Manchester City and Arsenal triumphed on Sunday, but Chelsea and West Brom went home sorrowing.
Manchester City brushed off a series of Coronavirus-related absences to outclass Chelsea 3-1 at Stamford Bridge on Sunday and reassert their Premier League title challenge.
Alexandre Lacazette continued his recent scoring spree with a double in Arsenal’s 4-0 win at West Brom, with the Gunners winning a third successive Premier League game.
Pep Guardiola’s men had scored more than twice in a league game just once since their opening match of the season, but were 3-0 up by half-time thanks to goals from Ilkay Gundogan, Phil Foden and Kevin De Bruyne.
Victory lifts City to within four points of Liverpool and Manchester United at the top of the table, but with a game in hand on both to come.
Chelsea were expected to challenge for the title themselves after a £220 million ($300 million) spending spree in the transfer market, but a run of one win in six games has left them down in eighth, seven points off the pace having played a game more than the leaders.
Roman Abramovich has dismissed plenty of Chelsea managers in the past for similar spells of form.
Pressure is mounting on Frank Lampard to prove he can mould a talented squad of individuals into a team capable of competing with the standards set by Liverpool and City in recent seasons.
City were without Ederson, Kyle Walker, Ferran Torres and Gabriel Jesus due to a coronavirus outbreak that led to their clash at Everton on Monday being postponed.
The visitors were unable to fill their bench due to a depleted squad, but Benjamin Mendy was named as a substitute despite City launching an investigation into his breach of coronavirus restrictions by hosting a New Year’s Eve party.
Goalkeeper Zack Steffen was handed his Premier League debut, but was barely tested despite Lampard being able to start £150 million trio Christian Pulisic, Timo Werner and Hakim Ziyech together in attack for the first time.
City took 10 minutes to find their feet in an unfamiliar formation with De Bruyne the most advanced forward in between Foden and Raheem Sterling.
But once Guardiola’s men found their rhythm, they cut Chelsea apart with an ease that will cause Lampard concern.
De Bruyne fluffed City’s first big chance when he fired wide from Joao Cancelo’s excellent through ball.
Gundogan opened the floodgates on 18 minutes when he spun just outside the area and found the bottom corner.
Three minutes later Foden doubled City’s lead with a fine near post finish from De Bruyne’s cross.
Guardiola had only won once in five previous visits to Stamford Bridge as Barcelona and City boss, but his side were cruising inside 35 minutes.
All 10 Chelsea outfield players were caught ahead of the ball as De Bruyne released Sterling to run through on goal from inside his own half and after the England international hit the post, De Bruyne was first to react and slot home the rebound.
The scoreline could have been far more embarrassing for the Blues had City been more ruthless in the final hour.
Foden looped a header over when unmarked at the back post before Gundogan flicked another glorious chance wide before the break.
City continued to keep the hosts chasing shadows in the second-half as Edouard Mendy tipped over Rodrigo’s header, while De Bruyne fired wide from the edge of the area.
The 23-year-old Kieran Tierney put the dominant visitors ahead with a superb solo goal – his first of the season.
The impressive Bukayo Saka (28) doubled the lead shortly after as Arsenal showed off some sensational team play.
West Brom had their best spell either side of the break, but an error from Semi Ajayi allowed Arsenal to hit the Baggies with a devastating attack that was eventually finished by a fizzing
Lacazette has now scored five goals in his last four outings in all competitions, while Arsenal’s resurgence continues with a third successive Premier League win and a second clean sheet in a row.
The win lifts them to 11th, while West Brom remain 19th, having conceded 12 goals in Sam Allardyce’s first three home league games.
(B3soccer)