EuroWire, LONDON: Manchester City kept their Premier League title challenge alive with a 3-0 win over Chelsea at Stamford Bridge on Sunday, scoring all three goals after halftime to cut Arsenal’s lead at the top of the table to six points. The result came a day after Arsenal lost 2-1 at home to Bournemouth, allowing City to capitalize in a match that carried major weight at both ends of the standings race. Chelsea, meanwhile, suffered another setback in their push for Champions League qualification.

The game was scoreless at the break, but Chelsea had looked the more threatening side in stretches of the first half. Marc Cucurella had the ball in the net after good work from Joao Pedro, only for the effort to be ruled out for offside, and the hosts created the clearer openings despite City controlling more of the possession. City, however, returned from halftime with greater urgency and quickly took command of a contest that had remained finely balanced through the opening 45 minutes.
Nico O’Reilly broke the deadlock in the 51st minute, heading home from a cross by Rayan Cherki after getting free inside the area. Six minutes later, Cherki was involved again, working the opening for Marc Guehi to drive City’s second into the far corner against his former club. Jeremy Doku added the third in the 68th minute after dispossessing Moises Caicedo just outside the Chelsea area, finishing past Robert Sanchez to complete a decisive burst of three goals in 17 minutes.
Second-half surge transforms contest
The victory was City’s first in the league since February and restored momentum to a title chase that had shown signs of slipping away. Pep Guardiola’s side made full use of Arsenal’s defeat on Saturday and also preserved the advantage of a game in hand as the season moves into its closing weeks. City and Arsenal are scheduled to meet next weekend, and Sunday’s result ensured that fixture will arrive with the gap between the clubs reduced and the title race still very much in play.
For Chelsea, the defeat was a third consecutive league loss and another blow to hopes of returning to the Champions League. The London club showed promise before the interval but could not withstand City’s sharper movement and pressure after the restart. Chelsea remained sixth after the result, four points behind fifth-placed Liverpool, and the manner of the collapse after halftime underlined how quickly the match turned once City found space and rhythm in the final third.
Title race tightens as Chelsea stumble
Cherki’s influence was central to the outcome. The French midfielder supplied the cross for O’Reilly’s opener and created the second goal with quick control and awareness in a crowded penalty area, while City’s front-foot pressing led directly to Doku’s finish. O’Reilly again delivered in a high-stakes match, and Guehi’s goal added further authority to a second-half display in which City moved the ball faster, won key duels and punished Chelsea’s mistakes with clinical finishing.
Chelsea still threatened sporadically late on, but City had already settled the match and closed it out without allowing any route back. The visitors left west London with a result that kept them firmly in contention in the Premier League race, while Chelsea were left to absorb a damaging home defeat. City moved within six points of Arsenal with a game in hand, while Chelsea stayed sixth and four points behind Liverpool.
