Chelsea captain John Terry has admitted he is still haunted by his horror penalty miss in the Champions League final as he gears up for the new season.
Terry, who will lead Chelsea against Guangzhou Pharmaceutical in China on Wednesday, said mental replays of the botched spot-kick were his first thoughts every morning.
”Every morning I wake up and it’s the first thing on my mind. I still think of it,” he said.
”I’m still very disappointed by it, but last season I said I’m a big man and have a big character and it’s down for me to deal with it.”
Terry slipped and sliced his kick against the post in the Moscow shoot-out, throwing away the chance to seal the title and handing a lifeline to eventual winners Manchester United.
It was the 27-year-old defender’s last contribution for Chelsea before their pre-season tour, which includes three stops in Asia and a return to Russia for the four-team Railways Cup.
Terry said scoring for England soon afterwards helped ease the pain, but he remained desperate to atone for his mistake under new coach Luiz Felipe Scolari.
”Having the England games straight afterwards helped flush it away a tiny bit, but hopefully we will be successful with the new manager and players this season and flush away all those bad memories,” he said.
Goalkeeper Petr Cech, who has signed a new five-year deal, is another player out to erase bitter memories after his howler helped Turkey dump the Czech Republic out of Euro 2008.
”The European Championships are all over for me. These things happen in football and I’m here with Chelsea and looking forward to the new challenge,” Cech said.
”I’m happy to be back at training. Mistakes can happen to everyone, but it is important to get over it and keep working harder and harder.”
Terry was hit especially hard by his error, which left him weeping uncontrollably. He later issued an open apology to fans and revealed he had trouble sleeping for days afterwards.
Chelsea have brought a virtually full-strength side, including new signings Deco and Jose Bosingwa, as they prepare for a new era under Scolari — their third manager in the space of a year.
Transfer speculation over Didier Drogba was heightened after the striker missed the trip through injury, and key midfielder Frank Lampard’s future also remains in doubt.
Chelsea have denied making a world-record bid for AC Milan’s Kaka, as well as an offer for Barcelona striker Samuel Eto’o, but say they are chasing Real Madrid forward Robinho.
Scolari, the ex-Portugal boss who took Brazil to the 2002 World Cup title and was once a target for England, is busy assembling a top-class squad that can realise billionaire owner Roman Abramovich’s sky-high ambitions.
His predecessor, Avram Grant, was sacked despite taking Chelsea to their first Champions League final and finishing just two points behind Manchester United in the English Premiership.
Chelsea also face China’s Chengdu Blades in Macau on Saturday before rounding off the Asian leg in Kuala Lumpur on July 29. — Sapa-AFP