After the euphoric return, reality is biting for Jose Mourinho, and the Chelsea homecoming is quickly going sour.
Having
already presided over the worst Premier League start in Roman
Abramovich's decade as owner, Mourinho is now reeling from the London
club losing its Champions League group stage opener for the first time.
Swiss
champion Basel had never won a game in England until coming from behind
on Wednesday at Stamford Bridge to beat Chelsea 2-1 in Group E.
The
winner came in the 82nd minute after Marco Streller seized on slack
defense at the near post to meet a corner and flick a header past
goalkeeper Petr Cech.
"I am responsible for everything," Mourinho said. "Especially after a bad result."
Although
Oscar lit up a drab start by curling Chelsea in front before half time,
the 2012 European Cup winners and reigning Europa League champions
missed a succession of chances to extend their lead after the break.
And
Basel, which beat Manchester United in the 2011-12 group stage, made
Chelsea pay for its wastefulness when Mohamed Salah began the comeback
in the 71st by bending in the equalizer.
Streller then inflicted
the loss that came exactly six years after Mourinho's first three-year
Chelsea reign was ended by Abramovich following a drab Champions League
draw against Rosenborg.
This was even more embarrassing for the west London club.
Not
since October 2003, when Claudio Ranieri was in charge at the start of
Abramovich's ownership, had Chelsea even lost a game in the group stage.
"We go home sad," said Mourinho, who wants to avoid Chelsea dropping into the Europa League to defend its title.
This
setback comes with Chelsea already three points off the Premier League
lead after four games, having opened with two wins, a draw and a loss to
sit in sixth place.
"We still believe in each other," Mourinho
said. "We need to keep together, stick together and try against Fulham
(on Saturday) to get the result to wake up the team for a smile."
The shock win drew acclaim from Basel's famous fans.
"Fantastic evening for Basel supporters, wow!" tennis great Roger Federer wrote on Twitter. "I am so happy, thanks FC_Basel."
The win ended Chelsea's 13-match unbeaten home run in European competitions.
"Winning
here at Chelsea against a manager like Mourinho is a great
achievement," Basel coach Murat Yakin said through a translator. "But
I've spoken with my players and we have to remain modest ... there is a
lot ahead of us still."
Basel is only off top spot in Group E because Schalke beat Steaua Bucharest 3-0.
Winning
European football elite competition remains the obsession at Stamford
Bridge despite the Champions League finally being won under former coach
Roberto Di Matteo in 2012.
Against Basel, there was no Fernando
Torres in the starting lineup or even on the bench, and Demba Ba only
came on in the second half with the teams locked at 1-1.
Instead, Samuel Eto'o, recently signed from Russian club Anzhi Makhachkala, led the attack.
But
the Cameroon striker, a four-time African player of the year and the
world's best-paid star while at Anzhi, couldn't even muster a shot on
goal.
"Samuel maybe lacked sharpness and this doesn't surprise
really when you are some years in a place that doesn't motivate you and
you are out of the big stage, maybe you're there not for the right
reasons and you lose hunger and appetite," Mourinho said. "Now he has
that back, he has that motivation."
Chelsea's breakthrough
instead came from Oscar in the 45th minute, with David Luiz, who had
concerned Mourinho with his sloppiness in defense, bringing the ball
forward.
The Brazil center back fed Frank Lampard and Oscar connected with a throughball before striking low past goalkeeper Yann Sommer.
After
an insipid first half - the type of performance fans jeered during Rafa
Benitez's interim reign last year - Chelsea discovered some spark after
the break.
But, first the cross bar denied Oscar and, when he
tried to curl a shot into the net from a similar position outside of the
area, the ball went wide.
The pressure was increasing, but a second goal proved elusive.
A
towering header from Branislav Ivanovic was saved by Sommer at close
range and the defender saw another header from a free kick nodded clear.
The game really came to life when Basel finally found its stride to stun the hosts.
Slick build-up play allowed Marco Strelle set up Salah to curl in the leveler from the edge of the area.
Then,
Chelsea defenders left Streller in space to meet Kay Voser's corner at
the near post and compound the early anxieties for Chelsea at the start
of a season that promised so much with the morale-boosting return of
Mourinho.