Another remarkable comeback by Manchester United ultimately proved in vain as Chelsea conjured up their own recovery in injury time to inflict an agonising 4-3 defeat at Stamford Bridge.
After our rivals Tottenham Hotspur and Aston Villa dropped two and three points respectively in their midweek fixtures, this was a big opportunity for the Reds to close the gap and it seemed we had taken it in swashbuckling style, with character once again coming to the fore, and Ten Hag using 16 players as his resources were again stretched by a pulsating encounter. But just when we appeared to be over the line, the late twists turned the game on its head one more time.
SECOND HALF If an enforced change in defence was far from ideal for the restart, with Varane replaced by the fit-again Jonny Evans, it was seemingly unconcerning for Maguire who thrillingly threatened to score the fifth goal of a frenetic game. As his new centre-back partner settled in, the Reds’ no.5 went on a barnstorming run down the left and unleashed a shot that whistled marginally outside the top right-hand corner.
Evans showed he was already up to speed when he brilliantly blocked Fernandez’s attempt, after the Argentinian was played into a dangerous position by the omnipresent Palmer. Chelsea’s beleaguered defenders, culpable in the collapse of their 2-0 lead, were under pressure to prove they had similar mettle and to his credit, Disasi did well to divert Holjund away from goal.
Casemiro, who grabbed a late equaliser for United in this fixture last season, headed over Chelsea’s crossbar and at the other end, Palmer’s shot was palmed over by Onana. All of this unfolded in the opening 15 minutes of the second period as the two sides continued to take turns in surging forward, in a manner more reminiscent of a basketball game than a ‘big six’ football fixture. The chaos needed a cutting edge and Antony provided it with one of the best assists you’ll see anywhere this season. Moments after he wriggled his way past a few Blues on the right and drilled a low centre across the six-yard box without any takers, the winger decisively bent a cross with the outside of his left foot into the mixer and this time Garnacho stooped to bravely head the ball past the onrushing Petrovic. United’s irrepressible Academy graduate reprised the recent, much-memed goal celebration by sitting on the advertising hoardings as the delirious United fans celebrated behind him, savouring yet another comeback. From 0-2 down to 3-2 up, the Reds were favourites now for a gap-closing away win in the race for Champions League places.
However, Palmer in particular had other ideas and when the VAR endorsed referee Jarred Gillett’s decision to award a penalty for Dalot’s challenge on Carney Chukwuemeka in stoppage time, he converted his second spot-kick of the night in injury time. 3-3 then? We all thought so but there was still time for Palmer to receive a pass from a right-wing corner and deliver a hammer blow that took a wicked deflection off Scott McTominay and gave Onana no chance of saving it, to make the final score, incredibly, 4-3 to Mauricio Pochettino’s side.
Chelsea:
Petrovic; Gusto (Gilchrist, 75), Disasi (Chalobah, 75), Badiashile, Cucurella; Caicedo (Chukwuemeka, 71), Gallagher (c) (Madueke, 89), Palmer, Fernandez, Mudryk (Sterling, 71); Jackson.
Unused substitutes:
Bettinelli, Silva, Casadei, Tauriainen.
Bookings: Gusto, Fernandes, Caicedo.
Goals: Gallagher 4, Palmer 19 (pen), 90+10 (pen), 90+11.
United:
Onana; Dalot, Varane (Evans, 46; Kambwala, 66), Maguire, Wan-Bissaka; Casemiro (McTominay, 75), Mainoo; Garnacho (Mount, 86), Fernandes (c), Antony; Hojlund (Rashford, 66).
Unused substitutes: Heaton, Amrabat, Eriksen, Amad.
Bookings: None.
Goals: Garnacho 34, 67, Fernandes 39.