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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Rob Smyth

Chelsea 0-1 Manchester City: Premier League – as it happened

Riyad Mahrez peels away to celebrate scoring the opening goal.
Riyad Mahrez peels away to celebrate scoring the opening goal. Photograph: Ryan Pierse/Getty Images

That’s it for tonight’s blog. I’ll leave you with Dave Hytner’s report from Stamford Bridge. Thanks for your company and emails, goodnight!

The player of the match is John Stones

It’s a big three points for us, especially after [the Everton game]. How we played in the second half was brilliant. We rushed a lot of our play in the first half and didn’t retain the ball as well as we usually do. We spoke at half-time about using the ball better and waiting for spaces to open. It all came together in the second half.

[Kyle Walker says that, when you are on it mentally, there’s nobody better. Are you in that zone now and, if so, what’s put you there?] I feel like I’ve been in it for the past two or three years. It kind of clicked. I’ve had to work at my game and try to become a better player and a better person.

We don’t focus on the table so early. The manager said before the game that they were 66 points to play for. In previous years we’ve gone on big winning runs and we’ve got to keep the momentum going. If we play like we did today I’m sure we’ll have a fighting chance.

“Chelsea’s version of The Young Ones - Hall. Hutchinson and the galloping Gallagher - all got a run around and will have sent out a message to their elders and supposedly betters,” says Colum Fordham. “Could they become the Chelsea equivalent of Radiohead’s Kid(s) A?”

Arf. Given the performance of some of the senior players, I’m sure there’s a How To Disappear Completely joke in there somewhere.

Full time: Chelsea 0-1 Manchester City

City move to within five points of Arsenal after a hard-fought victory at Stamford Bridge. The first half was cagey and tactical, but City upped the tempo in the second half and two of their substitutes, Jack Grealish and Riyad Mahrez, combined for the winning goal.

Chelsea’s poor run continues, though there are mitigating circumstances. Raheem Sterling and Christian Pulisic both went off injured, and Chelsea ended the game with three teenagers on the field. Two of them, Carney Chukwuemeka and Lewis Hall, almost combined for an injury-time equaliser.

Erling Haaland celebrates as the final whistle blows.
Erling Haaland lets it out as the final whistle blows. Photograph: Marc Atkins/Getty Images

Updated

90+4 min Koulibaly is booked for fouling Mahrez, who was leading a City break. Time’s up for Chelsea.

90+1 min: Chance for Hall! That would have been a huge moment for Chelsea – and Arsenal. The impressive Chukwuemeka ran half the length of the field before easing the ball outside to Hall on the left side of the area. His first touch was slightly errant, which made the angle really tight, and he sprayed a shot wide of the near post.

Lewis Hall blasts his chance wide.
Lewis Hall blasts his chance wide. Photograph: Shaun Botterill/Getty Images

Updated

90 min Four added minutes.

89 min Grealish is cynically fouled by Kovacic, who is booked.

89 min Zakaria, who has quietly had a decent game, beats two players in midfield to start a Chelsea move. Hall dances away from Phillips and Lewis and drives a low cross that deflects dangerously across the area before being cleared by Grealish. Hall looks a good player, really confident and purposeful even against a team as intimidating as City.

Updated

87 min “Enzo Fernandez is throwing a tantrum so he can join THIS?” sniffs Sean Orlowicz.

Heh. Don’t forget the injury list. This run of form is about as representative of Chelsea as Pablo Honey is of Radiohead.

Updated

86 min: City substitution Rodri, who has cramp, is replaced by Kalvin Phillips. “Looks pretty trim there…” says Jamie Carragher. Azpilicueta runs over to hasten Rodri’s departure.

Updated

85 min Chelsea have been much better in the last 20 minutes. Part of that is human nature, City easing off after going 1-0 up, but I also wonder whether Graham Potter might have had his fill of certain older players, Aubameyang in particular.

83 min Gallagher is basically playing as a centre-forward, and his approach so far brings to mind Dave Bassett’s pre-match instructions to Billy Whitehurst back in the day: “Go and cause some bo11ocks, Billy.”

82 min Chelsea work the ball nicely from right to left, only for Kovacic to inexplicably overhit a pass to the unmarked Hall.

80 min “Pep torching the hopes and dreams of fantasy football managers across the land,” says Andy Bollen. “Meanwhile Cancelo, Walker and Foden all fighting over the magic sponge to valet his motor.”

Ederson, De Bruyne and Beast are the only City players worth touching in Fantasy Premier League, a lesson I still haven’t learned. Kyle Walker got one point tonight, and I had Mitoma on the bench an’ all.

Updated

79 min Another dangerous low cross, this time from De Bruyne, is well defended by Thiago at the near post. Gundogan was waiting behind him to score.

78 min Gallagher has energised Chelsea with his intense pressing, but he goes a bit too far when he deliberately leaves one on Stones. Paul Tierney gives him a warning.

Conor Gallagher of Chelsea keeps the ball in play.
Conor Gallagher seems up for the challenge. Photograph: Javier García/REX/Shutterstock

Updated

77 min If it stays like this City will be five points behind Arsenal with 21 matches remaining, two of them head-to-heads.

74 min Kovacic collects a loose ball 30 yards from goal and thrikes it over the bar. Chelsea have been pretty good since the young players came on.

74 min Havertz’s looping header is comfortably saved by Ederson, though he was offside anyway.

73 min City work the ball nicely down the right, and De Bruyne’s low cross is just too quick for Haaland, stretching in front of an open goal. They’ve been fantastic in the second half.

72 min The more you see City’s goal, the more it looks like Kepa should have stopped it. He might have pushed the ball out to an onrushing forward, Beast maybe, but that’s better than letting it roll behind you when somebody has an open goal.

Updated

71 min This is a decent spell of possession for Chelsea, probably their best of the second half.

68 min: Triple substitution for Chelsea Conor Gallagher, Omari Hutchinson and Lewis Hall replace Aubameyang, who only came as sub in the first half, Ziyech and Cucurella.

66 min “Pep did ‘play the bucket’!” says Gary Naylor, taking his own idea and running with it.

65 min It was a brilliant ball from Grealish, into a perfect area, but on the replay it looked like Kepa had a decent chance to push it away had he dived full stretch. Jamie Carragher on Sky Sports has also been very criticial of Cucurella for allowing Mahrez to run off him.

The two substitutes who came on three minutes ago have combined to give City the lead. De Bruyne charged forward from midfield and slid a simple pass to Grealish on the left side of the area. Grealish is a tactile footballer but this time he slid a devastating first-time cross with his left foot. Kepa decided not to dive towards it, a little weirdly, and Mahrez got the wrong side of Cucurella to tap into an empty net.

Riyad Mahrez celebrates his goal.
Super-sub Riyad Mahrez! Photograph: John Sibley/Action Images/Reuters

Updated

GOAL! Chelsea 0-1 Pep Guardiola (Mahrez 63)

City take the lead with a beautiful goal!

Riyad Mahrez scores.
Riyad Mahrez pounces to break the deadlock. Photograph: Glyn Kirk/IKIMAGES/AFP/Getty Images

Updated

62 min Grealish plays a nice little pass to the overlapping De Bruyne, who flicks a cross with the outside of the boot towards Haaland. Koulibaly gets in front to head clear.

61 min Ziyech flips a long pass from the edge of his own penalty area towards Havertz, who threatens to get the wrong side of the last man Akanji. Ederson comes miles out of his goal, doesn’t get the ball and is very relieved to see Akanji get to it before Havertz.

60 min: Double substitution for City New wide forwards please: Jack Grealish and Riyad Mahrez are on for Foden and Bernardo.

59 min: Chance for City! Bernardo Silva beats Cucurella thrillingly on the right, not once but twice before pushing the ball back to De Bruyne on the edge of the area. He takes a touch and smashes a shot wide of the near post.

58 min I’ve been calling Foden and Bernardo Silva wing-backs but they’re not really, they’re just wingers. Bernardo receives a good ball from De Bruyne just inside the area and tries to make room for a shot. Koulibaly holds him up and then Kovacic pokes the ball away.

55 min: Chance for Thiago! Chelsea give their defenders a breather with a decent counter-attack that ends when Ziyech’s cross is put behind by Akanji. The corner isn’t properly cleared, with Chukwuemeka swinging a deep cross from the left. The unmarked Havertz inexplicably miscontrols the ball, but it falls perfectly for Thiago to ping a drive that hits Rodri and deflects just wide of the far post.

53 min “My dog is sat next to me, snoring,” says Joe Pearson. “Given the excitement index of this match, I might be inclined to join him.”

A goal is coming, Frank says.

52 min: Good save by Kepa! This is brilliant from City. They win the ball in the final third again, and De Bruyne rifles a low left-footed drive that is smartly saved, low to his left, by Kepa.

51 min: Ake hits the post! De Bruyne whips the free-kick towards the near post and the well positioned Azpilicueta puts it behind for the corner. City take it short, with De Bruyne floating an inswinging cross beyond the far post. The backpedalling Ake gets in front of his teammate Rodri – who might have been in a better position – and thumps a header off the outside of the near post from a tight angle.

Ake’s header hits the woodwork.
Ake’s header hits the woodwork. Photograph: Tony Obrien/Reuters

Updated

50 min All of a sudden City are smothering Chelsea, who can’t get out. Azpilicueta is penalised with pulling Foden back on the left wing, and City have a free-kick in a decent position.

50 min Rico Lewis has started well, carrying the ball confidently through midfield on a couple of occasions.

49 min “What I’m struck by since everyone returned from the World Cup break is that City played its best game (only really good game?) the first time out on Dec. 22 vs. Liverpool in the Carabao Cup, but otherwise it almost seems like they can’t be bothered, when you’d expect their performance to improve as they get more games under their belts,” says Bob Best. “The Everton match was especially stunning. Brighton mauled them at Goodison Park Tuesday, after City (at home) played Everton like it was a meaningless friendly, where saving energy and avoiding injuries seemed to be the objectives.

“Any insights? It’s one thing to play well and not win all the time. It’s another to just not play well in the first place, when you have not only have all the tools but have more tools than you need, as evidenced by the ongoing discussions over who should be playing.”

I think it’s too early to draw conclusions, and I’m not only saying that because I didn’t see City’s games against Everton or Leeds. There was always going to be a bit of weirdness after a mid-season World Cup, and City have had spells like this before – remember the 2020-21 season, when Gary Neville among others said they looked “bored” after a really sluggish start. Then they won 20 games in a row in all competitions.

48 min A dodgy lay-off from Aubameyang is pinched by Haaland, who moves past Koulibaly and drags a shot wide from 20 yards. City’s intensity has been better since the break.

46 min City begin the second half. In fact they are playing the same 3-2-4-1 system, with Rico Lewis in central midfield and Bernardo Silva as the new right wing-back. What are you doing to me, Pep.

City are making a double substitution at half-time. Manuel Akanji and Rico Lewis for Joao Cancelo and Kyle Walker. That surely means a switch to 4-1-2-3.

“A match like this, clever but sterile play on both sides, needs the managers to be allowed a ten minute ‘Bielsa Mode’ period when all ten outfield players must sprint forward the moment one of them gets the ball,” says Gary Naylor. “Its start could be signalled by the fourth official holding up a bucket in the club colours. Any goals conceded in that period don’t count because, well, neutrals, Leeds fans and even the man himself, didn’t really care about that end of the pitch. Wouldn’t half liven this up.”

Half-time reading

He looks a cracking player, this chap.

Half time: Chelsea 0-0 Man City

That was a surprisingly cagey first half. City set up in an unusual 3-2-4-1 formation and struggled to find their usual attacking rhythm. Chelsea were a bit better, despite losing Raheem Sterling and Christian Pulisic to injury, and the substitute Carney Chukwuemeka hit the post on the stroke of half-time.

45+1 min “For all of Pep’s desire to be the Ornette Coleman of tactics, he’s deployed Haaland very conventionally,” says Kári Tulinius. “While the Norwegian’s goal tally suggests this is the smart choice, this makes the City offense is more predictable. You don’t often see any more five or six players all running at different angles, each a potential threat. City’s attacking rhythm’s a lot simpler than it used to be.”

There were umpteen factors, but I always found it interesting that Man Utd won the title only once in five years when Ruud van Nistelrooy was at the club, even though he scored goals in industrial quantities.

45+1 min Two minutes of added time.

45 min Cancelo chops past Cucurella in the area and hammers a cross shot that is really well blocked by Koulibaly. It’s livening up, just in time for half-time.

44 min: Chukwuemeka hits the post! Havertz curves a crossfield pass to Chukwuemeka in the inside-left channel. He cuts inside Walker and sweeps a low shot from the edge of the area that takes a slight deflection and hits the inside of the near post. Stones calmly launches a City break that ends with De Bruyne shooting straight at Kepa from 20 yards.

42 min Ziyech – a confident boy at the best of times, never mind after being one of the stars of the World Cup – cuts inside and has a pop from the right edge of the area. It’s well struck but straight at Ederson.

41 min Chelsea hvve had a few promising breaks, only to let themselves down with the final pass. There was another a moment ago, with Chukwuemeka crossing behind Aubameyang after a good move that also involved Havertz.

39 min “City won’t win three titles in a row exactly because Pep rotates too frequently and changes formation too often,” says Jeff Sachs.

To be fair, that hasn’t cost them a Premier League yet. A Champions League or two, maybe, but not a Premier League. Yet. They need to get their act together soon though, because they have a tricky run coming up: Spurs twice, Man Utd away and Arsenal away in the next six weeks.

38 min: Chance for Haaland! Out of nothing, City cut Chelsea open. Rodri fires a pass into Gundogan, 40 yards from goal. He turns and angles a pass to Haaland, pulling away from Koulibaly in the inside-right channel. Haaland controls the ball beautifully on the run but then pokes an early left-footed shot over the bar from the edge of the area.

36 min Whether because of Pep’s tinkering or for some other reason, City aren’t at the races.

34 min “The Stockport Messi has taken a page out of the book of the real artifact by playing much better in a Guardiola team boasting many of the world’s greatest midfielders than for a national team that has none of those,” says Phil Podolsky, who surely isn’t going to go there. My word, he is going to go there. “But, silly as it may sound, I sort of get the Messi analogy. Something about the way Foden can produce thunderbolts with very little backlift, switch his weight, things of that nature. Not the same calibre of generational talent, clearly, but just you wait. He’ll be a regular fixture in the Ballon d’Or top three in a couple of years, you’ve heard it here first.”

One thing that will be interesting is whether he ends up as a left-sided No8, stays as a wide forward or flits between the two. He’d be really dangerous dribbling from deep, a bit like Jack Wilshere, but that would also compromise his goal threat.

Updated

33 min That was City’s first shot of the game.

33 min Gundogan collects a loose ball 20 yards from goal, opens his body and shapes a curler towards the far corner. It’s well off target.

32 min Cancelo runs Cucurella and drives a flat cross that is inadvertently looped towards his own goal by Koulibaly. Happily for Chelsea, it drops into Kepa’s loving embrace.

31 min It’s not a great game this, I won’t like to you.

Nathan Ake of Manchester City in action with Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang
Aubameyang connects with ball and Nathan Ake’s noggin. Photograph: Marc Atkins/Getty Images

Updated

28 min Rodri throws Ziyech to the ground on the Chelsea right, a silly foul to give away. Ziyech’s dangerous inswinging free-kick is headed away at the near post by the backpedalling Haaland.

Updated

27 min Havertz is causing City problems when he drops into the hole. In fact, at the moment Chelsea are the more dangerous team and it’s probably fair to ask while Pep felt the need to abandon his usual 4-1-2-3 against a team who have been struggling all season, and who City usually beat on this ground. What have I told you about thinking, Pep.

Updated

26 min “With Chelsea already using two substitution windows, could be tricky for Potter the rest of the game to make significant changes,” says Eric Pilcher.

Yeah, that feels like a bit of a glitch. One way round it would be to give each team three windows in the second half. They might still get unlucky with injuries but it reduces the chances.

24 min Chukwuemeka has a shot blocked after fine play from Ziyech and Havertz; then Ziyech has a shot from a tight angle kicked away by Ederson.

22 min: Chelsea substitution Carney Chukwuemeka replaces Christian Pulisic. Chelsea are a defensive injury away from a world-class physio room XI: Mendy; James, Fofana, Chilwell; Loftus-Cheek, Kante; Sterling, Mount, Pulisic; Broja.

Updated

21 min He’s touched it now.

21 min Pulisic won’t be able to continue. In other news, Erling Haaland hasn’t touched the ball yet, literally.

18 min Pulisic hurt himself during that challenge with Stones, and this doesn’t look great.

17 min Stones’ tackle led to a corner for Chelsea. That led to another corner, which led to bugger all. And now Chelsea have another player down, Christian Pulisic.

16 min: Great defending from Stones! Havertz, 20 yards from goal, teases a lovely through pass to Pulisic, who is in the act of shooting when Stones lunges to make a fantastic block tackle.

Christian Pulisic is thwarted by John Stones.
Christian Pulisic is thwarted by John Stones. Photograph: Chris Lee/Chelsea FC/Getty Images

Updated

15 min Kovacic plays an excellent pass between the lines to Havertz, who does likewise to find Aubameyang on the right side of the area. The attack peters out but that was more promising for Chelsea.

14 min I’ll shut up about tactics now. It’s been a pretty cagey start, though Gundogan has just made a good run down the right only to cross too close to Kepa.

12 min “Completely agree on Foden,” says Patrick Brennan. “He is clearly supremely talented, but for me, he’s never quite hit what I perceive to be his ceiling. He may well do of course in the future. I compare him to Saka - I think most would agree that Foden is the more talented player, but for England, who has been the more effective? Saka, for me (Clive). If Foden does hit his heights then all bets are off...!”

Saka has been far better for England I’d say. I’m fairly sure Foden will achieve greatness – he’s only 22 – but it surprises me when people compare him to Wayne Rooney and Michael Owen at the same age.

11 min These are the revised teams.

Chelsea (4-2-2-2ish) Kepa; Azpilicueta, Thiago Silva, Koulibaly, Cucurella; Zakaria, Kovacic; Ziyech, Pulisic; Aubameyang, Havertz.

Manchester City (3-2-4-1ish) Ederson; Walker, Stones, Ake; Bernardo, Rodri; Cancelo, Gundogan, De Bruyne, Foden; Haaland.

Updated

9 min Chelsea work the ball nicely through midfield and find Cucurella on the left. He overhits a cross that hits the side netting at the near post. Ederson scampered across a little nervously but he was never really in danger.

8 min The game hasn’t really got going, with both teams getting their tactical bearings. Chelsea’s formation is a 4-2-2-2 of sorts, though it’s not a million miles from an admittedly more modern version of 4-4-2.

Kevin De Bruyne sticks a leg out to keep the ball rom Denis Zakaria.
Kevin De Bruyne sticks a leg out to keep the ball rom Denis Zakaria. Photograph: Matt McNulty/Manchester City FC/Getty Images

Updated

6 min “Like most Chelsea fans, I don’t expect much from tonight, but not because City (Haaland aside of course) are a vastly superior team,” says Julian Menz. “Simply put, City have a plan, a connected way of playing. Chelsea, on the other hand, far too often resemble a 1000-peice jigsaw puzzle a bored five-year-old started before dumping most of the pieces on the floor.”

5 min: Chelsea substitition Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang replaces Raheem Sterling. Chelsea have had grotesque luck with injuries, which makes the criticism even more unfair.

4 min Actually, Rodri isn’t playing centre-back. It looks like the same 3-2-4-1 formation that Guardiola played in defeat at Anfield, with Foden and Cancelo as (very high) wing-backs. Walker, Stones and Ake are the back three, with Walker and Ake playing pretty wide and Rodri dropping deeper when City don’t have the ball.

3 min Yet another injury problem for Chelsea. Raheem Sterling has gone down after an innocent-looking challenge with John Stones, and he’s feeling his right hamstring. He wants to continue, but that doesn’t seem like the brightest idea. Not even Diego Costa could run off a hamstring injury, and by heaven he tried in the 2014 Champions League final.

Raheem Sterling is treated for an injury.
An early call for the magic sponge. Photograph: Ben Stansall/AFP/Getty Images

Updated

2 min Crikey, Pep’s gone all funky. It looks like Rodri is playing at centre-back, with Cancelo on the right-hand side of midfield.

1 min After a minute’s applause for Pele, and if you haven’t watched the below video you really should do it right now, Kai Havertz gets the match under way.

“Welcome back…” says Jeff Sachs, before moving brusquely to business. “I miss Nunez misses.”

I’m playing the long game on this one. Even this season, when he has been widely ridiculed, he’s scored nine in 22 games. He’ll be fine.

“When the season began a City triumph seemed inevitable,” says Mary Waltz. “I continued to believe that until my relegation bound Everton drew with them at Etihad. It’s not that they don’t have the best talent and manager in the PL. They do. It’s just hard to maintain that continued excellence over long periods.”

Indeed. There’s a reason only five teams have been English champions for three consecutive seasons: Huddersfield Town (1923-26), Arsenal (1932-35), Liverpool (1981-84) and Manchester United (1998-2001 and 2006-09). I do think City will join the list though.

“Why hasn’t Pep picked his best front six (ie, the one starting this evening) more often?” wonders Andrew Hurley. “Foden behind Grealish is, well...”

Well, Guardiola is a disciple of rotation, rightly I think. I would generally play Foden ahead of Grealish in the bigger games because of his goal threat, but I think I see him through different eyes to the rest of the world. Brilliant player, could be a great, but I don’t recognise the generational talent (sic) most people talk about, particularly with England. I thought he was very disappointing against France. Guardiola has made a few comments about body language this week, which many have interpreted as being about Foden.

And I know he has his faults, especially from 12 yards, but don’t forget Riyad Mahrez was City’s top scorer with 24 last season. The flexibility of Bernardo and Foden in particular gives Guardiola so many options.

Updated

“Unless Chelsea win tonight they’ll remain third in the West London Championship behind Fulham and Brentford, albeit with a game in hand,” says Richard Hirst. “Who could have foreseen that, almost halfway through the season?”

Transfer latest

If there’s one thing Chelsea are still world class at, it’s irritating opposing teams whose players they want to buy. But it seems they are in the process of bringing in some pr-etty, pr-etty good footballers.

And here’s Pep

[On the changes tonight] I picked the team the fans told me to play. Some of the players came back from the World Cup with niggles, and Rico and the other guys have been fantastic.

[With Arsenal eight points in front, do you enjoy the thrill of the chase?] Well, we’d prefer to be eight points in front! A lot of games still to play, so we are trying to maintain our level and have a run of victories.

[On Beast] Many times in the previous season we played with a false nine so we had an extra player in the middle; now the extra player is in the box, so we have to adjust something. But, yeah, we are delighted: with his consistency, with his goals, with everything.

[On reintegrating players after the World Cup] I took a look, individually – first day, second day, third day, how they were training. It depends on the body language. In the period after the World Cup it was important to take a look: how is the body language, the mood, and try to pick the best line-up. Step by step the guys come back to reality and ready to play each game.

[On Grealish v Foden] There isn’t always a specific reason for picking players. Sometimes I want to rotate, sometimes it’s tactical, sometimes it’s because of the quality of the opposition. I’ve never been somebody who picks the same eleven every week, because it makes the locker-room impossible.

[On Graham Potter] All managers need time; I finished third in my first season at City. He is a top, top-class manger.

Updated

Graham Potter is chatting to Sky Sports

[Sum up your first four months at Chelsea] It’s been intense, challenging, enjoyable. We’ve had a transition period, and that has an effect: lots of games, lots of injuries. That’s my summary.

We haven’t been happy with how we played, certainly in the Premier League. We need to attack more and create chances. You can make excuses, because there are reasons, but ultimately we have to take responsbility and say, ‘We can do better.’ We need stability and we’re working towards that.

We haven’t functioned as well as a team as we’d have liked. We’re four months in and we lost the place for six weeks of those four months, but we acknowledge we have to build our attacks better and create more chances. That’s the honest answer.

Updated

Premier League goals this season

Chelsea 20-21 Erling Haaland.

Updated

Team news

Graham Potter makes two changes to the Chelsea side that drew at Nottingham Forest on Sunday. The more mobile Mateo Kovacic replaces Jorginho in midfield, and Hakim Ziyech is in for Mason Mount, who suffered a knock in training. Not sure what that means tactically; we’ll find out at 8pm.

Pep Guardiola picks a more grown-up City side, with Kyle Walker, Joao Cancelo, Ilkay Gundogan and Phil Foden replacing Rico Lewis, Manuel Akanji, Riyad Mahrez and Jack Grealish.

Chelsea (possible 4-2-2-2) Kepa; Azpilicueta, Koulibaly, Thiago Silva, Cucurella; Zakaria, Kovacic; Ziyech, Pulisic; Havertz, Sterling.
Substitutes: Bettinelli, Jorginho, Aubameyang, Chalobah, Gallagher, Chukwuemeka, Humphreys, Hutchinson, Hall.

Manchester City (4-1-2-3) Ederson; Walker, Stones, Ake, Cancelo; Rodri; De Bruyne, Gundogan; Bernardo, Haaland, Foden.
Substitutes: Ortega Moreno, Phillips, Grealish, Alvarez, Gomez, Akanji, Mahrez, Palmer, Lewis.

Referee Paul Tierney.

Updated

Preamble

We know it’s coming, or at least we think we do. All four of Pep Guardiola’s title-winning seasons at Manchester City have included terrifying winning runs to either burn off or reel in their rivals: They won 18 consecutive Premier League games in 2017-18, 14 in 2018-19 - when they had no margin for a draw, never mind a defeat - 15 in 2020-21 and 12 last season. The streaks in 2017-18 and 2020-21 included statement victories at Stamford Bridge, and they’d love another tonight.

Everyone expects City to go on another run, and this would be a good time to start. They are eight points behind Arsenal, with tonight’s match in hand, and five of their next seven games are against Big Seven teams. A couple of months ago it was unthinkable that anyone other than City would win the league; now it is merely unlikely.

The reason I said the Big Seven rather than the top seven is that Chelsea start tonight’s game in tenth. The last thing they need, given the hysterical criticism they have received either side of the World Cup, is a game against City. They have two: tonight and then a trip to the Etihad in the FA Cup on Sunday. But like City, Chelsea know a win tonight could be a line in the sand.

Kick off 8pm.

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