Winning Club World Cup can give us strength for season, says Oscar

 
10 December 2012

Chelsea midfielder Oscar believes his side can gain confidence for the rest of the season by winning the Club World Cup in Japan.

The Brazilian playmaker is the only member of the Blues squad which arrived in Japan yesterday to have played previously in the event, a tournament widely regarded to be a straight shootout between the champions of Europe and South America.

However, that proved not to be the case in spectacular fashion two years ago when Oscar's Internacional were dumped out by African side TP Mazembe in the semi-finals, the first time a Copa Libertadores winner had ever lost at that stage.

Oscar, who joined Chelsea this summer for £25million, is determined to avoid another embarrassment when the European champions play CONCACAF counterparts Monterrey in Yokohama on Thursday and said the club would treat the competition with respect.

"I am still learning about English football and I have been told Manchester United are the only English team to have won this world club title," he said.

"It is a title Chelsea have never won and every title is important for Chelsea. If we win it, it is going to give us so much more confidence and strength for the rest of the season.

"Coming back, if we're able to win it, it will be better for us and it will give us the chance to keep building on the back of all these results. That's what I'm hoping for and expecting."

"I am pleased to have the second opportunity to take part again and I hope that, this time, I will get to the final and get a trophy at the end of it."

Chelsea will take to the field on Thursday barely a week after making one piece of unwanted history, becoming the first Champions League holders to crash out of the competition before Christmas.

Looking to pile on the misery for Rafael Benitez's men if they reach Sunday's final is likely to be Corinthians. And while the Champions League final remains the biggest game in European club football, the Club World Cup is the be all and end all for teams from Brazil and Argentina.

Oscar said: "It has always been big in South America, even in the days when it was the Intercontinental Cup.

"In Brazil, it has always been seen as the one opportunity for our clubs to play against one of the big European teams.

"This was always seen as the chance for them to test themselves against a big team from Europe and to go and show their football to the world.

"Nowadays, the European clubs have all started to take the competition more seriously and they've been winning rather than the South Americans.

"For Chelsea, we are representing Europe and we are going there with a determination to do it well. We are going to try to win this competition this year."

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