Palace 1 Chelsea 3
Match Summary
Summary:
- Two changes for Palace as França & Wharton make first Premier League starts
- Muñoz plays first game at Selhurst Park
- Ayew snapshot tests Petrovic early on
- Palace push for opener; low Mateta shot saved
- Lerma scores Palace’s 1000th top-flight goal in spectacular style
- Gallagher drags wide for Chelsea with only shot in first-half
- HT: Palace 1-0 Chelsea
- Gallagher side-foots Chelsea level immediately after the restart
- Silva and Palmer go close as visitors start second-half brightly
- França and Mateta combine as Palace look to hit back
- Chilwell strikes narrowly over the bar
- França’s rising strike beaten away by Petrovic
- Gallagher scores last-minute winner
- Fernandez adds third for Chelsea deep into stoppage time
- FT: Palace 1-3 Chelsea
Jefferson Lerma had put Palace ahead after half-an-hour with a thunderbolt of a goal; his first for the club, and our 1000th strike in the top-flight, was no less than the Eagles deserved for a brilliant first-half display.
But Chelsea proved the more efficient team in front of goal in the second, former Palace loanee Conor Gallagher scoring at either end of the half before Enzo Fernandez added a third – supremely harsh on the home side – on the counter.
Palace were seeking a third straight home Premier League victory, with manager Roy Hodgson handing Adam Wharton and Matheus França their first league starts in a red and blue shirt. Daniel Muñoz also started in what was his first match at Selhurst Park.
The Eagles made a bright start in front of the Selhurst faithful. Jordan Ayew tested Djordje Petrovic’s handling in the Chelsea goal after five minutes with a sharp turn and strike from distance, before Chris Richards got on the end of a lofted free-kick from Will Hughes, but could not direct his header – back-to-goal – on target.
While the visitors enjoyed the greater possession in the early stages, Palace had the better penetration on the counter – França’s curling through ball was not far from setting Jean-Philippe Mateta in on goal, but was marginally overhit.
The opening quarter of the game admittedly lacked momentum, but Palace continued to enjoy the better opportunities; a slack back-pass from Malo Gusto presented Mateta with the chance to shoot from a tight angle, but his placed finish failed to truly test Petrovic.
The game needed a spark and on the half-an-hour mark, Lerma provided it, writing his name into club folklore with Palace’s 1000th top-flight goal – and in some style.
Tyrick Mitchell and Lerma combined to win possession high off Moisés Caicedo. The Colombian took a touch inside, lined up his sights – and rifled the most sensational of strikes from 30 yards, dipping beyond the despairing dive of Petrovic and finding the top corner.
It was no more than Palace deserved, and while Chelsea continued to enjoy as much as 79 percent of the possession at one point in the first-half, Palace restricted them to just one chance: Gallagher dragged wide from Noni Madueke’s slipped pass.
Sadly, Chelsea would improve after the break – and following a lengthy delay due to a technical difficulty with the officials’ equipment, the visitors duly scored with their first shot on target.
Racing forwards from right-back, Gusto’s pull-back found Gallagher on the penalty spot, and the midfielder crashed home a half-volley.
The goal gave Chelsea confidence and, mere moments later, Thiago Silva’s near-post header appeared to be goalbound before Mateta intervened. Then, Cole Palmer cut inside and hit a rasping shot into the side-netting.
Yet Palace weathered that storm and enjoyed the better chances of the next spell in the game, França combining well with Mateta and playing an intricate slide-rule pass with led to the forward having a shot blocked on the slide by the lunging Silva.
After a bright opening to the second-half, the next 10 minutes were rather more cagey, but Chris Richards made a succession of headed clearances and Muñoz did well to get his own head on a fierce Caicedo cross; from the edge of the box, Ben Chilwell fired a rasping drive not far over.
As the half wore on, Wharton’s influence on proceedings grew, the 20-year-old showcasing his impressive ability to break the lines with a well-placed pass. On 75 minutes, one such pass found França 30 yards from goal, and his firm effort forced Petrovic to beat the ball away with both hands.
The match was there to be shaped by such fine margins and, seconds after substitute Odsonne Edouard had almost found Mateta with a through ball, his weaving run and dragged shot was just a Levi Colwill interception away from doing the same yards from goal.
As the game ticked into injury time, heartbreak for Palace – and from a familiar source, too, as a Palmer pull-back picked out Gallagher on the edge of the box, and he swept home a low winner into the far bottom corner.
Undeserved gloss was added to the scoreline deep into injury time when Palmer led another counter-attack, finding Enzo Fernandez who checked inside and found the top corner.
Palace: Henderson (GK), Muñoz, Richards, Andersen, Mitchell, Wharton, Lerma, Hughes (Ahamada, 78), França (Edouard, 84), Ayew, Mateta.
Subs: Johnstone (GK), Ward, Tomkins, Clyne, Riedewald, Ozoh, Schlupp.
Chelsea: Petrovic (GK), Gusto (Gilchrist, 84), Disasi, Silva (Colwill, 61), Chilwell, Fernandez, Caicedo, Gallagher, Palmer, Madueke (Nkunku, 45), Jackson (Sterling, 79).
Subs: Bergstrom (GK), Chalobah, Chukwuemeka, Casadei, Mudryk.