Martin Samuel, Chief Football Correspondent
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There has been something uncommonly relaxed about Chelsea these past few days. Amid the incessant speculation, the endless lists of names in the frame, rumours of clandestine meetings in Milan and summer trips abroad with more of a whiff of subterfuge than the smell of coconut oil, the men in charge of a club that would be big have kept their counsel. Now we know why.
They had him. They had the guy. They had landed the big one. Chelsea succeeded where the FA failed two years ago; they had impressed when nine months ago they merely confused. They had got Luiz Felipe Scolari, World Cup winner, a man at the top of his profession. In the bag, on the hook, done and dusted.
Chelsea would not confirm when the deal was completed, but the suggestion is at least a week ago and probably before the European Championship finals began.
There were suggestions last night that Chelsea had jumped the gun and made the announcement without asking Scolari’s permission, causing embarrassment in his adopted Portugal, after a win that ensured his team progressed to the last eight of the tournament, but this was strongly denied in London. It would make no sense to do that, anyway. Not having come this far.
The club have hardly covered themselves in glory or presented a coherent strategy over the past year, but this one feels right. It takes a huge personality to confront the pressure and demands of the regime at Stamford Bridge, to balance the yearning for a beautiful game with the insistence that it must also be a winning one, and if any manager has the wit to pull it off, it is Scolari.
José Mourinho was a man who responded to the intensity of his situation and thrived on it, for two years at least, while Avram Grant was not. Scolari has more of Mourinho in him than he does Grant, tempered by something that is going to be invaluable in the coming years: experience. At the age of 59, he has been around the block long enough to have kept his passion, like Sir Alex Ferguson, but not his impetuosity.
Chelsea are not getting the man who raised his hands to journalists or was regarded in his early days in Brazil as a brute, always ready for confrontation. In the main, Scolari is wiser (although he was fined about £10,000 for throwing a punch at a Serbia opponent during a European Championship qualifier last year, such transgressions are increasingly rare). His teams are gentler, too. Grêmio, the club at which he made his name, became champions of South America with a fierce, uncompromising style.
Scolari, who hails from the south, Rio Grande do Sul, was called “The Argentinian” as a result, which in Brazil is about as big as an insult gets. This reputation was put to rest in 2002, when he won the World Cup with a joyous Brazil team that found room for the three Rs: Ronaldo, Rivaldo and Ronaldinho. If there is a criticism of his present Portugal team it is that they lack a midfield destroyer. One may say that he has changed.
For Chelsea, this is a grand coup. Never has one appointment contrasted so greatly with its antecedent. When Grant replaced Mourinho in September, the decision was mystifying. Little-known, unheralded, uncomfortable from the start, he was identified only as a friend of Roman Abramovich, the owner, and distrusted accordingly. Scolari is the polar opposite. From no track record to the ultimate track record: from a dour persona to a great room-filler; from a pal of the boss to a step into the unknown.
Who knows how Scolari will respond to the challenge of Premier League football, of a transfer budget that will be beyond any previous experience, of a squad of players that is very much in flux. With Grant, Abramovich probably knew what he was getting. With Scolari, who does?
The Brazilians thought that they knew him six years ago when he was widely predicted to turn out a World Cup team of solid pragmatism. Instead he grew to be the great romantic. Chelsea were keen to point out last night that this manager ticked all the boxes: a world-class CV, the ability to deliver outstanding, entertaining football and a reputation for getting the best out of top players. Hidden in that statement may also be a coded message that they got it wrong the previous time; not that anyone at the club will admit it.
Maybe Grant was always intended to be the caretaker, although the terms of his contract make him a very expensive one; maybe, deep down, the executives at Chelsea always knew that it was going to take a man of strong character and experience to take Mourinho’s work on; maybe they just had to let the owner get his faith in a friend out of his system.
Whatever the reason for the change in direction, it is an aberration that has been corrected. Big clubs need a big presence on the touchline and the training field and Grant was not that. The players say he was the most nervous man in the dressing-room before the Champions League final against Manchester United last month and he lacked the authority to deal with the most senior figures in the team. Scolari will never be found wanting in that way. At half-time against the Czech Republic yesterday, with the scores level, he took the mighty Cristiano Ronaldo to task over aspects of his performance. Portugal won 3-1.
As the team bus pulled away from Stade de Genève last night after the match, written on the side was the message, “This coach is driven by the will to win”. Above, Scolari sat proudly in his front-row seat. It is that energy, that ambition, that determination, which Chelsea believe they have signed up for next season.
Abramovich will have left Geneva a contented man and it is Scolari’s job to keep him that way. Having endured a time with the world’s most footballobsessed nation on his back, he may think he has seen everything, although those who have followed Chelsea this past year still think that he could be in for the odd surprise.

Martin Samuel, a seven times winner of Sports Writer of the Year, is the most successful sports journalist of his generation. The Times Chief Football Correspondent was named Sports Journalist of the Year at the 2008 British Press Awards, just weeks after retaining Sports Writer of the Year for the third time in succession at the Sports Journalists' Association awards for 2007. Judges described his work as "the highest form of journalism" and praised his "trenchant, fearless views, combined with wit and irony and the memorably killer phrase". Samuel scooped the What the Papers Say award in 2002, 2005 and 2006
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Bill, what a load of rubbish.
United were fourth when Grant took over. Chelsea were a point behind them with a game in hand.
They finished two points behind.
I doubt mourinho would have done much better but Grant's Chelsea weren't a patch on United last year.
Mike, Northants,
Lifts them into the world elite? Three league titles and few FA Cups? Do me a favour.
Edward, Lincoln, England
He won the Copa Libertadores with two different teams, hardly nothing of value at club level...
Daniel, Bath, UK
Lets not get overexcited about this guy, he's won nothing of value at club level and winning the world cup with Brazil isn't exactly hard is it? I sense another trophyless season for Chel$ki, swiftly followed by another managerial dismissal!
J Roberts, Manchester, UK
Ref appointment of Dominic Grieve: the "troika" under David Cameron (Osborne/Hague/Grieve) are all graduates of Magdalen College, Oxford, two of them in Modern History. Is this unprecedented?
Perhaps Magdalen College - The Party of Choice?
Mark Dugdale
Mark Dugdale, London, UK
I'd like to see Scolari and Capello over 12 rounds.
Steve, Melbourne, Australia
So Scolari adviced Ronaldo to move to Real? Is he saying to us all that next season champs league quater final, chelsea v madrid, Real madrid are going to win because that is the club ronaldo should be playing for if he wants to win more trophies.
Hakeem, Dagenham, England
Whilst his CV speaks for itself, and undoubtedly he will form a good bond with the players, it will be interesting to see how he deals with the politics of the club - for instance Frank Arnesen, and his agenda
Shaun, widnes,
Tough decision; we'll pay you say 5,6,7 million a year, you can spend, oh i don't know 100 million on players; the owner likes to have a say and so do his mates and when you get fed up you'll get around 15 million as a pay off. Very tough.
jonners, weybridge,
Under Avram Grant Chelsea were better than Man U. They were further below Man U in the table when he took over than at the end of the season. Even though they had far worse injury problems. Even though it was a team he inherited. Chelsea were also better than Man U in the Champs League final.
bill, Madrid,
"The players say he was the most nervous man in the dressing-room before the Champions League final against having beaten Sven-Göran Erikssons England on the way."
eh ?
RJA, Nottingham, UK.
No doubt he is a great manager...at international level. His club CV however is something quite different as is club football.Time will tell on this appointment I guess, as a neutral I'm not quite as convinced as the Chelsea faithful.2 years max then the wheels will come off the Chelsea circus.again
David, Cardiff, Wales
As Mr. Samuel said, this is the ultimate coup. Of all the coaches out there, only Rijkaard had a better track record. With the talent available, and the crendentials of Scolari I can't conceive of this team suffering under another treble horror any time soon.
Martin Bennett, Mount Airy, Georgia, United States
Both chelsea and Scolari will have big suprises when they start working together. Scolari has very little experience of coaching big teams every week and he is not Mourinho - Now i know why scolari told Ronaldo to leave old trafford. Even with Deco signing Chelsea won´t be champions again.
Vincent, Lisboa, Portugal
Really loathed the way Chelsea management tossed out Mourinho, but now we have Another Special One. Great choice! And it will be interesting to see which players get cut if Scolari is to deliver on Abramovich's craving for pretty football.
Karin, London, UK
Now we (Portuguese) can finally understand why he told Cristiano Ronaldo to move to Real Madrid hahaha
We secure the EPL 2008/2009 title before day one :)
Luis, Lisbon, Portugal
Poor commentary. The dismissal of Avram Grant as a mistake the club won't own up to is both unfair and fundamentally incorrect! AG took Chelski further in the Champion League than Morinho could, and rescued a potentially poor season for them. He was well respected by Terry and was simply unlucky.
James Ryan, London,
am i the only reader looking for a new daily paper since you changed the format of Times 2, and in particular since you abolished "modern morals"?
the flavour and content of the new Times 2 seems more superficial and less interesting. And there is something about the format..
Anne Redston, London, UK
This puff piece is already foreboding what we will read the entire next season: Drama between two mega-clubs blown out of proportion. Who cares if the financial background let alone the resulting quality leave much to be desired. After all, one can always re-write the facts to sell the papers...
Ilja, Sliema, Malta
Scolari. Another crazy Cheslea move. We are led to believe that he does not speak English or his English is limited at best. After the 'honeymoon' with the press ends (by the end of September), he will realize just what he has got himself into...the English press will not let him bully them.
Ian, London,
Great chance for attractive and aggressive football style on and off the pitch. Trophies? I doubt it. The premiership may be too boring for Scolari, and consistency is not his trademark. If the Chel$ki fans are to be satisfied with silverware only, we could face a huge chaos before the coming season
Objective One, Tel Aviv, Israel
put aside all the tribal nihilism for a second - this is great news for the Premiership as a whole and confirms the English league as the most exciting in the world. Is there another club "Big Phil" would have come to England for other than Man U? Doubt it. We have a Special One.
jarvis, London, UK
So Ronaldo going to the Bridge, rather than Madrid?
Ian Melvin, Blackpool, UK
Perfect! Chelsea have a solid core of good players already, and giving Scolari the money to build on, or subtract from, that nucleus will guarantee a world-class team at Stamford Bridge.
As a Chelsea supporter for over 60 years, I couldn't be happier with their choice of manager!
Barrie Collins, Long Sault, Ontario, Canada