Chelsea 5 Genk 0

FOR once, Fernando Torres scored without making a complete fool of himself. The Spaniard is finally beginning to make his mark for Chelsea. And unlike his previous two goalscoring performances for the club, Torres left the pitch without looking red-faced. The same could not be said for Genk, who played in a ridiculous pink kit � the only thing more shocking was their defending. Torres' shame goes back to scoring at Manchester United but only being remembered for his Ronny Rosenthal moment.Six days later, he struck in a 4-1 win over Swansea but was then red-carded for a two-footed lunge � and has yet to complete that domestic ban. Yet, last night, the ex-Liverpool striker improved on his disastrous goals-to-games ratio for Chelsea with a fine first-half brace.They were sandwiched by Raul Meireles' first for the Stamford Bridge outfit and Branislav Ivanovic's first of the season. Torres' opening strike was his first Champions League goal for 875 minutes, dating back to Liverpool's Euro tie at home to the Londoners in April 2009.Ironic, then, that his second would come just 16 minutes later. Chelsea treated the second half as a training session and you could hardly blame them ahead of Sunday's derby with QPR.Torres could have had three while sub Salomon Kalou grabbed the fifth in a one-sided affair. John Terry and Didier Drogba were rested, with the Ivory Coast striker understood to be extremely unimpressed with manager Andre Villas-Boas' decision. But Villas-Boas had clearly scouted this shambolic lot and knew he could have played without a keeper and still won. Against an outfit struggling in their domestic league, you would have expected Chelsea to totally dominate and they did.This was a night of firsts and not just for Torres, Meireles and Ivanovic because no team anywhere near as bad as this mob has played here at Stamford Bridge in the Champions League. A decent League One side would have beaten them and, within just a few minutes, the Chelsea crowd knew they were going to see a hatful. Meireles created a seventh-minute chance for Torres to flick the ball on to a post.But less than 60 seconds later, it was Meireles, the �12million signing from Liverpool, who grabbed his first goal for Chelsea. The Portuguese star was given the freedom of the Bridge as he strode forward before whipping in a shot from 25 yards. Genk's boisterous travelling fans were not shy in coming forward, though, and soon after responded in perfect English: "1-0 up, and you still don't sing." Yet, three minutes later, Chelsea were 2-0 up. The Belgians were pulled apart with Frank Lampard playing in Torres to bury the ball from 15 yards. Fingers were once again pointing at hopeless Genk centre-back Abel Masuero and visiting coach Mario Been should have substituted him immediately.Hardly surprisingly Torres was enjoying himself � and there's few times you have been able to say that since he left Merseyside. We had not even reached the half-hour when Torres scored his second with a powerful header from a fine Meireles cross. While Genk had managed a couple of half-chances this was already becoming embarrassing. The visitors attempted to defend in numbers but were simply not very good and conceded a fourth three minutes before the break as Florent Malouda's free-kick was boomed home by Ivanovic. With England full-back Ashley Cole also subbed at the break, you knew that Villas-Boas no longer had his mind on the actual match but was focused on the Premier League.Malouda could have scored a fifth goal but wasted the chance while Lampard was tripped and a penalty should have been given. Torres was then denied his hat-trick by a smart save by Laszlo Koteles as he met the ball at the near post on 73 minutes. But the ball fell straight to sub Kalou to score after just a couple of minutes on the pitch. This was Chelsea's biggest ever home Champions League win. While, admittedly, it may not live long in the memory, maybe things are at last starting to change for Torres.