Terry confident of ending Jose dream

Mourinho's Inter will arrive in London on Monday holding a 2-1 advantage from the first-leg of their last-16 tie at the San Siro. It will be the first return to Stamford Bridge for Mourinho since September 2007, when he departed after leading the club to every domestic honour including successive Premier League triumphs in 2005 and 2006. Terry, who scored in the FA Cup victory over Stoke last weekend, is confident Chelsea can overcome Inter's slender lead and reach the last eight of the tournament at the expense of the 'Special One'. Terry said: "Returning to Stamford Bridge with a one-goal deficit and an away goal against the Italian champions is a starting point most sides would take and this side believes we can turn it around. "We are going for three trophies right now and every game is crucial. Only winning will do." Carlo Ancelotti, meanwhile, has leapt to the defence of his former club AC Milan, insisting they do not need to be completely rebuilt following their dismal 4-0 defeat at Manchester United. Milan have come in for heavy criticism in both Italy and England after their disastrous Champions League showing, with many labelling the team as old and past it. However, Ancelotti, who left the San Siro for Stamford Bridge last summer following eight years in charge of the Serie A side, believes the situation is not as bleak as is being made out. "Milan had the misfortune of facing Manchester United, a team of great quality and who are in a brilliant moment of form," he told Sky Italia. "Besides, they were also missing important players like (Alexandre) Pato and (Alessandro) Nesta. "There are youngsters who are coming through such as Pato, Thiago Silva, (Ignazio) Abate and (Luca) Antonini. "Milan are a squad who certainly, like all sides, need some additions, but they are not a team that needs to be reformed."