The Scottish Mail on Sunday

PEP FINDS HIS MOJO

City manager outwits Tuchel in crunch match as statement victory sends out strong title message at Stamford Bridge

- By Oliver Holt AT STAMFORD BRIDGE

IT had begun to feel as though Pep Guardiola was falling out of fashion. The smart money has been flocking to Chelsea in the Premier League stakes these past few weeks and their boss, Thomas Tuchel, has become everyone’s new darling. Top of the table going into this game, Tuchel and his team were already being anointed champions in some quarters.

Tuchel, after all, had outsmarted Guardiola in the Champions League final in Porto last May when the City boss was said, once again, to have over-complicate­d things. It was the third time in succession Tuchel’s Chelsea had beaten Guardiola’s City. When Tuchel was asked last week whether he was a better coach than his rival, he was coy in his response.

But at Stamford Bridge, Guardiola got his mojo back. And got his own back. At the start of a run of away games that will continue with them playing in Paris against PSG this week and at Anfield against Liverpool next weekend, City were outstandin­g in their demolition of Chelsea. They were relentless, they were hungry, they were brilliant and they were beautiful.

And so it was fitting that the end of a match which ought to re-establish City as the favourites to retain their title, Guardiola was showered with accolades. Primary among them was that the win made him the most successful manager in City’s long and celebrated history, taking him above legendary City boss Les McDowall with his 221st victory at the club.

McDowall was City manager for 592 games between 1950 and 1963 and this was only Guardiola’s 303rd match in charge. He has already, of course, won more trophies than any other manager in the club’s history and the manner of City’s victory in west London held out the hope that there will be many more to come. And soon.

This was a dominating, smothering, brave, skilful performanc­e by City, who had been confronted at the start of the game by a dark blue wall of N’Golo Kante, Jorginho and Mateo Kovacic in the Chelsea midfield that seemed designed to stop even a team as creative as City from penetratin­g it. Tuchel’s ploy simply didn’t work. City were too good. Way too good.

It is early in the season yet but the fact that this victory knocked Chelsea off the top of the table and lifted City above them felt symbolic. This was a statement win by a team that has faced questions about whether, in the light of the failure to buy a centre-forward in the summer, it is properly equipped to compete with its main rivals.

If Chelsea’s selection had been designed to thwart City going forward, it was City who refused to give their opponents a chance to play. Romelu Lukaku was rarely in the game, starved of service. Chelsea sorely lacked creativity of their own. Their defeat was a reality check in their hopes of stealing City’s crown away from them this season.

A quarter of an hour had gone before Chelsea finally broke free of City’s shackles for the first time. They hoofed the ball out of defence but it fell kindly to Lukaku near the halfway line and he laid it off to Marcos Alonso. Alonso picked out the run of Timo Werner down the left and when he crossed the ball, Lukaku swivelled and tried to shoot but the ball squirmed from him.

City dominated possession. Chelsea were patient and brave trying to beat their opponent’s press but they rarely achieved it. When they did, they broke with intent and purpose and Werner looked particular­ly sharp and filled with new confidence. But those moments were few and far between and City were equal to them.

And so we were left with half chances and flashes of excitement. A few of them came in a flurry just before half-time. A Rodri shot glanced off the top of Antonio Rudiger’s head and flew over the bar. A chipped cross from Phil Foden was chested down by Gabriel Jesus ten yards out but he blazed his shot wildly over. Edouard Mendy rushed a punch to clear a corner but it fell harmlessly wide. A long shot from Kevin De Bruyne sped high and handsome into the Matthew Harding Stand.

Jack Grealish, whose influence had been limited by some excellent defending by Cesar Azpilicuet­a, in particular, curled a shot wide just after the break. And as City resumed their first-half domination, so the Chelsea faithful roared their players on whenever there was the merest glimpse of an attack. But their encouragem­ent was in vain.

Seven minutes after the interval, City worked a short corner from the left and when it reached Rodri 25 yards out, he slammed a shot goalwards. It went into a group of players massed in the area and Jesus controlled it and turned beautifull­y. His right-foot shot hit the bottom of Jorginho’s outstretch­ed boot and bounced into the ground. The deflection rooted Mendy to the spot and the ball found the bottom corner of the net.

City nearly went further ahead five minutes later. Grealish, who was growing in confidence, finally found some space in the area and jinked round Azpilicuet­a. His slide-rule shot was destined for the bottom corner until Mendy reached out and made a brilliant diving finger-tip save with his left hand that diverted it round the post.

The game had sprung to life. Tuchel brought Kai Havertz on for Kante and it opened up even more. Grealish was at the centre of everything now. His cross from the left was pushed out by Mendy but it fell to Jesus and his shot was heading for goal until it was hacked off the line by Thiago Silva, a firsthalf substitute for Reece James.

Lukaku had a goal disallowed for offside but that was a rare break in City’s relentless­ness. Chelsea seemed to miss the guile and energy that the injured Mason Mount brings them and in particular, his ability to slip between the lines.

City nearly wrapped things up 12 minutes from time when De Bruyne curled a flat free-kick deep into the Chelsea area. Aymeric Laporte made a late run and stretched to meet it at the back post but his effort flew wide.

City had another golden chance to put the game out of reach a few minutes later. Chelsea lost the ball deep in their own half and Phil Foden was on it in a flash. He played a perfect through ball to Grealish but when the £100m man tried to flick it past Mendy with the outside of his right foot, the goalkeeper blocked it with his body and the danger was cleared. City saw out the remaining minutes and Guardiola’s record was safe.

He was the main man once again.

CHELSEA (5-3-2): Mendy; James (T Silva 28), Azpilicuet­a, Christense­n, Rudiger, Alonso; Kante (Havertz 60), Jorginho (Loftus-Cheek 76), Kovacic; Lukaku, Werner. Subs (not used): Arrizabala­ga, Chalobah, Saul, Hudson-Odoi, Chilwell, Ziyech.

Booked: Christense­n, Rudiger, Alonso.

MANCHESTER CITY (4-3-3): Ederson; Walker, Dias, Laporte, Cancelo; B Silva, Rodri, De Bruyne(Mahrez 81); Foden (Fernandinh­o 88), Jesus, Grealish (Sterling 87). Subs (not used): Stones, Ake, Steffan, Torres, Palmer, Lavia. Booked: Dias, Laporte.

Referee: Michael Oliver.

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 ?? ?? CHILD’S PLAY: Jesus celebrates his winner (below left) to the delight of boss Guardiola (below right)
CHILD’S PLAY: Jesus celebrates his winner (below left) to the delight of boss Guardiola (below right)

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