When Fernando Torres hit his glorious
winner, Jose Mourinho jumped from his dugout and wheeled past the City
bench with his arms stretched wide.He then climbed up through the crowds like a Wimbledon champion in search of his son.
Jose Junior leapt from his seat, stretching out to reach his dad’s hand after Torres.
Chelsea: Cech, Ivanovic, Cahill, Terry, Cole, Ramires, Lampard (Mikel 65), Schurrle (Willian 65), Oscar, Hazard (Eto'o 83), Torres
Substitutes not used: Luiz, Schwarzer, Azpilicueta, Mata
Scorer: Schurrle 32, Torres 90+1
Booked: Lampard, Ramires
Manchester City: Hart,
Zabaleta, Demichelis, Nastasic, Clichy, Javi Garcia (Kolarov 80),
Fernandinho, Nasri (Jesus Navas 69), Toure, Silva, Aguero (Negredo 86)
Substitutes not used: Richards, Milner, Dzeko, Pantilimon
Scorer: Aguero 48
Booked: Zabaleta, Nastasic, Javi Garcia
Referee: Howard Webb (South Yorkshire)
Attendance: 41,495
Chelsea had stunned City in the final minute of this exhilarating match, and Mourinho was where he likes to be — centre stage.
On the touchline his assistant Rui Faria sprinted on to the pitch with clenched fists, sank to his knees and looked up to the heavens.
The Chelsea ranks were pumped full of energy but on the pitch bodies were everywhere as the knees buckled on City’s players.
They collapsed on the turf as if they had just blown their chances of winning the Barclays Premier League. Perhaps they have.
There was certainly no talking to Manuel Pellegrini on Sunday night when he appeared, very briefly, to analyse City’s third defeat on the road. This one hurts the most and has left them six points off Arsenal at the top.
‘We are losing stupid points,’ was City boss Pellegrini at his most coherent during a torturous five-minute assessment of his side’s performance.
He was going through the motions but that’s what happens when your title rivals strike for glory in the last minute and the opposition manager’s name happens to be Mourinho. There is disbelief. And there was disrespect.
Pellegrini also confirmed he had refused to shake Mourinho’s hand at the final whistle.
Jose Junior leapt from his seat, stretching out to reach his dad’s hand after Torres.
Back on form: Fernando Torres was instrumental in Chelsea's victory over Manchester City
Mix up: Mastija Nastasic nods the ball over Joe Hart, not expecting the goalkeeper to be out of his goal
Matchwinner: Torres' late goal secured a last-gasp victory for Chelsea
Horror show: It was a moment to forget for England goalkeeper Hart
Goal map of the Fernando Torres goal
Match facts
Substitutes not used: Luiz, Schwarzer, Azpilicueta, Mata
Scorer: Schurrle 32, Torres 90+1
Booked: Lampard, Ramires
Substitutes not used: Richards, Milner, Dzeko, Pantilimon
Scorer: Aguero 48
Booked: Zabaleta, Nastasic, Javi Garcia
Referee: Howard Webb (South Yorkshire)
Attendance: 41,495
On the touchline his assistant Rui Faria sprinted on to the pitch with clenched fists, sank to his knees and looked up to the heavens.
The Chelsea ranks were pumped full of energy but on the pitch bodies were everywhere as the knees buckled on City’s players.
They collapsed on the turf as if they had just blown their chances of winning the Barclays Premier League. Perhaps they have.
There was certainly no talking to Manuel Pellegrini on Sunday night when he appeared, very briefly, to analyse City’s third defeat on the road. This one hurts the most and has left them six points off Arsenal at the top.
‘We are losing stupid points,’ was City boss Pellegrini at his most coherent during a torturous five-minute assessment of his side’s performance.
He was going through the motions but that’s what happens when your title rivals strike for glory in the last minute and the opposition manager’s name happens to be Mourinho. There is disbelief. And there was disrespect.
Pellegrini also confirmed he had refused to shake Mourinho’s hand at the final whistle.
Whatever the semantics, it’s a long-standing custom in English football
to afford the opposition manager the courtesy at the final whistle.
City’s coach will have to learn the way things are done here.
Stunner: Sergio Aguero celebrates his magnificent equaliser for City early in the second half
Classy: Sergio Aguero's equaliser was a goal of the highest quality
Once the Chelsea excitement had died down — and the stadium announcer
confirmed that Torres had scored his first goal in the league this
season — there was only one question: Joe Hart, what were you doing?
His face was contorted when Torres sprinted beyond him in the final seconds but he has only himself to blame for this inexplicable error.
Hart operates at the highest level and there is no hiding place for a keeper once considered good enough to be spoken of in the same breath as Manuel Neuer, Gianluigi Buffon and Petr Cech. Not any more.
The late, great Brian Clough always claimed that a good goalkeeper could save a team between 10 and 15 points a season. Hart is costing City as many.
His face was contorted when Torres sprinted beyond him in the final seconds but he has only himself to blame for this inexplicable error.
Hart operates at the highest level and there is no hiding place for a keeper once considered good enough to be spoken of in the same breath as Manuel Neuer, Gianluigi Buffon and Petr Cech. Not any more.
The late, great Brian Clough always claimed that a good goalkeeper could save a team between 10 and 15 points a season. Hart is costing City as many.
First blood: Andre Schurrle (left) celebrates with his teammates after giving Chelsea the lead after 32 minutes
Provider: Torres also set up Andre Schurrle for Chelsea's opening goal
Pitch map of Andre Schurrle's goal for Chelsea
Pitch map of Sergio Aguero's goal for Man City
Hart was in familiar territory. Only last month he came racing out of his penalty area to intercept Andreas Weimann at Villa Park.
Weimann shimmied past him in the 75th minute to win the game for Aston Villa, adding to a collection of howlers on the Hart showreel. City’s keeper is a liability right now.
His deputy, Costel Pantilimon, is expected to replace him for the Capital One Cup tie against Newcastle on Wednesday at St James’ Park. From there, it has to be the Romanian’s jersey to lose.
This was a brilliant match. It was full of magical moments from both teams as they tested and stretched each other to the limit at Stamford Bridge.
Aerial battle: Ashley Cole vies for possession with Manchester City's Samir Nasri (right)
How did he miss? Fernando Torres rues a gilt-edged opportunity wasted during the first half as Joe Hart counts his blessings
Praised: Mourinho was happy that Torres' hard work paid off
Time to celebrate: Ramires joins Torres to mark Chelsea taking the lead
MATCH ZONE ANALYSIS
David Silva’s 360-degree spin that took him past two Chelsea midfielders was a blur of skill and speed, a real jaw-dropping moment.
Chelsea were bombing on all afternoon down that wing, throwing numbers forward to test the resilience and confidence of City’s left-back Gael Clichy. They had his measure.
Torres was sensational, galloping past him to set up Chelsea’s first-half opener by Andre Schurrle.
Sandwiched: Sergio Aguero finds himself in the middle of Fernando Torres (left) and Ashley Cole
Rejuvenated: Fernando Torres gets away from City defender Martin Demichelis
So close! Manchester City manager Manuel Pellegrini rues a missed opportunity
Tangled: Ashley Cole and Samir Nasri fight for the ball
Crushing: City manager Manuel Pellegrini described the defeat as 'one of his worst'
Calm down: But Mourinho would have enjoyed his side's late winning goal
'Slice of luck'? The win was Jose Mourinho's best since his return to Stamford Bridge
Cuddles: Mourinho gets put in a celebratory headlock
Enough is enough: Mourinho decides to head back to his dugout
But this was Torres’ day. His attitude was first class and his commitment unquestionable after he saved a goal-kick by sliding into the electronic advertising hoardings.
It was the Torres of old who ran through in the final minute, reading Willian’s hopeful pass and making a mug of Matija Nastasic and Hart on the edge of City’s area.
Arm's length: City's David Silva is marshalled by Chelsea's Eden Hazard during the opening stages of the match
Rivalry renewed: Chelsea and Manchester City shakes hands prior to kick-off
Chelsea are two points off Arsenal at the top and by the time they face each other on December 23, they could be both be in the clear.
After this, Chelsea are one, big happy family.
New signing: Chelsea fan Katie Anthony, 7, poses with a mural of the squad outside Stamford Bridge
Cover star: Eden Hazard featured on the front of the matchday programme
Health and safety gone mad: A pitchside sign at Stamford Bridge warns fans of flying footballs
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