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Chelsea 2-2 Bournemouth: Captain fantastic Reece James rescues wasteful Blues but slump continues

Rescue act: Reece James’ late free-kick rescued a point for Chelsea against Bournemouth (Chelsea FC via Getty Images)
Rescue act: Reece James’ late free-kick rescued a point for Chelsea against Bournemouth (Chelsea FC via Getty Images)

Chelsea needed some last-gasp captain’s heroics from Reece James to avoid a galling defeat by Bournemouth in a Premier League thriller at Stamford Bridge.

The Blues skipper came off the bench to dispatch a stoppage-time free-kick and rescue a dramatic share of the spoils for his side in a pulsating 2-2 tie after they had been stunned by a spirited fightback.

Chelsea dominated the first half of Tuesday night’s eventful contest in west London, leading through Cole Palmer’s stylish early goal and spurning numerous golden chances to add to their lead - with Nicolas Jackson particularly wasteful.

They were made to pay for that frustrating profligacy again after the interval, with Justin Kluivert restoring parity for in-form but injury-hit Bournemouth from the penalty spot after Moises Caicedo had clumsily fouled Antoine Semenyo.

Semenyo’s powerful effort after the hour mark looked to have the Cherries on course for another famous win in a truly memorable season, only for the fit-again James to have the final say.

Despite the late euphoria, Chelsea have now gone five games without a win in the Premier League as their concerning slump continues and they will find themselves out of the top four altogether if soaring Newcastle win at home to strugglers Wolves on Wednesday night.

Bournemouth, meanwhile, despite that late setback will still be content with another positive result that extends their club-record unbeaten Premier League run to nine matches despite an injury nightmare that has seen them lose both record signing Evanilson and Enes Unal in recent weeks.

Chelsea were dominant from the outset in a one-sided first half, the influential Enzo Fernandez’s heavy touch inside the box denying a likely early goal before Palmer failed to test goalkeeper Mark Travers - starting instead of Chelsea loanee Kepa Arrizabalaga, who was ineligible to face his parent club - with a tame free-kick.

A confident Palmer flicked an impudent chip wide of the back post before giving his side the lead after only 13 minutes, sitting down Travers with a lovely feint before rolling the ball coolly into the back of the net after great battling work and a perfect assist from Jackson.

Bournemouth’s injury crisis got worse still when right-back James Hill signalled that he had to come off and was replaced by Kluivert, with Jadon Sancho and Noni Madueke - recalled to the side after illness - both seeing efforts blocked before Chelsea got an injury scare of their own as Palmer stayed down clutching his ankle after making a sliding challenge on Semenyo.

He was fine to continue and Fernandez forced a low save from Travers before Jackson fired a bobbling low cross from the dangerous Madueke over the crossbar from close range.

A dramatic passage of play then saw Ryan Christie narrowly miss a diving header and Kluivert send a low effort against the post after Robert Sanchez had inexplicably given the ball away, with Chelsea immediately going down the other end and rattling the woodwork themselves through Jackson, who also lashed into the side netting from close range after his header from a deep Palmer cross had been parried low by Travers.

Bournemouth were notably below par but got themselves level within five minutes of the restart, Kluivert emphatically sending Sanchez the wrong way from the penalty spot after Caicedo had brought down Semenyo inside the box.

That led to the introduction of James from the bench as Romeo Lavia - making his first Premier League start for more than a month after a hamstring injury - came off and Caicedo moved into midfield.

In the game’s most controversial moment, David Brooks - recalled to the Bournemouth team along with Tyler Adams - avoided a red card for making contact with the face of Marc Cucurella in something resembling a clothesline to halt a Chelsea break after referee Robert Jones had been sent by VAR Graham Scott to consult the pitchside monitor, with Travers then almost letting another Jackson effort squirm under him and Sanchez denying Brooks with his feet.

A stunning and unlikely Bournemouth turnaround was completed just under 20 minutes later when Semenyo ran at Chelsea youngster Josh Acheampong - making his first home league start at centre-back - and thundered past a helpless Sanchez after being played in by Christie to leave Stamford Bridge shocked.

Travers easily dealt with another tame Jackson strike and Bournemouth almost wrapped up a first victory over Chelsea since 2019 when substitute Daniel Jebbison’s effort from a Kluivert cut-back was deflected wide.

Travers was at full stretch to tip over a header from Tosin Adarabioyo, who was brought on for Acheampong despite Levil Colwill sustaining a knock in the second half.

Joao Felix had an effort saved and Chelsea looked to be running out of steam before Christie’s foul on the Portuguese allowed James to step up and save the day in a huge moment in another injury-plagued season for the captain.