toptop
Gabriel
Jesus struck a potentially significant blow in the Premier League title race for
Manchester City, as his goal helped them defeat their Champions League final
conquerors Chelsea 1-0 at Stamford Bridge.
The meeting between the European and English champions, four months on from
their clash on the big stage in Porto, lived up to its billing, with City at
first dominant, grabbing their deserved goal when Jesus swivelled and shot into
the bottom corner on 53 minutes.
It was the first goal Chelsea had conceded from open play in the league this
season and it transformed the contest into a furious end-to-end battle.
Jack Grealish had a shot tipped around the post and Jesus was denied a second by
Thiago Silva's goal-line clearance, before Romelu Lukaku's tap-in was ruled out
for offside, Mateo Kovacic's shot was deflected wide, and Grealish was kept out
again by Edouard Mendy.
After suffering three defeats in a row to Thomas Tuchel, Pep Guardiola could
finally celebrate a victory over the German at the final whistle - and a result
which pulls Man City level with previously unbeaten Chelsea on 13 points in the
table.
After their stutter against Southampton last weekend, the win and performance
also adds belief to City's campaign for back-to-back titles, ahead of a week
which sees them go to Paris St-Germain in the Champions League and then
Liverpool in the Premier League on Sunday.
As for Chelsea, who failed to land a shot on target, they will have to pick
themselves up in time for a Champions League trip to Juventus in midweek, and
then re-focus on their Premier League aspirations at home to Southampton next
time out.
Player ratings
Chelsea: Mendy (8), Azpilicueta (7), Christensen (8), Rudiger
(7), James (6), Kante (6), Jorginho (6), Kovacic (6), Alonso (6), Werner (6),
Lukaku (6).
Subs used: Thiago Silva (7), Loftus-Cheek (6), Havertz (6)
Man City: Ederson (7), Walker (7), Dias (8), Laporte (7),
Cancelo (7), De Bruyne (7), Rodri (7), Foden (7), Jesus (8), Bernardo Silva (7),
Grealish (7).
Subs used: Mahrez (N/A), Fernandinho (N/A), Sterling (N/A)
Player of the match: Gabriel Jesus (Man City)
How it happened...
On a Saturday of showdowns, which also features Anthony Joshua's world title
fight with Oleksandr Usyk and the continuing battle for the Ryder Cup, the
lunchtime match-up between Premier League title challengers Chelsea and
Manchester City at Stamford Bridge was hotly-anticipated. And the importance of
the fixture was plain to see in the intensity of the opening stages.
Amid an electric atmosphere, it was City who had the better of those early
rounds, with 43 per cent of the play in the first 15 minutes in the home side's
defensive third of the pitch.
Chelsea skipper Cesar Azpilicueta was forced to head over his own bar during
that period but City struggled to find a way through and it was Tuchel's side
who carved out the first chances, with Lukaku unable to turn in Timo Werner's
cross after a counter-attack before the German had a shot deflected behind for a
corner.
City soon resumed control of the ball, though, pinning Chelsea back, and the
hosts' task was made harder just before the half-hour when Reece James - who had
been locked in a battle with Grealish - was forced off injured from an earlier
collision with his England team-mate. Thiago Silva came on, with Azpilicueta
taking James' place at right wing-back.
Rodri saw a shot deflected over off Antonio Rudiger, Kevin De Bruyne blasted off
target and Jesus wastefully sliced wide but still City hadn't turned their
possession and territory into a telling blow by the time the final first-half
whistle sounded.
Tuchel had made key half-time changes in each of Chelsea's three previous
Premier League games but there was no change at the break this time and there
was no change to the flow of the match, with Grealish shooting wide of the far
post three minutes after the restart.
Then finally City made the breakthrough. Joao Cancelo's initial effort was
blocked into Jesus' path in the box and the Brazilian swivelled and fired a
bobbling shot into the bottom corner.
With Chelsea forced to take more risks, the game opened up. Grealish forced
Mendy into a sharp stop and Thiago Silva had to clear a Jesus effort off the
line before Kai Havertz - Chelsea's Champions League final hero who had been
sent on in search of an equaliser - teed up Lukaku to finish as an offside flag
was raised.
Kovacic was next to go close for the hosts, seeing his shot deflected wide,
before Aymeric Laporte slid in to send an effort from a corner just off target
at the back post and Grealish's one-on-one chance was snuffed out by Mendy.
In the final moments Ederson caught Havertz with a painful punch as he tried to
clear a loose ball but, when play resumed, City - who have still conceded just
one goal in the league this term - saw out the win. It may not be a knockout
result but it felt like an important one between two sides expected to go
toe-to-toe throughout this Premier League season.
What the managers said...
Chelsea boss Thomas Tuchel: "We were excellent in the last 20
metres of the pitch but not the other 80 metres. City were stronger, sharper,
with more position. I had the feeling we lacked belief to escape in the
situation. With every mistake we did we lost more confidence. We defended very
well until the goal although we were too deep. There was no connection [with
Lukaku] and this was a team problem, not an individual problem.
"We could not escape the pressure. It was a question of decision making and we
were so unprecise. We lacked confidence to switch sides. We were not on our
highest level and you cannot expect a result. We played with the mentality we
had something to lose but there was nothing to lose. After the goal there was a
good reaction and a bit more risk. That's the mentality you need from the start:
that you take risks and accept risks. They made us underperform."
Man City boss Pep Guardiola: "From the first second to the last
second we tried to play our game and it was fantastic. We played really good. Ok
we've three more points and that's really good for us. Three more points gives
us the awareness we can do it again. We are here and we will try to do it again.
"We've had three defeats [against Chelsea in a row] because they're so good, the
manager is more than exceptional. Since Roman Abramovich took over, every year
Chelsea have been exceptional. But in those three games we could not do better,
that's why I can't complain and I'm so proud to get to the final of the
Champions League.
"I'm proud [to now have a club record 221 wins as Man City manager]. In these
221 games I never scored one goal. I share it with all the people in the club,
the players, all the staff. I can't deny how proud we are to achieve that, to be
close to Les McDowall, the previous manager who achieved this record, and we try
to do it more."
Opta stats
Pep Guardiola registered his 221st victory in all competitions as Manchester
City manager; a new club-record for most wins by a manager, moving ahead of Les
McDowall (220 wins).
Manchester City have won back-to-back away top-flight games versus Chelsea for
the first time since January 1955.
Chelsea have lost four of their last seven home top-flight games against Man
City (W3), as many as they'd lost in their previous 38 combined (W21 D13 L4).
Man City have conceded just one goal in their six Premier League games this
season - the fewest they've shipped at this stage of a league season in their
history.
Gabriel Jesus scored his 52nd Premier League goal, with Manchester City never
losing a game in the competition in which he has scored in (P44 W42 D2) -
extending the record for most games scored in without ever losing for a single
side (44 games).
Gabriel Jesus became the fifth player to score 20+ match-winning goals in the
Premier League for Manchester City, after Sergio Agüero (48), Raheem Sterling
(23), Yaya Touré (22) and David Silva (20).
What's next?
Chelsea go to Juventus in the Champions League on Wednesday for an 8pm kick-off,
while Man City are away to PSG in the same competition on Tuesday at 8pm.
Click Here For Official Team Sheet
Teams
Chelsea Mendy, Azpilicueta (c), Christensen, Rudiger, James
(Silva 29), Kante (Havertz 60), Jorginho (Loftus-Cheek 76), Kovacic. Alonso,
Lukaku, Werner
Subs Not Used Kepa, Chilwell, Chalobah, Saul, Hudson-Odoi,
Ziyech
Booked Alonso, Christensen, Rudiger
Goals
Manchester City Ederson, Walker, Dias (c), Laporte, Cancelo,
Rodri, De Bruyne (Mahrez 81), Silva, Foden (Fernandinho 87), Jesus, Grealish
(Sterling 87)
Subs Not Used Steffen, Ake, Stones, Lavia, Palmer, Torres
Booked Laporte, Dias
Goals Jesus 53
Attendance 41,040
Referee Michael Oliver
VAR Darren England