Chelsea
Late Enzo Fernández Equaliser Earns Chelsea a Point as City Lose Dias and Gvardiol to Injury
City dominated possession and outshot Chelsea but conceded a 94th-minute equaliser; injuries worrying
Manchester City conceded a 94th-minute equaliser from Enzo Fernández to finish 1-1 with Chelsea at the Etihad Stadium. City controlled large periods, but Chelsea’s improved second-half showing and a late finish denied the hosts victory as the season passed the halfway stage and left City six points behind the league leaders following Arsenal’s win over Bournemouth.
City took the lead when Tijjani Reijnders finished after Rayan Cherki’s pass deflected into his path. Chelsea grew into the game after half-time and created a series of openings, culminating in Fernández’s stoppage-time strike following a cross from Malo Gusto. Gianluigi Donnarumma saved the first effort but could not keep out the rebound.
Worrying for Pep Guardiola was the loss of both starting centre backs, Rúben Dias and Joško Gvardiol. Gvardiol was withdrawn shortly after the interval with what appeared an ankle problem, and Dias could not complete the match after picking up a knock late on.
Team and key details
Chelsea (4-2-3-1)
Starting XI: Filip Jörgensen; Josh Acheampong, Trevoh Chalobah, Benoît Badiashile, Malo Gusto; Reece James (c), Enzo Fernández; Estêvão, Cole Palmer, Pedro Neto; João Pedro.
Subs used: Andrey Santos, Jorrel Hato, Liam Delap.
Man City player ratings (out of 10)
GK: Gianluigi Donnarumma — 7.9: Not really seen until Chelsea had their first shot on target with 20 minutes left, pulling out a relatively straightforward but important stop. Almost kept out the equaliser.
RB: Matheus Nunes — 7.4: Might have done more to cut out the cross before it reached Fernández.
CB: Rúben Dias — 7.3: Unable to complete the game after picking up a knock late on.
CB: Joško Gvardiol — 6.9: Withdrawn only a few minutes after half-time with what appeared an ankle problem.
LB: Nico O’Reilly — 7.3: Won his individual battle with Estêvão, who did not re-emerge after the break.
CM: Bernardo Silva (c) — 6.4: Led by example but limited in output.
CM: Rodri — 8.3: Controlled performance on his return to the starting XI.
CM: Tijjani Reijnders — 7.7: Continued his scoring run with a strong finish.
RF: Rayan Cherki — 6.6: Architect of the breakthrough but lacked consistent end product.
LF: Phil Foden — 6.6: Bright early, faded after the interval.
ST: Erling Haaland — 7.2: Quiet start, later tested Chelsea and struck the inside of the post.
Substitutes: Abdukodir Khusanov (51’ for Gvardiol) — 6.6; Jérémy Doku (70’ for Reijnders) — 6.7; Nathan Aké (81’ for Dias) — N/A. Subs not used: James Trafford, Rico Lewis, Stephen Mfuni, Divine Mukasa, Ryan McAidoo, Reigan Heskey.
City dominated possession and outshot Chelsea but failed to turn control into three points as injuries compounded late frustration.
Chelsea
Rosenior sets youth target, invokes United’s Class of ’92 as blueprint
Rosenior compares his young Chelsea side to United’s Class of ’92 and calls for bravery and balance.
Liam Rosenior has framed Chelsea’s current crop as a long-term project modelled on Manchester United’s 1990s youth revolution. He invoked the Class of ’92 era as an example of what sustained faith in young players can deliver and argued the club must be equally daring if it is to replicate that success.
“I was a Manchester United fan and I am now massively a Chelsea fan,” Rosenior revealed. “I remember Sir Alex Ferguson was brave enough to put six or seven players aged between 19 and 21 into a title-winning team because he believed in them.
“They grew and won trophy after trophy. It was an amazing period in that club’s history. Without that bravery, it doesn’t happen. There is potential for that here.”
The piece recalled Ferguson’s summer of 1995 decision to rely on academy graduates after losing the title to Blackburn Rovers. Paul Scholes (20), David Beckham (20), Nicky Butt (20), Gary (20) and Phil Neville (18) all featured in the opening game of 1995–96, with Ryan Giggs then 21 completing the youthful half-dozen.
Yet Rosenior also highlighted the quality already in the squad. “Speak about Moisés Caicedo or Enzo Fernández or Cole Palmer or Reece James—world-class players and still very, very young,” Rosenior insisted. “That is the ultimate ambition for this club—to create that again.”
The article noted United’s average starting XI age of 25.5 in 1995–96, the second-youngest in the division, compared with Chelsea’s current average of 24.7 and a relative lack of senior figures. Enzo Maresca had warned in December that experience is crucial: “When you have 20 and 21-year-olds and a player who is 30 or 31, and he starts to say something to them, it’s invaluable,” the Italian boss explained in December. “But it’s the strategy of the club,” he sighed. Less than two weeks later, he was gone.
Tosin Adarabioyo, who turned 28 in September, is the oldest player in Chelsea’s Premier League squad, which includes 12 players aged 21 or under. The club have not spent on a player over the age of 25 since co-sporting directors Laurence Stewart and Paul Winstanley were appointed in 2022.
The debate over youth versus experience has a long memory. Alan Hansen declared: “You can’t win anything with kids.” Gary Neville reflected the same reality: “I’ve said many times that Alan Hansen was right, you don’t win anything with kids,” Neville told Sky Sports back in 2019. “The Class of ’92 didn’t win that Premier League title. We had Steve Bruce, Gary Pallister, Roy Keane, Eric Cantona, Brian McClair and Peter Schmeichel. We had world-class performers and two of the best centre backs ever. Keane was the most inspirational captain and leader, Cantona was world-class, Schmeichel was the best in the world and Dennis Irwin was brilliant.
“They pulled us through it.”
Chelsea
Rosenior Rejects Puppet Tag and Promises Decision-Making Power at Chelsea
Rosenior insisted he will make the decisions at Chelsea, rejecting the idea he is a puppet. Clearly.
Liam Rosenior used his first Chelsea press conference to draw a clear line under suggestions he will defer to ownership. Having spent the previous 18 months coaching Chelsea’s sister club Strasbourg, where a similar structure is in place, Rosenior was at pains to say he will not be a figurehead.
Maresca’s frustrations with the club’s influential sporting directors and gaggle of co-owners reportedly stemmed from a constant need to defend himself and a sense that his recruitment calls were ignored. The former Leicester City boss saw requests for another centre back last summer and appeals for more senior players around the turn of the year fall on deaf ears.
Rosenior, 41, who had spells at Derby County, Hull City and Strasbourg and is a former Brighton fullback, was explicit: “I don’t think it’s possible to ever be in this job and not be your own man,” Rosenior declared at his first Chelsea press conference, which he prefaced by shaking the hand of every media representative present. “People will see through you straight away.
“I will make the decisions at this club, that’s why I’ve been brought in.
“I understand, I’m not an alien, I know what’s being said in the press but there’s no way you can be successful as a manager if you don’t make the decisions for yourself.”
He refused to adopt the more high-profile profile associated with recent predecessors but projected calm confidence. “I’m not arrogant, I’m good at what I do,” he shrugged.
Rosenior stressed his record: “In every job I’ve worked, whether as an interim, assistant, head coach, relative to the group I’ve worked with, I’ve been successful. I’ve always wanted to be at a club like this but it’s not about just being here, it’s about being successful.
“Nobody can guarantee wins but at the same time I’ve worked very hard for a long time to try and put myself in a position where I can be successful.”
Rosenior watched on as Chelsea lost 2–1 at Fulham, extending a five-match winless run that leaves the club eighth and 18 points behind league leaders Arsenal. He remained measured: “Hopefully, I can add my own ideas, sometimes a different voice helps, but the players haven’t been far away.” He called prioritising competitions “crazy” and highlighted positives around training and player quality.
Chelsea
How Liam Rosenior’s Arrival Reshapes Roles at Chelsea
Rosenior’s Chelsea arrival will reshuffle roles: Delap, Estêvão, Santos and Penders stand to gain in.
Chelsea have appointed Liam Rosenior to replace the frustrated Enzo Maresca. Rosenior arrives with a reputation for high-intensity, energy-first football and a preference for a 3-4-2-1 shape he employed at Strasbourg. Early flexibility will be important as he adapts that system to a large, unsettled squad.
One immediate tactical implication is for Estêvão. Though the 18-year-old has often been used on the right wing since his arrival at Stamford Bridge, Chelsea reportedly view him as an attacking midfielder long term. Under Maresca he was more often an impact substitute than a regular starter. Rosenior’s fluid 3-4-2-1 could increase Estêvão’s minutes in a second attacking midfield role alongside Cole Palmer, though he would likely need to share time with João Pedro and Enzo Fernández.
The No. 9 position may also be open. João Pedro has operated there this term but is not an out-and-out centre forward and could be better suited to an attacking midfield role. Rosenior knows Liam Delap well: he signed Delap at Hull and the striker thrived on loan from Manchester City, scoring eight goals and adding two assists in the Championship at the MKM Stadium. Delap has the physical traits of a traditional striker and did his chances no harm by scoring against Fulham with Rosenior in the stands watching.
Andrey Santos is another player with an existing Rosenior connection. The Brazilian played 34 games for Rosenior in 2024–25, scoring 11 goals and providing four assists. Santos has started just five Premier League games this term and one in Europe, but a congested schedule could give Rosenior reason to use him more often.
Goalkeeping is a further area for review. Robert Sánchez has improved but remains unconvincing, while Filip Jörgensen has not inspired. Mike Penders, on loan at Strasbourg from Chelsea, has been the French side’s starting keeper under Rosenior this season and impressed in his first campaign in a top-five league. Rosenior has seen Penders’ development first hand and may offer him an opportunity next season.
Reece James appears safe in the XI but could be shifted to wing back, a demanding role that risks aggravating his injury history. The Rosenior system does not favour natural wingers, so wide players who prefer hugging the touchline, such as Alejandro Garnacho, or those lacking defensive discipline face a difficult path. Jamie Gittens has struggled to find the polish and technical edge to displace established wide options.
