that he signed for Chelmsford City in the Southern League for the 1976–77 season. He played for only a few months with Chelmsford. He was still struggling with alcoholism and delirium tremens and sought out help from Alcoholics Anonymous. He was also hospitalised in the alcoholics' ward of Warley Psychriatric Hospital.
In August 1977 and still coping with alcoholism, Greaves made his debut for Barnet in a 3–2 win against Atherstone Town. Playing from midfield in 1977–78, Greaves netted 25 goals (13 in the Southern League) and was their player of the season. He chose to leave the "Bees" early in the 1978–79 season in order to focus on his business interests and beating his alcoholism, despite manager Barry Fry's attempts to get him to stay at Underhill. Greaves went on to make several appearances for semi-professional side Woodford Town before retiring.

International career

Greaves made his debut for the England under-23 team in a 6–2 win over Bulgaria at Stamford Bridge on 25 September 1957; he scored two goals, and missed out on a hat-trick after failing to convert a penalty. In total he scored 13 goals in 12 games.
Greaves won his first England cap on 17 May 1959 against Peru at the Estadio Nacional, scoring England's only goal in a 4–1 defeat. The tour of the American continents was not considered a success by the British media, as England also lost to Brazil and Mexico, but Greaves mostly escaped criticism in the press as he was still a teenager and showed promise with his performances. He scored consecutive hat-tricks on 8 October 1960 and 19 October, in victories at Northern Ireland and Luxembourg. On 15 April 1961, Greaves scored another hat-trick in a 9–3 victory over Scotland at Wembley, and also had a fourth goal disallowed for offside.
He played in all four of England's games at the 1962 FIFA World Cup in Chile, scoring one goal in the 3–1 victory over Argentina before playing in the quarter-final defeat to Brazil. During the defeat to Brazil a stray dog ran onto the pitch and evaded all of the players' efforts to catch it until Greaves got down on all fours to beckon the animal. The Brazilian player Garrincha thought the incident was so amusing that he took the dog home as a pet.
On 20 November 1963, he scored four goals in an 8–3 win over Northern Ireland. The following year, on 3 October, he scored another hat-trick against Northern Ireland to take his goal tally to 35, ahead of Bobby Charlton, which meant that he held the overall England goalscoring record until 1968 when Charlton overtook his goal tally. He scored four goals again on 29 June 1966, in a 6–1 friendly win over Norway, and in doing so ensured himself a starting place in the 1966 FIFA World Cup.
"I danced around the pitch with everyone else but even in this moment of triumph and great happiness, deep down I felt my sadness. Throughout my years as a professional footballer I had dreamed of playing in a World Cup Final. I had missed out on the match of a lifetime and it hurt."
— Greaves was bitterly disappointed to have missed the World Cup final, though it was only aftr his playing career ended that he descended into alcoholism.
At the World Cup he played all three group games against Uruguay, Mexico and France, however in the win against France midfielder Joseph Bonnel racked his studs down Greaves' shin, causing a wound that required 14 stitches and left a permanent scar. His replacement, Geoff Hurst, scored the winner in the quarter-final against Argentina and kept his place all the way to the final, where Hurst scored a hat-trick as England won the tournament. Greaves was fit to play in the final, but manager Alf Ramsey opted against changing a winning team. Only the 11 players on the pitch at the end of the 4–2 win over West Germany received medals. Following a Football Association led campaign to persuade FIFA to award medals to all the winners’ squad members, Greaves was presented with his medal by Gordon Brown at a ceremony at 10 Downing Street on 10 June 2009.
Greaves played only three more times for England after the 1966 World Cup, scoring a single goal. His final cap came in a 1–0 win over Austria on 27 May 1967. He retired from international football early the following year after telling Ramsey that he had no intention of becoming a bit-part player in the England squad. In total he scored 44 goals in 57 appearances for England. He remains third in the all-time list of England goalscorers, behind Bobby Charlton and Gary Lineker. Greaves holds the record for most hat-tricks for England — six in all.

Style of play

Greaves was a prolific goalscorer, and cited his relaxed attitude as the reason for his assured composure and confidence. He also had great acceleration and pace, as well as great positional skills.

Broadcasting career

Greaves became a columnist at The Sun newspaper in the early 1980s. He continued to write his column for 30 years until it was cancelled, at which point he began working as a columnist for
The Sunday People. He worked as a pundit on Star Soccer from 1980, and later worked on The Saturday Show before he was selected as a pundit for ITV's coverage of the 1982 FIFA World Cup. From there he worked on World of Sport and On the Ball, where he struck up a partnership with
Ian St. John. Greg Dyke also hired Greaves to work as a television reviewer and presenter on TV-am in what Dyke admitted was a way of "dumbing down" the programme in order to attract more viewers. From October 1985 to April 1992 he and St. John presented a popular Saturday lunchtime football show called Saint and Greavsie. He went on to work as a team captain on Sporting Triangles, opposite Andy Gray and Emlyn Hughes. His career in television came to an end as the Premier League was starting up, and he believed that his light-hearted approach to football was not considered serious enough for television bosses at the time.
He went into semi-retirement after Saint and Greavsie was cancelled, making only occasional television appearances and after-dinner speeches. He released his autobiography, Greavsie, in 2003. Greaves has also written numerous books in partnership with his lifelong friend, the journalist and author Norman Giller.

Personal life

He married Irene in 1958, and though the pair went through a divorce process during the height of his alcoholism the divorce was never finalised and they reunited after three months apart. They had four children, Lynn, Mitzi, Danny (who was a professional footballer with Southend United), and Andrew. They also had another son, Jimmy Greaves Jr, who died before his first birthday.
Whilst playing for Tottenham Hotspur he took out a £1,000 bank loan to start a packing business with his brother-in-law. By the end of his playing career this company had an annual turnover of over £1 million. He had a number of different business interests, including a travel agency. Whilst out of the Spurs first team Greaves entered the 1970 London to Mexico World Cup Rally. In his first ever rally, alongside co-driver, Tony Fall, Greaves drove a Ford Escort to a sixth place finish out of the 96 entrants.
Greaves underwent surgery on an artery in his neck after suffering a mild stroke in February 2012.


Honours

Chelsea

FA Youth Cup runner-up: 1958

Tottenham Hotspur
 
FA Cup winner: 1961–62 & 1966–67
Football League First Division runner-up: 1962–63
FA Charity Shield winner: 1962 & 1967
European Cup Winners Cup winner: 1962–63
 
England
 
British Home Championship winner: 1959–60 (shared), 1960–61, 1963–64 (shared), 1964–65 & 1965–66
British Home Championship runner-up: 1961–62, 1962–63 & 1966–67
FIFA World Cup winner: 1966
Jimmy Greaves 2007.jpg
Good Luck Jimmy and Thank You.
and Get Well Soon!!

Saturday 28 September 2013

The Chelsea Boys on GTA V




Live Gameplay on our Youtube Channel 
Watch live video from colinmafia on www.twitch.tv

Live streaming video by Ustream


Grand Theft Auto V Coming this Fall to PlayStation 4, Xbox One and PC
Grand Theft Auto V will take full advantage of the power of the PlayStation 4, Xbox One and PC with across-the-board graphical and technical improvements to deliver a stunning new level of detail. Increased draw distances, finer texture details, denser traffic, and enhanced resolutions all work together to bring new life to the cities, towns, deserts and oceans of Rockstar North’s epic reimagining of Southern California. 
Switch between the interconnected lives of Michael, Trevor and Franklin as they embark on a series of heists across Los Santos and Blaine County in the biggest, deepest and richest open world experience yet, with game world enhancements that include new wildlife, upgraded weather and damage effects, and an array of new details to discover.
The new generation upgrades also extend to Grand Theft Auto Online, an ever-evolving Grand Theft Auto universe. Rise through the criminal ranks by banding together to complete Jobs for cash, purchase properties, vehicles and character upgrades, compete in traditional competitive modes, or create your own content to play and share with the Grand Theft Auto community.
All new content and gameplay created since the launch of Grand Theft Auto Online, including an extensive array of new Jobs, an arsenal of new weapons, scores of new vehicles, new properties and player customizations will also be available for the PlayStation 4 system, Xbox One and PC with much more to come. In addition, the current community of players will have the ability to transfer their Grand Theft Auto Online characters and progression to their choice of PlayStation 4, Xbox One or PC.
Grand Theft Auto V for PC will also feature a video editor designed for advanced movie-making.
Check out the new video that debuted tonight during Sony's E3 press conference above, and visit rockstargames.com/V/order to pre-order.

I Own The Liberator and the Motorbike


The GTA Online San Andreas Flight School !1.16 Update Now Available

You think you've got what it takes to be awesome? Want to take yourself to the absolute limit – hell, past the limit – and live to high-five on the other side? Get yourself down to The San Andreas Flight School. Grab the stick of the fast and nimble Western Besra tr...

Join Our Crew go to : http://socialclub.rockstargames.com/crew/the_chelsea_boys


 
The Chelsea Boys
Team leader Beermonster76 level (200+)

 Free T-Shirt at GTA V Binco Stores for every crew member with Chelsea Boys logo
Get one on Your Bike or Car from Los Santos Customs.
551 members  so far
See How You Doing on Team Leader Board
 Chelsea Badge for Your car or Motorcycle from Los Santos Customs


Personalised Number Plates Free Order Via iPhone/iPad iFruit App (8 characters)
This is Mine
 
http://socialclub.rockstargames.com/crew/the_chelsea_boys/gtav
  Hierarchy
http://socialclub.rockstargames.com/crew/the_chelsea_boys/manage/hierarchy
 
http://www.youtube.com/user/2010landcruiser
subscribe free now for Classic Chelsea Matches
Over 200+ Gameplay videos to view


A Massive Open World Game Where You Decide What Happens Next Join Now Online 
and Make Money from Sunrise to Sunset

How to Build and Publish a Race on GTA V Creator (Beta) pt 1 of 3

My Buggati Adder (Veyron) Crome and Blue Nice!!
Blue is the Colour $1,000,000 Online Nick it in Single player.








Buy Your Penthouse Flat and  perhaps a second property near the beach, Plan a Big Heist with your friends.
 http://cdn.sc.rockstargames.com/images/backgrounds/GTAV/crewbg.jpg

Someone actually formed their own bus company and runs buses to a timetable Lol
 

Sunday 1 September 2013

Chelseas European Campaign 2014 - 2015

Competition format
Champions League Draw
How We Won the Champions League 2011-12
 Trophies (UEFA Champions League group stage draw)
Chelsea were Drawn in Group g with

Schalke 04

NK Maribo

Sporting Lisbon

Rest of the Draw Visit Link

Group G

PositionTeamPlayedGoal DifferencePoints
No movement1Chelsea61414
No movement2Schalke 6-58
No movement3Sporting607
No movement4NK Maribor 6-93

Round of 16 

ParisParis(FRA)
v
ChelseaChelsea(ENG)
Man. CityMan. City(ENG)
v
BarcelonaBarcelona(ESP)
LeverkusenLeverkusen(GER)
v
AtléticoAtlético(ESP)
JuventusJuventus(ITA)
v
DortmundDortmund(GER)
SchalkeSchalke(GER)
v
Real MadridReal Madrid(ESP)
Shakhtar DonetskShakhtar Donetsk(UKR)
v
BayernBayern(GER)
ArsenalArsenal(ENG)
v
MonacoMonaco(FRA)
BaselBasel(SUI)
v
PortoPorto(POR

Wed. 17th. Sept.
Matchday 1
Chelsea 1 v 1 Schalke 04 (H) (NK Maribor 0 v 1 Sporting)

Matchday 2
Chelsea 1 v 0 Sporting (A) (Schalke 1 v 1 Maribor)
 
 Match Report
http://www.chelseafc.com/news/latest-news/2014/09/match-report--sporting-lisbon-0-chelsea-1.html



Tues. 21st. Oct.
Matchday 3
Chelsea 6 v 0 Maribor (H) (Schalke 4 v 3 Sporting)
Match Report
http://www.chelseafc.com/news/latest-news/2014/10/match-report--chelsea-v-maribor.html



Wed. 5th. Nov.
Matchday 4
Chelsea 1 v 1 Maribor (A) (Schalke 2 v 4 Sporting)

Match Report
http://www.chelseafc.com/news/latest-news/2014/11/match-report--maribor-v-chelsea.html


Tues. 25th. Nov.
Matchday 5
Chelsea 5 v 0 Schalke (A) (Maribor 1 v 3 Sporting)
Match Report
http://www.chelseafc.com/news/latest-news/2014/11/match-report--schalke-v-chelsea.html

Tues. 10th. Dec.
Matchday 6 
Chelsea 3 v 1 Sporting (H) (Maribor 0 v 1 Schalke)

Match Report
http://www.chelseafc.com/news/latest-news/2014/12/match-report--chelsea-v-sporting-lisbon.html

Tues. 17th. Feb.
round of 16

Paris St. Germaine v Chelsea 7.45pm. ITV1 or Link