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Regular-article-logo Friday, 16 May 2025

De Bruyne the hero as City shock champions Chelsea

Manchester City regained top spot in the Premier League with a deserved 1-0 victory over an out-of-sorts Chelsea at Stamford Bridge on Saturday.

(Reuters) Published 01.10.17, 12:00 AM
Pep Guardiola with Kevin De 
Bruyne on Saturday.

London: Manchester City regained top spot in the Premier League with a deserved 1-0 victory over an out-of-sorts Chelsea at Stamford Bridge on Saturday.

Having been knocked down into second place by Manchester United's win over Crystal Palace earlier in the day, Pep Guardiola's side jumped back ahead of their city rivals on goal difference thanks to Kevin De Bruyne's superb second-half strike.

City are now unbeaten in 15 league games and have dropped only two points this season. Chelsea sustained their second defeat of the campaign at Stamford Bridge and fall to fourth, six points adrift of the two Manchester clubs and one behind Tottenham Hotspur, who are third.

Their poor performance and result were compounded by losing top scorer Alvaro Morata to injury in the first half when he limped off, holding his hamstring.

Earlier, Manchester United registered a 4-0 win over pointless Crystal Palace.

The result left Palace rooted to the bottom of the table after a record seventh successive defeat without a goal to start the season.

Two more goals from Harry Kane helped Tottenham Hotspur to consolidate their place in the Champions League positions with a comfortable 4-0 win away to Huddersfield Town.

In two key games at the wrong end of the table, West Ham United had a late win over Swansea City to move above them, but Bournemouth were held at home by Leicester City.

Romelu Lukaku's late strike at Old Trafford meant that free-scoring United have hit four goals in a game six times this season.

Juan Mata and Marouane Fellaini scored before halftime and when Fellaini headed in his second just after the interval, the points were made even more secure.

Palace, beaten 5-0 away by City in their last game, avoided a repetition but have become only the second team since the Premier League began to lose their first seven games. Unlike Portsmouth in 2009-10, though, they have not scored a single goal.

England striker Kane continued his astonishing run by following up a Champions League hat-trick in midweek with two more goals as Spurs went 3-0 up by halftime at promoted Huddersfield. Ben Davies scored the other first-half goal and Moussa Sissoko added a fourth just before the final whistle.

Kane, having failed to score at all in August once again, made it 13 for club and country during September.

"Goals to games it is probably the best month I have had, especially after August," he said. "I feel good, I feel confident and I am there to put the goals away."

Manager Mauricio Pochettino must be running out of ways to describe his main striker, who was applauded off by both sets of supporters when substituted near the end.

"Harry Kane is in an amazing moment," he said. "He is scoring goals, his energy is fantastic - the way he works without the ball."

Watford recovered from two goals down at West Bromwich Albion to go fifth after the home team scored twice in three minutes in the first half through Salomon Rondon and Jonny Evans.

Abdoulaye Doucoure kept Watford in contention and Brazilian Richarlison headed an equaliser in the final minute of added time.

Substitute Peter Crouch earned Stoke City a 2-1 win at home to Southampton after Maya Yoshida had equalised Mame Biram Diouf's opener. Earlier Saido Berahino, who has not scored for 30 games, missed a penalty conceded by Southampton's Virgil van Dijk, playing his first game of the season.West Ham relieved some of the pressure on manager Slaven Bilic when two of his substitutes combined for a dramatic winning goal at home to Swansea.

Arthur Masuaku crossed for Diafra Sakho to score, taking the London side out of the bottom three and putting Swansea there instead.

Bournemouth stay bottom but one after dominating against Leicester but failing to score. Jermain Defoe came closest in the second minute, hitting the bar.

In Sunday's three matches, sixth-placed Liverpool meet up with their former manager Rafa Benitez, now in charge of Newcastle United; Arsenal host Brighton and Everton are at home to Burnley.

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