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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 169
Thursday, 18 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 14:57 UTC
  • UTC14:57
  • EDT10:57
  • GMT15:57
  • CET16:57
  • JST23:57
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Doku's 97th-Minute Equaliser Rescues Manchester City but Hands Arsenal Title Initiative

A chaotic final 13 minutes at Goodison Park handed Manchester City a 3-3 draw rather than the defeat their second-half collapse deserved — and left the Premier League title race in Arsenal's hands with two games to play.

@TheAthletic · Telegram

Manchester City left Goodison Park on 4 May 2026 with a point they did not deserve and a title race they can no longer fully control. Jeremy Doku struck in the 97th minute to cancel out a sequence of three goals in 13 chaotic second-half minutes that had handed Everton the lead, completing a 3-3 draw that leaves Arsenal in the driving seat with two games remaining.

The arithmetic is blunt. City now require Arsenal to drop points in one of their two remaining fixtures to retain the crown they have held for four consecutive seasons. Before kick-off, the initiative had sat with Pep Guardiola's side on goal difference. It no longer does.

How the game pivoted

City arrived in Liverpool in reasonable health. They had won their previous four league matches and carried a six-point buffer over Arsenal into this round. The visitor's attacking intent showed early: Doku curled City into the lead in stoppage time before half-time, collecting the ball on the left, cutting inside, and finishing with precision that drew praise from Guardiola afterwards as two "really, really top goals."

What followed was a collapse that Guardiola himself described only obliquely in post-match comments. Within nine minutes of the restart, Everton had equalised and then taken the lead through a combination of defensive errors and clinical finishing. A third goal before the hour extended the hosts' advantage. For thirteen minutes — a window the BBC described as "mad-cap" — City were not merely behind but visibly disorganised, the kind of second-half capitulation that has no precedent in this title-winning cycle.

Doku's intervention in the 97th minute, reacting to a loose ball in the box with the kind of composure that separates title-winning campaigns from lost ones, rescued a point. It did not rescue the narrative. Guardiola acknowledged the sequence had endangered everything. "A remarkable finale," the BBC noted — "but will 13 chaotic minutes cost Man City title?" remains the question the club must now answer.

What Arsenal's position now means

A draw that once looked like a catastrophe now reads, on closer inspection, as merely unhelpful. CBS Sports framed it precisely: two dropped points for City mean Arsenal are "in full control of the Premier League title race in the final month." The mathematics do not require Arsenal to win both remaining games — a draw and a City slip-up would suffice. But the direction of travel has shifted unmistakably. The title that has felt inevitable in Manchester for four years now depends on Arsenal failing.

City have two games remaining. Arsenal have two games remaining. Guardiola's side must now win both and hope Arsenal falter. The alternative — Arsenal winning both — crowns a project that has been building quietly and persistently all season, one that has survived its own wobbles and emerged into a position of genuine strength precisely when City have shown their first prolonged instability.

Guardiola's dilemma and the structural picture

Guardiola spoke after the match of his side's determination. He praised Doku's quality and the team's refusal to accept defeat even at 3-2 down deep in stoppage time. That resilience — scoring in the 97th minute rather than accepting a defeat — may yet matter. A single point when none seemed likely is still a point. And in a compressed title race decided by fractions, even a rescued draw has value.

But the structural picture is less forgiving. City have controlled this season through tactical precision, depth of squad, and the kind of collective focus that has delivered four consecutive titles. What unfolded between the 51st and 64th minute at Goodison Park — three goals conceded in thirteen minutes against a mid-table side — represents something that cannot be explained away as bad luck. It was a failure of defensive structure at a moment when structure mattered most. Whether that failure is a one-off or a sign of a side running on fumes in the final stretch of a gruelling season is a question Guardiola must resolve quickly.

The road ahead

Neither side plays again until the weekend. The pause gives Guardiola time to reset and gives the City squad a chance to recover physically. It also gives the dressing room a chance to absorb what happened without the immediate pressure of another match. Arsenal, meanwhile, continue with the knowledge that the title is in their own hands — a position they have not occupied this late in a season in years.

The final two games for each side will decide everything. City must now do what Arsenal do — win, and win convincingly — while hoping for help from elsewhere. The 97th-minute equaliser bought Guardiola's side time. It did not buy them control.

This publication's coverage focused on the structural collapse rather than the heroic recovery: the 13-minute window that handed the initiative to Arsenal received more analytical weight than Doku's spectacular finish, which most outlets led with.

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© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire