City held 3-3 at Everton in title blow, Forest eye safety
- Manchester City’s title bid suffered a crushing blow despite them recovering from a second-half capitulation to snatch a 3-3 draw at Everton on Monday.
- Post By Ivan Kolekevski
- 08:35, 5 May, 2026
London, 5 May 2026 (dpa/MIA) - Manchester City’s title bid suffered a crushing blow despite them recovering from a second-half capitulation to snatch a 3-3 draw at Everton on Monday.
Jeremy Doku curled in a superb stoppage-time equalizer to earn City a point in their pursuit of Premier League leaders Arsenal, but the two dropped at Hill Dickinson Stadium could be highly damaging.
City had led 1-0 at halftime following Doku’s first goal of a dramatic night, but Everton hit back with three goals in the space of 14 minutes – substitute Thierno Barry scoring a double either side of a Jake O’Brien header.
Erling Haaland quickly responded as City battled back and Doku had the final say with the last kick of the game, denying Everton boss David Moyes a first career win over Pep Guardiola.
The result leaves City trailing Arsenal by five points with just one game in hand.
Chelsea’s season plunged to a dispiriting new low as Nottingham Forest won 3-1 at Stamford Bridge to condemn them to a sixth consecutive Premier League defeat.
It had already been the club’s worst run of league form since 1912 but just when it looked like there were no fresh crises left to visit them, Forest’s second-string XI arrived in west London and blitzed the ninth-placed side.
Two goals from Taiwo Awoniyi – the first after 98 seconds – and a penalty from Igor Jesus meant Vitor Pereira’s side moved six points clear of the relegation zone.
The Blues’ five-game scoring drought had almost reached six, far beyond the point of credibility, by the time Joao Pedro’s stoppage-time overhead kick gave them their first league goal since March 4.
The ridiculousness of that run had earlier been laid bare when Cole Palmer had a first-half penalty saved by goalkeeper Matz Sels.
Visiting supporters in the Shed End could have been forgiven for barely recognizing their team.
The seven outfield players brought in by Pereira, a move made doubtless with Thursday’s Europa League semi-final second leg with Aston Villa in mind, had 11 league starts this season between them, but it was Chelsea who appeared like strangers to one another.
Interim head coach Calum McFarlane had seen his hands virtually tied by late injuries to Pedro Neto and Alejandro Garnacho, meaning a first Premier League start for 18-year-old Jesse Derry.
As if things could get no worse, the teenager required oxygen and was carried off on a stretcher with a serious head injury late in the first half after colliding with Forest’s Zach Abbott. He was later conscious and OK.
Photo: EPA