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Chapter 236 - Chapter 234: Reconciled League Leaders, Ecstatic Arsenal Meet Misery

Chapter 234: Reconciled League Leaders, Ecstatic Arsenal Meet Misery

Mourinho slapped his thigh and marched briskly back toward the bench with the tactical board in hand, muttering to himself as he walked, "Well, well, even bushy-browed good guys like you have learned to play dirty, huh?"

Guardiola had really pulled something new out of the hat at home to counter Chelsea—something Mourinho had not anticipated at all in his pre-match preparations.

In the past, Pep's possession-heavy style often involved long periods of passing within his own half, that was nothing new. But this—this was something else. Holding the ball in a compressed 30-meter area near their own goal, coordinating passes between midfielders, full-backs, and center-backs to completely nullify high pressing? That was a first for Mourinho.

What truly caught him off guard was the way the counterattack was initiated. Not from the wings, not from direct long balls to the striker acting as a pivot, but from overlapping full-backs pushing up into space to create passing lanes. The final blow even came from the right-back's cross to the left-back's shot—utterly unconventional.

If Leon hadn't chased back with everything he had and pulled off a risky sliding clearance, Kolarov would have had a clear shot inside the box—and Mourinho didn't dare guarantee Čech would've been able to stop it.

Adrenaline pumping and brow furrowed, Mourinho and assistant coach Holland scrambled over the tactical board to rework Chelsea's setup. They had to adjust quickly.

Meanwhile, Guardiola wasn't exactly thrilled despite having his plan nearly succeed. He stood at the sideline, arms crossed, mumbling nonstop. If a reporter had been nearby, they would've caught every word—and all of them were about Leon.

Since the 2011–2012 season, every time Guardiola had faced a Mourinho-coached team, Leon had been the X-factor. First, it was Leon neutralizing Messi and killing Barça's explosive edge. Then it was his surging runs through midfield, distributing killer passes to Madrid's forwards or finishing chances himself.

Now? Now, Leon was doing it again—this time in a Chelsea kit, disrupting Guardiola's Manchester City at both ends of the pitch.

Guardiola exhaled, gave himself a firm slap on the forehead, then stood upright and clapped encouragingly for his players.

This tactical innovation of his—born of months of experimentation—had nearly stunned Chelsea. That much alone was a success. He was pleased with the system's effectiveness, even if he knew Mourinho would soon adjust.

But Guardiola also knew that so long as City didn't actively push for a goal, Chelsea would be hard-pressed to break them down. If Chelsea wanted to open the scoring, they'd have to push higher and harder, which would in turn open them up to City's wing-based counters.

Zabaleta and Kolarov both had strong attacking instincts and enough technical quality to make this work.

Of course, in Pep's ideal world, the players executing this system would be his former Barça disciples. If he had Xavi, Iniesta, and Busquets pulling strings again, with Alves and Alba bombing down the flanks, this approach would be even deadlier.

And if only—just if—he could bring Messi into the mix, too…

But it wasn't possible. He'd love to rebuild his dream team, but the transfer market doesn't care about dreams.

Sighing, Guardiola shelved the fantasy and turned his attention back to reality.

The match resumed. Mourinho hadn't issued any major adjustments yet, but Chelsea's players were now acutely aware of the danger from City's flanks.

Lampard, who had been caught high in the previous sequence, stayed put beside Matić, blocking any potential launch points from midfield.

Leon, still full of energy, pressed and prowled—but found little joy. City's midfield trio of Fàbregas, Yaya Touré, and Fernandinho maintained possession with calm composure.

The old patterns weren't working. Leon couldn't win the ball because City had stopped trying to move it forward. No offense meant no transitions. No transitions meant no turnovers to exploit.

It reminded Leon of Mourinho's old ultra-defensive tactics back in Madrid. When ahead, they'd simply shut down play and refused to attack. No transitions, no chances for the opponent to pounce.

What Guardiola had constructed was similar, though more nuanced.

Eventually, Mourinho did make tactical changes.

Leon and Lampard took turns stepping into City's half to apply pressure, joining the front three to harass City's defenders.

At the same time, Chelsea never committed too many men forward. Two midfielders stayed back with the full-backs to guard against City's wingers. When necessary, Leon and Lampard both surged upfield, while Matić and David Luiz dropped to shield the midfield line, with Terry sweeping behind as the last man.

A well-calculated, conservative gamble.

Guardiola quickly understood what Mourinho was doing: a stable pressure system aimed at squeezing out a narrow win without taking major risks.

Having just accused Guardiola of "playing dirty," Mourinho now looked every bit as cautious.

Both managers dug in. Neither wanted to expose their flanks, neither willing to give the opponent a chance.

The electric start gave way to a slow, methodical, risk-averse chess match.

City waited for Chelsea to overcommit. Chelsea refused to give them the chance.

After a promising first quarter, the match dulled.

Even the most passionate home and away fans started yawning by halftime.

Yet Mourinho and Guardiola didn't mind.

Had this match occurred after matchday 30, with City trailing by six points, Pep might have gone for broke.

But it was only matchday 24. Fourteen games remained. There was still time. No need to rush.

Last season in La Liga, Guardiola had planned to use this very approach to stay within touching distance of Madrid. He only failed because of a falling out with Barça's board over winter transfer targets. Had he stayed, things might have ended very differently.

"You're as confident as ever," he muttered with a dry smile as Mourinho sat motionless in the 60th minute, making no aggressive moves.

Mourinho didn't care about a draw. He was banking on consistency over drama—believing that his Chelsea would take more points from the rest of the top eight than either City or Arsenal.

He didn't need to win today. He just needed to avoid losing.

Pep wanted to pull Chelsea down here—but deep down, he knew his City wasn't ready. Not yet. It would take another season or two, and a few more signings, to perfect his plan.

So he held back.

He resisted the urge to throw everything at Chelsea in the final 20 minutes.

The real shock came not from what happened—but from what didn't.

For the first time in years, fans watched Guardiola abandon his attacking principles.

Even if it was temporary, it was still rare.

Leon understood. Mourinho wouldn't take risks when he didn't need to. And Leon wouldn't push either. No reckless pressing, no kamikaze charges.

In the final 20 minutes, City finally began probing midfield again—but Chelsea had dropped into a compact shell.

Leon, Matić, and substitute Ramires closed every channel. Nothing got through.

The game ended 0–0.

No winner. Perhaps even no real loser. But one clear beneficiary.

Arsenal.

Their win over Crystal Palace not only pushed them two points ahead of City, it also brought them within four points of Chelsea.

A perfect round for the Gunners.

Chelsea and City fans grumbled online but accepted the result.

The English media, however, pounced.

They accused both teams of cowardice, of denying fans a true spectacle in a supposedly "blockbuster" fixture.

But what did they expect? When Mourinho decided to shut things down, it was never going to be fireworks.

And Guardiola had played along.

Sky Sports pundits, having watched the first half, already knew this match would be a dud.

But critiques had to be delivered. That was the job. Stirring the pot sold clicks.

Fortunately for the tabloids, they wouldn't have to wait long for their headlines.

Five days later, matchday 25 exploded.

Liverpool annihilated Arsenal 5–1 in a game that sent shockwaves through England.

That same afternoon, City responded by obliterating Norwich 6–0.

And in the late kickoff?

Chelsea crushed Newcastle 5–0 at Stamford Bridge.

Ibrahimović and Hazard both delivered goals and assists. Leon scored twice—once with his head, once with his feet. Terry netted his first league goal of the season.

And just like that, the media frenzy returned.

This time, the spectacle was real.

Liverpool, City, and Chelsea had all flexed their muscles—and the Premier League was once again the center of the footballing world.

Only Arsenal was left wounded.

For them, joy had turned to sorrow.

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