When the dust settles on a tempestuous match, the finger-pointing
stops and the bans are handed out, perhaps this will be the occasion
when Chelsea
made it clear their title aspirations are authentic. They rode their
luck at times – discounting the own goal from Gary Cahill – and their
opponents were entitled to be aggrieved about some of the refereeing
decisions. Yet nobody could question the endurance of Antonio Conte’s
men, their competitive courage and the tactical acumen of their manager.
Unfortunately for them, the occasion will be remembered more for the
collective lack of discipline in stoppage time when City, to put it
bluntly, lost the plot. Sergio Agüero, having already served one
suspension this season, can expect a four-game ban after his scything
red-card challenge on David Luiz. That, however, told only part of the
story as the two sets of players clashed by the touchline and
Fernandinho could be in serious trouble after reacting to some
provocation from Cesc Fàbregas by grabbing him by the neck, levering him
towards the crowd and eventually pushing him over the advertising
hoardings almost into the laps of the front row of spectators.
Fernandinho wanted to prolong the argument even after being sent off
and he, and City, might face further action when the Football
Association studies the video replays and sees how stewards had to
prevent it getting even more out of hand. Chelsea could also be fined
given the number of players from the sides locking horns. To put it into
context, the managers felt compelled to go on the pitch and Diego
Costa, of all people, could be seen trying to calm down Fernandinho.
Guardiola did at least recognise it was a shabby way to end the match –
“I would like to apologise,” he said – but he was pushing his luck
trying to argue that Agüero’s wild, two-footed challenge was not
intentional and his own conduct was questionable, to say the least.
At one point, late in the game, Guardiola could be seen sarcastically
clapping the referee, Anthony Taylor, for giving City a free-kick, even
punching the air and sticking up his thumbs to give his act an extra
flourish. Guardiola insisted that he would never be disrespectful about
referees in press conferences, but he had already done just that in
front of a television audience stretching to millions. As for his
apology, it was hardly uttered in the manner of someone who genuinely
felt contrition or embarrassment. He was seething, no matter how
determined he was not to criticise Agüero or Fernandinho directly.
It was a breathless contest, laced with controversy, and in fairness to City they did have legitimate complaints, in particular the first-half incident when David Luiz could feasibly have been sent off for halting Agüero’s run towards goal. City were also denied two penalty appeals in the opening 45 minutes and Taylor spent large parts of the game with an incensed crowd reminding him of his alleged boyhood allegiances to Manchester United.
It was a breathless contest, laced with controversy, and in fairness to City they did have legitimate complaints, in particular the first-half incident when David Luiz could feasibly have been sent off for halting Agüero’s run towards goal. City were also denied two penalty appeals in the opening 45 minutes and Taylor spent large parts of the game with an incensed crowd reminding him of his alleged boyhood allegiances to Manchester United.
Ultimately,
though, there was a reminder here that Guardiola’s team are going to
find it difficult to win the league when they defend with so little
cohesion. City have kept two clean sheets in the league and having taken
the lead it must have been startling for their manager to see how they
unravelled in the face of Chelsea’s superb counterattacking.
Costa began the comeback on the hour and the next two goals came from
the kind of breakaway attacks that have exposed City on several
occasions this season. At least there was some form of mitigation for
Eden Hazard’s goal, with the clock ticking down and the home side left
with no choice but to advance in numbers. Yet, from one penalty area to
the other, Chelsea opened them up in a matter of seconds when the
substitute Willian ran clear to give the visitors the lead. Chelsea
played with the better structure, the clearer heads and a greater
understanding of the wing-back system employed by both sides.
Hazard’s late finish confirmed an eighth successive league win,
Chelsea’s best run for 10 years in a single season and that made it a
desperately disappointing afternoon for City bearing in mind the home
team led at half-time and had a golden opportunity, two minutes before
Costa’s equaliser, to double their lead. Kevin De Bruyne could not keep
his shot down, the ball came back off the crossbar and the remainder of
the match merely re-iterated that Guardiola is still to get the balance
right between attack and defence.
More than anything, City will look back to what happened on the
half-hour mark when De Bruyne’s long pass sent Agüero chasing after two
defenders and César Azpilicueta’s attempt to play the ball back to
Thibaut Courtois fell short. Agüero would have fancied his chances in a
sprint against David Luiz and his opponent seemed to realise it, leaning
in with sufficient force to unbalance the striker, but also applying
enough disguise to get away with it.
That was a key moment because if the free-kick had been given the
next decision for Taylor would have been whether Agüero, running in
diagonally 30 yards from goal, had been denied a clear scoring
opportunity and, if so, Chelsea would have been down to 10 men.
Taylor had already given Cahill the benefit of the doubt after a
handball inside the penalty area and the volume turned up again when
N’Golo Kanté got away with a challenge on Ilkay Gündogan. Cahill’s own
goal came shortly afterwards and Agüero might consider, on reflection,
that Chelsea’s centre-half had suffered enough indignity without rubbing
it in by patting him on his head as he ran away in celebration. Jesús
Navas had supplied the cross and as own-goals go this one was
spectacular – a twisting volley to redirect the ball beneath the joint
of crossbar and post.
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