Everton 2-1 Chelsea

Louis Saha celebrated his new contract with a stunning double as
leaders Chelsea lost a 1-0 lead to lose 2-1 against Everton at
Goodison Park.
The Frenchman, who signed a two-year deal last week, first
exposed Chelsea's weakness at set-pieces with a headed equaliser
and then fired a brilliant 75th-minute winner at Goodison Park.
Chelsea had shaded the early stages and taken the lead
through Florent Malouda but Saha, who also missed a penalty,
secured Everton's first victory over the Londoners since 2000.
With Manchester United held by Aston Villa, victory could
have taken Chelsea four points clear at the top but Everton's
greater industry merited victory.
Sacked England captain John Terry escaped lightly in terms of
crowd abuse following recent media revelations but the Chelsea
stalwart was caught out for Saha's winner.
And of further concern for manager Carlo Ancelotti was the
nature of the equaliser - the 16th of 22 goals this season Chelsea
have conceded from set-pieces.
Everton scored all their goals from similar situations when
the sides played out an entertaining 3-3 draw at Stamford Bridge
two months ago.
This time the Toffees were without key midfielders Marouane
Fellaini and Steven Pienaar through injury and suspension
respectively.
Mikel Arteta, having recovered from a knee injury, made his
first start in almost a year while Chelsea replaced Michael Ballack
with Yury Zhirkov.
Everton stretched Chelsea within the opening minutes as
Landon Donovan broke clear but the American overhit his cross for
Saha.
After that Chelsea began to take control with Frank Lampard
shooting wide after a Nicolas Anelka dummy and Didier Drogba
heading over from a Malouda cross.
Branislav Ivanovic then volleyed wide but Chelsea broke
through after 17 minutes from a route-one ball.
Petr Cech's long clearance was headed on by Drogba and
Malouda brushed off the challenge of Phil Neville to drill a
left-footed shot low past Tim Howard.
Chelsea threatened again when Richardo Carvalho leapt above
Terry to meet a Lampard corner but Howard saved comfortably.
Everton then launched a counter-attack with Diniyar
Bilyaletdinov breaking down the left to cross for Leighton Baines
but the left-back caught his volley awkwardly and Cech saved.
But the Toffees grew in confidence and pulled level after
winning a corner in the 33rd minute.
Donovan's cross dropped over Lampard and Saha rushed in to
power a header past Cech for his 12th goal of the season and his
first in five games.
Everton almost added an immediate second as Tim Cahill set up
Leon Osman on the edge of the area but his shot flew wide.
Drogba pulled the ball back from the byline as Chelsea
responded but Anelka stabbed wide from six yards.
Lampard tried his luck from a 30-yard free-kick but shot over
and Drogba then curled one wide.
But Everton finished the half with a flourish and Saha should
twice have given the hosts the lead.
First he was picked out in front of goal by Donovan but his
first touch bought Cech time and the keeper rushed forward to save
from point-blank range.
The former Manchester United forward had an immediate chance
to make amends after Donovan was felled in the area by Carvalho but
Cech guessed right and saved the resulting spot-kick to his left.
Everton did not let the miss affect them and started the
second half well with a dangerous Bilyaletdinov cross palmed over
the bar by Cech.
Saha then showed brilliant control to turn and create another
shooting opportunity in the box but Carvalho just did enough to
force him to fire wide.
Everton also started winning the 50-50 balls and Drogba
showed a growing Chelsea frustration when he fired wildly at goal
from more than 40 yards.
Bilyaletdinov showed good control in the area but his shot
was blocked and a Donovan cross was just too high for Cahill.
Everton appealed for handball against Terry on the edge of
the area but referee Alan Wiley's decision to play on was
vindicated as replays showed the ball catching the face.
Pressure finally paid off as Everton deservedly went ahead
through Saha after 75 minutes.
Terry missed the chance to cut out a long ball from Sylvain
Distin and Saha brilliantly chested the ball down before turning
and firing home powerfully with his left foot.
Chelsea, having been subdued for most of the second half,
finally sparked into life but the crossbar came to Everton's rescue
as Drogba met a Lampard corner with a good header.
Lampard then got in a shot at the end of a flowing move but
Howard saved to his right.