Arjen Robben won two Premier League titles while playing for Chelsea and says he still has 'great feelings' for the club. Photograph: Ben Radford/Getty Images |
The former Chelsea winger has won various league titles and cups in four
different countries and is hoping to complete the set with a Champions
League victory for Bayern Munich.
Chelsea
will feel like intruders in Bavaria. They will touch down in Germany
this morning to find Munich decked in red and white, plastered with
posters declaring "one city, one dream", the clamour that it is Bayern's
destiny to claim a fifth European Cup in their own Allianz Arena rammed
down the visitors' throats. They are party poopers provoking nothing
but suspicion from the locals. Even the sight of a familiar face will
hardly feel welcoming. "I still have great feelings for Chelsea and am
really happy for them that they're in the final," says Arjen Robben.
"But unfortunately, this time, we'll have to disappoint them."
A reunion with an old-friend-turned-foe awaits. Robben enjoyed three
years in south-west London, a period spent entirely under José
Mourinho's stewardship, and seemed to delight and frustrate the
Portuguese in equal measures. There were successive Premier League
titles, two League Cups and an FA Cup success, his dazzling wing play in
combination with Damien Duff and Joe Cole helping to illuminate a side
that, with the benefit of hindsight, now appears refreshingly
attack-minded.
Yet the Dutchman is also remembered for the
niggles, the strains and the agonised facial expressions as he winced in
pain while prone on or hobbling from the turf. His last appearance, as a
substitute who had to be replaced, in the 2007 FA Cup final rather
encapsulated his stint at the club: a cameo cut short by injury that
still yielded a winners' medal.
The 28-year-old reflects on that
spell in England, which ended in a messy public courtship with Real
Madrid and an eventual £24m move to the Bernabéu in the summer of 2007,
with real fondness. "I have no regrets at all," he says. "I had
injuries, but I didn't get them on purpose.
"Overall, I had a
great time, especially in the first season when I was part of the team
who won the league for the first time in 50 years. It was great to be
there, and I played my part in the time I was fit, and showed what I
could do on the pitch. Of course I wanted to show them more, but because
of the injuries I couldn't always do that.
"They've changed the
way they play in the time since. But when I was there we were nice to
watch, with two wingers and attacking football. Maybe, tactically,
they're a bit more defensive these days. They can still play football,
but it's not always the most technical football like you see at Arsenal
or Manchester United. For a lot of their players, this will be their
last chance to win the Champions league. They're all getting a bit older, with all respect.
"People
say their team has not evolved, and that may be a failure, but it could
also be a strength. A lot of their players have been at the club for a
long time, which can make them strong. They have experience and a lot of
leaders in their team, even if the biggest leader [John Terry] will be
missing in the final.
"We know the threat they pose. They've come
close in this competition before, and it's still a big target for
Mr Abramovich. They were in the final four years ago against Manchester
United and, when I was there, we played two semi-finals against
Liverpool. But, in the end, it's about winning the trophy. If you want
to enter the history books you have to win it. We're in our second final
in three years and, for us, it's our time to win it."
Robben has
grown used to securing silverware over a 12-year professional career
that has taken in five clubs in four countries. There was a Primera Liga
title in his first season at Real, a club he was reluctant to leave
before the lavish arrivals of Cristiano Ronaldo and Kaká cast him to the
fringes, with the Bundesliga crown claimed in his first season at
Munich his fifth league success in eight years. Jupp Heynckes's Bayern
purr as an attacking force when Robben and Franck Ribéry – a combination
that has locals sporting "Robbery" on the back of their shirts – are
gliding down the flanks, supplying the prolific Mario Gomez in
the centre.
When the combinations click, they appear
irrepressible. When they do not, and Bayern have been frustrated
domestically by Borussia Dortmund in the last two seasons, the tension
is palpable. There was a high-profile spat with Ribéry over a free-kick
in the first leg of the semi-final against Real Madrid, a dispute that
spilled over into the dressing room with the Frenchman later accepting a
fine for striking his team-mate. The Dutchman, such a placid figure at
Chelsea, has endured other fall-outs with the captain, Philipp Lahm, and
Thomas Müller.
"Those stories are closed," says Robben. "It's
something we don't talk about any more." As if to prove as much, he
recently signed a two-year contract extension, the first time he has
prolonged a spell at any of his clubs.
That suggests a player
content with his lot, though Chelsea stand in the way of the real prize.
"There's only one target for us, and that's winning the Champions
League," he adds. "It's the biggest trophy in club football and, if you
win it, it will stay with you forever. When we heard the final would be
played in Munich it became the dream for everyone at the club. It's been
a very long road – we had to play qualification matches [against FC
Zürich] as we weren't qualified for the group stages – but everyone has
been hoping and praying. The final's in our stadium, in our city, and
everything will be red and white. That's a great motivation for us.
"This
feels like the only trophy that is missing. I've won the league in four
countries, and all the cups. The only one missing is the Champions
League. We can use what happened to us in the final two years ago [when
Mourinho's Internazionale won 2-0] to help us this time. I told my mum
then: 'If we win the Champions League and the World Cup, you can have my
boots because I'll stop playing.' It didn't work out in 2010, with
Bayern or Holland, but we can do it this time."
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