EPL Index
·16 Mei 2026
Semenyo Seals FA Cup Glory as Manchester City Beat Chelsea

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Yahoo sportsEPL Index
·16 Mei 2026

Manchester City found beauty in the grind at Wembley, beating Chelsea 1-0 in an FA Cup final short on rhythm but rich in consequence. Antoine Semenyo, signed from Bournemouth in January for £65m, delivered the decisive moment with 16 minutes remaining, a flash of instinct and elegance that lifted Pep Guardiola’s side to another domestic trophy.
For long stretches, this was a final searching for a spark. Chelsea worked hard, Manchester City probed patiently, but neither side found the fluency expected of such a stage. Then came Semenyo, arriving at speed to meet Erling Haaland’s cross with a superb right-footed flick beyond Robert Sanchez. It was sudden, sharp and worthy of winning any final.
Semenyo’s goal carried the feel of a player growing quickly into Manchester City’s world. There was no hesitation, no sense of stage fright, only movement, timing and conviction. Haaland had endured a difficult afternoon with limited service, yet his persistence mattered. His delivery invited invention, and Semenyo supplied it.
That single moment gave City the FA Cup to add to their Carabao Cup triumph over Arsenal. It also ended a painful sequence of final defeats against Manchester United and Crystal Palace. For a team more often associated with control and technical authority, this was a victory built on patience, sweat and resilience.
Guardiola’s reaction was restrained, perhaps fittingly so. This was not Manchester City at their most dazzling. It was Manchester City at their most durable, managing frustration, staying alive in the contest and trusting that quality would eventually cut through.
Manchester City’s best sides have often won finals by suffocating opponents with possession and precision. This FA Cup final was different. Chelsea disrupted their patterns, closed space well and made City look unusually ordinary for long spells.
Yet champions find routes through awkward afternoons. City did not dominate with swagger, but they stayed compact, disciplined and calm. Semenyo’s contribution will rightly take the headlines, but this was also about collective resolve. Ruben Dias defended with authority, Rodri kept trying to impose order, and Haaland’s work without reward finally produced the assist that mattered.

Photo: IMAGO
With two league games left and Arsenal still two points ahead, City’s chase for another domestic treble remains alive. Their next match, away to Semenyo’s former club Bournemouth, now carries added intrigue.
For Chelsea, this was another bruising Wembley chapter. A fourth successive FA Cup final defeat is a statistic that will sting deeply. There were periods, especially in the second half, when their supporters could sense a familiar Chelsea script developing, one where turmoil gives way to trophy-lifting defiance.
Instead, they lacked the final pass and the ruthless touch. Their structure unsettled City, but their attacking work failed to become decisive. That left them exposed to individual brilliance, and Semenyo punished them.
The defeat also leaves Chelsea without silverware at the end of a draining season. Their immediate focus turns back to the Premier League, with Tottenham Hotspur visiting Stamford Bridge on Tuesday in a fixture carrying serious weight for European qualification hopes.
After Liam Rosenior’s dismissal, Chelsea are moving towards another reset. Xabi Alonso has been heavily linked with the head coach role, and his possible arrival would bring intelligence, authority and fresh optimism to a club in need of direction.
His work at Bayer Leverkusen marked him out as one of Europe’s most admired young coaches, although his short spell at Real Madrid came amid considerable dysfunction. Chelsea will hope he can bring clarity where there has too often been churn.
This FA Cup final defeat will hurt, not only because Chelsea lost 1-0 to Manchester City, but because they were close enough to imagine a different ending. City had Semenyo. Chelsea had effort, organisation and moments of threat, but not enough cutting edge.
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