Brighton net twice at the death to claim comeback win away to 10-man Chelsea

Brighton struck twice in second-half stoppage-time as 10-man Chelsea threw away the lead to slump to a 3-1 Premier League defeat at Stamford Bridge.

Maxim De Cuypers’ header put Brighton into the lead at the start of 11 added minutes at the end of the match to stun the home side, who had labored ever since the dismissal in the 53rd minute of Trevoh Chalobah. Substitute De Cuypers was left unmarked to nod the ball home after Mats Weiffer had turned Yasin Ayaris’ deep cross back into the box, before fellow substitute Danny Welbeck added a third, his second, to finish Chelsea off.

For the second time in as many league matches, Brighton manager Enzo Maresca had been left looking for answers following a red card. This time he at least had the comfort of an advantage given to his side by Enzo Fernandez’s header midway through the first half. But after Chalobah was sent off for denying Diego Gomez a clear goal-scoring opportunity—as had happened at Old Trafford last weekend—Chelsea were made to improvise.

That they failed to do so raises questions again about this young side’s ability to show guile and organizational nous when under pressure. Manchester United learned last week how rattled Chelsea become when a situation changes rapidly, and here Brighton were the beneficiaries. Welbeck headed them level 13 minutes from time as the game swung the visitors’ way.

Chelsea started excellently and might have finished Brighton off by half-time. Bart Verbruggen kept out free-kicks in the first half from Fernandez and Reece James, while Marc Cucurella fizzed an early effort just a yard wide against his former club. There was a hum of approval from home fans when Estevao Willian nutmegged Ferdi Kadioglu on halfway, then drove determinedly into the box before Jan Paul van Hecke could shovel the ball behind for a corner.

The game was being played at an excitable pace, with all one-touch passing and zig-zagging runs—the antithesis of Chelsea’s lacklustre surrender to United a week ago.

In the absence of Cole Palmer, Fernandez took the number 10 role as he did against Bayern Munich. His speed of thought on the ball and sureness of touch in the centre greased the gears of Chelsea’s early dominance.

The goal after 24 minutes was much deserved. Moises Caicedo slipped the ball into the right channel for James to zip onto, and as his cross skipped up into an arch off the covering Kaoru Mitoma, there at the far post was Fernandez, hanging in the air as it dropped to nod it over the line.

Then came the red card on which the game turned. A dreadful pass from Andrey Santos exposed Chalobah as the last man to the goalwards advance of Gomez. The defender made a hopeless attempt to win the ball from behind, and following a protracted VAR analysis, he was dismissed.

Welbeck came on and shot agonizingly wide after losing Cucurella, as Chelsea failed to clear their lines. But the striker would not be denied. Moments later, he was left free inside the box to rise and bullet Yankuba Minteh’s cross past Robert Sanchez for the equaliser.

De Cuypers’ goal for 2-1 was the killer for Chelsea. Few of their fans remained in the ground by the time Welbeck crashed in his second and Brighton’s third.
https://www.breakingnews.ie/sport/brighton-net-twice-at-the-death-to-claim-comeback-win-away-to-10-man-chelsea-1811936.html

Roy Keane tells Pep Guardiola to stop complaining about Man City’s schedule

Roy Keane had little sympathy for Pep Guardiola following the Manchester City manager’s comments about his team’s schedule after Sunday’s 1-1 draw at Arsenal.

Guardiola felt his players showed the effects of a busy week that included last weekend’s derby and a Champions League clash with Napoli. “Hats off to the team, their resilience,” he said on Sky Sports after seeing Erling Haaland’s early opener cancelled out by Gabriel Martinelli’s stoppage-time strike.

“To score is so difficult when you’re not effective at high pressing, you’re not effective in the build-up. The mindset has to be strong, but we have a lot of fatigue with the same players, we have, you know, how many injured.”

When asked why he felt his team were not effective, Guardiola explained: “(Arsenal) were better and we were incredibly tired. Sometimes people don’t realise, the game against Napoli in the Champions League was so emotional. After that, a recovery day and the day after you have to (travel) four, five hours (to London).”

Pressed on his feelings regarding the schedule, he added:
“But if you want to bring up the fact that now I’m complaining about the schedule, OK. OK, I’m complaining about the schedule! Are you satisfied? OK!”

Former Manchester United captain Roy Keane, speaking as a pundit on Sky Sports, responded bluntly:
“If you’re talking about fatigue and schedules, we’re in September and they’re on the back of two home matches. The United game they were fairly comfortable, Napoli had a man sent off after 20 minutes. They’ve not travelled from Russia or Poland when you’ve had a tough away game.

“We all know the challenges of being a footballer is being robust and playing two or three games a week. We look at their players on the bench, I’m sure there must be other managers in the Premier League looking at Pep thinking, ‘Pep, if you think you’ve got problems with schedules and the strength in depth, my goodness.’ I didn’t like that angle Pep was coming from.”
https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/roy-keane-pep-guardiola-napoli-champions-league-sky-sports-b2830922.html

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