Key events
Jonathan Wilson
Half-time reading
Another final-day showdown, another final-day heartbreak. The pain may have been spread over 61 years, but that won’t make it any easier to bear for Hearts who, having been top for 250 days of the Scottish Premiership season, missed out on the title again.
There was, of course, a Celtic penalty for handball and a critical video assistant referee decision that went their way but, on this occasion, neither provided the controversy. That came instead from the confusion as the game was ended by a pitch invasion with 23 seconds plus whatever else the referee felt needed to be added to injury still to play.
Some incursions are largely joyous, forgivable as spontaneous eruptions of emotion but while that may have been true for the majority who spilled out of the stands, there were also many who confronted Hearts players. But even if the invasion had been purely celebratory, fans cannot be allowed to dictate when games finish.
Half time: Chelsea 0-0 Manchester City
Peep peep! That’s the end of a first half that was intriguing rather than downright entertaining. The stats say City have been the better team – 60 per cent possession, both shots on target – but Chelsea grew into the game after a slow start and got into some promising positions. Joao Pedro, all alone up front, has been excellent.
45+1 min: Chelsea penalty appeal! After Bernardo lost the ball in a dangerous position, Joao Pedro surged into the penalty area and was sent flying by Khusanov. It was a body check rather than a trip but I think decision could have gone either way.
Nope, no penalty. The consensus is that it’s one to file under ‘a coming together’. That’s fair enough, but equally Khusanov knew what he was doing.
45 min Three minutes of added minutes.
44 min: Sanchez denies Haaland
Haaland rumbles into the Chelsea area, left of centre, and batters a shot from a tight angle that is blocked by Sanchez. His positioning was good, Petr Cech-good, and that made it very difficult for even Haaland to score.
42 min Andy Gordon has this to say on the skull cap being worn by Chelsea’s keeper Robert Sanchez.
My mind is wandering a bit, but could Chelsea have downloaded an AI of Petr Cech to feed to Sanchez through electrodes in that skull cap?
I love this idea; the potential is endless.
41 min The corner is headed away by Haaland, who then uses his abundant noggin to clear the danger a second time.
40 min After another crisp Chelsea move, Palmer’s cross is headed behind by the stooping Bernardo Silva. Chelsea are on top as we approach half-time.
38 min A deep cross is cushioned back across the face by Gusto and cleared by City. Chelsea are having less of the ball but look more dangerous when they have it.
33 min Semenyo beats Cucurella with ease on the right side of the area, only to slash a left-foot shot out for a throw-in on the far side.
32 min Cucurella is booked for a foul on Semenyo, who has caused him problems all day.
32 min Joao Pedro looks okay to continue.
31 min Now Joao Pedro is down with an injury to his left thigh. That’s a worry – for Chelsea, for Brazil and for all lovers of economical, intelligent, underrated centre-forward play.
29 min Enzo Fernandez is booked for wiping out Bernardo Silva. Both feet were off the ground, with his studs showing slightly, so although he took the ball he can have no complaints.
Okay, he should have no complaints. He is currently complaining.
28 min “We’ve gone from numbingly dull to mildly exciting incompetence,” says Adam Roberts. “Is this progress?”
Any chance we could talk about the game rather than my writing?
27 min: Disallowed goal for City! Semenyo plays in the underlapping Nunes, who gives Haaland an open goal at the far post. But Nunes started his run far too early and was clearly offside.
26 min Chelsea are growing into the game. Enzo Fernandez almost releases Joao Pedro with a short through pass that is crucially intercepted by Khusanov.
25 min Caicedo is limping with what looks like a knee problem. He’s going to continue for now.
23 min At the other end, James is sacked just outside the area by Doku. Haaland collects and smashes a cross-shot across the face of goal from a very tight angle.
22 min A fine tackle by Palmer on Doku leads to a dangerous Chelsea break. Joao Pedro is held up at first by Khusanov; then, when support arrives, he ignores Enzo on the edge of the area and goes for goal himself. Alas, Joao Pedro slips in the act of shooting and the ball dribbles through to Trafford.
21 min A slick attack from Chelsea, their first move of quality, ends with a cross on the run from Gusto that is headed behind by the diving Nunes.
The corner is taken short and eventually worked all the way back to the keeper Sanchez. No, I haven’t made that up.
19 min Possession watch: Chelsea 28-72 Man City.
16 min Not a classic so far. Both teams are playing the long game – City with the ball, Chelsea without.
14 min Semenyo, who has started brightly, runs at Cucurella and slides an inviting ball into the six-yard box. Haaland and Marmoush are on their heels and it runs behind for a goalkick.
12 min On the few occasions Chelsea have got the ball up to Joao Pedro, he has protected it superbly. He’s such a key man today.
10 min Doku swings a cross beyond the far post. Rodri comes round the back and plants a header back across goal that hits a Chelsea defender and is cleared desperately by Chelsea. No matter, a free-kick had been given, either for offside against Rodri or a high boot from Haaland.
8 min So does Semenyo, whose mistimed free-kick hits Palmer on the edge of the area.
8 min Bernardo Silva is fouled 30 yards from goal. Khusanov fancies this…
6 min Semenyo cuts infield from the right and hits a left-foot shot from the edge of the area. The ball deflects off a Chelsea defender and loops towards Marmoush, who mishits an attempted flick eight yards from goal. That was a chance, even if the spin on the ball made it awkward to read.
4 min City have monopolised possession early on, but so far it has all been in front of the Chelsea defence.
2 min City have started in a 4-2-4 formation, with Marmoush playing alongside and sometimes beyond Haaland.
1 min Cole Palmer strokes the ball back to Robert Sanchez, and the 2026 FA Cup final is under way.
A reminder of the teams
Chelsea (3-4-2-1) Sanchez; Fofana, Colwill, Hato; Gusto, Caicedo, James, Cucurella; Palmer, Enzo; Joao Pedro.
Substitutes: Jorgensen, Acheampong, Tosin, Chalobah, Essugo, Andrey Santos, Neto, Garnacho, Delap.
Man City (4-2-3-1) Trafford; Nunes, Khusanov, Guehi, O’Reilly; Rodri, Bernardo; Semenyo, Marmoush, Doku; Haaland.
Substitutes: Donnarumma, Dias, Reijnders, Stones, Ake, Kovacic, Cherki, Savinho, Foden.
Referee Darren England.
Pep Guardiola speaks to TNT Sports
We were happy to make four [FA Cup finals in a row]. But now we are here, that’s not enough: we have to win.
[On the return of Rodri] He has special composure and we’re really pleased he’s there. Hopefully he can do what the team requires.
[Is Omar Marmoush’s selection a reward for his performance in the week?] Phil Foden?! [Shrugs] It’s not about that – we think we require certain movements that Omar gives us. And of course we have players on the bench who will be important in the second half.
Calum McFarlane’s pre-match thoughts
It’s a great occasion and a massive privilege to lead a massive club out in such a big game – I’m really looking forward to it.
[Would a win salvage the season?] This club is known for winning silverware so it would be a little bit of a salvage, but we know we need to be better in the league. We’re doing everything we can to win today.
It’s great to have Reece back. He’s such a good player – we know what he brings to the team and he showed that in 30 minutes against Liverpool.
Levi [Colwill] is in a good place and has trained really well. It’s another boost for the team to have him back.
Even though it’s been a difficult year we’ve had some really good performances against Europe’s elite, the Premier League’s elite. We’re hoping we get that again today.
“Makes you think though,” writes Bill Hargreaves. “You got your left back, your right back, and now Cole Palmer has a Henry V haircut – nothing at the back. You know, Quasimodo predicted all this.”
Rodri talks to TNT Sports
It’s a big day, a big final; we need to show our best. It’s always special to play a final – it’s our fourth [FA Cup final] in a row and it means a lot, but we haven’t won the last two so it’s an important day.
If you’re reading this entry, you’re in the wrong place. Go to Simon Burnton’s liveblog, right now, but come back before 3pm.
“With the Swedish side of the family today,” writes Julian Menz. “Even my daughter knows they have no chance later tonight, but I’m doing my best to explain the UK entry by googling ‘Thomas Dolby’.
”In the meantime, we have the small matter of an FA Cup final to negotiate. Let’s just hope a hockey match doesn’t break out (and yes, it’s the Ice Hockey World Cup at the moment)….”
I’d love a nine-goal thriller. Bet José would too.
“Tracksuits instead of specially commissioned cup final suits,” says Matt Emerson. “Game’s gone.”
Whatever happened to the Spice Boys? The strong, silent type.
So, about that team news. As expected, Chelsea will start with a back three. Calum McFarlane has made two changes from last weekend’s draw at Anfield: Robert Sanchez and Reece James come in for Filip Jorgensen and Andrey Santos.
Pep Guardiola prefers Omar Marmoush – who had a penalty saved by Dean Henderson in last year’s final – to Rayan Cherki. City’s designated FA Cup goalkeeper James Trafford is back in net. Phil Foden has to settle for a place on the bench alongside Cherki, Ruben Dias and Gianluigi Donnarumma. But Rodri is back, Rodri is back and Rodri is back.
The FA Cup final XIs
Chelsea (3-4-2-1) Sanchez; Fofana, Colwill, Hato; Gusto, James, Caicedo, Cucurella; Palmer, Enzo; Joao Pedro.
Substitutes: Jorgensen, Acheampong, Tosin, Chalobah, Essugo, Andrey Santos, Neto, Garnacho, Delap.
Man City (4-2-3-1) Trafford; Nunes, Khusanov, Guehi, O’Reilly; Bernardo, Rodri; Semenyo, Marmoush, Doku; Haaland.
Substitutes: Donnarumma, Dias, Reijnders, Stones, Ake, Kovacic, Cherki, Savinho, Foden.
Referee Darren England.
When Chelsea drew at Manchester City in the league in January, they dominated the second half after Calum McFalarne made a half-time switch from 4-2-3-1 to 3-4-2-1. This is a longwinded way of saying they may well start with a back three today.
‘Stirring’ is the subject of Matt Dony’s email. And he doesn’t mean a synonym of ‘rousing’
Is the score not something like 115-74 to City? The magic of the cup, eh?
“Challenge to City,” says Krishnamoorthy V. “Show me your Conference League.”
And the latest score on FA Cup final day is Krishnamoorhy 1-0 Smyth.
The Scottish title race is reaching its conclusion at Celtic Park, where Celtic and Hearts are drawing 1-1 after 50 minutes. Celtic’s goal was another penalty, but this time there was no controversy. You can follow the rest of that game with Simon Burnton.
The first email of FA Cup final day
“One writes off Chelsea at their own peril,” says Krishnamoorthy V. “Show me one team that has won everything on offer. If a Hammersmith Over-70s Welfare Cup was announced tomorrow, Chelsea would nick that too.”
I agree, but haven’t City won everything as well? Apart from the Hammersmith Over-70s Welfare Cup.
Jamie Jackson
Pep Guardiola has described his decade managing Manchester City as “effing* fun”, and suggested Saturday’s FA Cup final against Chelsea might not be the last time he leads the team out at Wembley.
While Guardiola’s contract expires in summer 2027, there is increasing expectation that he will depart the club in the close season. Saturday’s final will be City’s 24th cup appearance at the national stadium under the Spaniard, with Guardiola aiming to claim the 17th major trophy of his 10 years in charge.
* He may not have actually said ‘effing’
We should have the team news by 2pm. Chelsea are expected to start Levi Colwill, who returned from long-term injury at Anfield last week. As for City, the main questions are whether Rodri is fit to return and whether the rejuvenated Phil Foden has done enough in the past week to earn a stating place.
Ed Aarons
As meteoric rises go, Calum McFarlane’s takes some beating. Six years after he and his assistants Harry Hudson and Dan Hogan were working for a south London charity that provides football and education for disadvantaged children, they will lead out Chelsea to face Manchester City in Saturday’s FA Cup final.
There have been accusations of cronyism given they have connections to Joe Shields, Chelsea’s co‑head of recruitment, that go back years, to when McFarlane, Hudson and Hogan were at the charity, the Kinetic Foundation, or beyond. But James Fotheringham, Kinetic’s co-founder, is dismissive of that.
“The narrative is of people being given an unfair opportunity,” he says of a backlash that has led to abusive messages being posted on Kinetic’s social media sites since McFarlane was appointed as Chelsea’s interim manager for the second time this season. “Calum did the hard yards at City, Southampton and Chelsea and has got seasons under his belt to get to that position. I think if anyone gets thrown into a six-game environment, you bring someone who you’ve been on the touchline with for 300 games and who knows how you work … That’s the truth of the situation Calum’s in.”
Jamie Jackson
Marc Guéhi’s whirlwind 12 months in the FA Cup: captaining Crystal Palace to glory at Wembley last season, experiencing the competition’s greatest shock via the holders’ third-round elimination at sixth-tier Macclesfield and, on Saturday, aiming to claim the trophy again when Manchester City face Chelsea.
In a story-rich competition the defender’s is one of the more intriguing, particularly as Palace’s triumph was their first trophy and City, who he joined nine days after the Macclesfield reverse, were their scalps in the final, beaten 1-0 by Eberechi Eze’s 16th-minute strike.
He says: “I feel like my football life is crazy. There’s no consistency to it. It’s very unpredictable. And it’s fun, interesting. I’m glad to be given the opportunity to play in such a prestigious final again. And for this club, I know how much it means to them to win trophies.”
Jacob Steinberg
Chelsea fared well as underdogs in their most recent outing in a final. They surprised Paris Saint-Germain in last summer’s Club World Cup, racing into an unassailable 3-0 lead by half-time and disrupting the European champions thanks to a clever tactical approach from Enzo Maresca.
Perhaps there will be more of the same at Wembley. Chelsea have form when it comes to upsetting the odds in a big game, although the one problem with bringing up the PSG win before Saturday afternoon’s FA Cup final against Manchester City is that the challenge of coming up with a plan smart enough to beat Pep Guardiola is no longer Maresca’s responsibility.
The subplot is that it is quite possibly a clash between Maresca’s past and his future. For Chelsea, the moment when a season of promise began its descent into chaos is, from their perspective, when their former head coach began to act like a man who wanted to leave. The infamous comment from Maresca about his “worst 48 hours” at the club after the win over Everton in December still clouds the air at Stamford Bridge. Chelsea’s reaction will be interesting if Guardiola steps down at the end of the season and Maresca, the leading candidate to replace his former boss, joins City.
Preamble
And now for something completely different: an FA Cup final between Chelsea and Manchester City. These two great clubs have met in a Champions League final, a League Cup final and a classic Full Members Cup final, but never, until today, on the FA Cup’s big day.
It’s a surprising stat given the size of the two clubs and their recent FA Cup record. Since the turn of the century – what did happen to that Millennium Bug – Chelsea and City have been involved in 17 of the 26 FA Cup finals.
In recent years, it’s been harder to deal with Kipling’s impostors. Chelsea were runners-up in three consecutive seasons from 2020-22, an unwelcome record that they hope to share by sundown. That’s because City – who won the FA Cup in 2023 en route to the Treble – have lost the last two finals.
City start as strong favourites, regardless of those defeats, and have an outside chance of a second domestic treble under Pep Guardiola. Chelsea have not won a domestic trophy since they beat Manchester United 1-0 in the 2018 FA Cup final.
Yet in that period they have won all three European trophies, a Super Cup and two Club World Cups. Funny old team. They can’t be trusted – but nor should they be written off.
Kick-off 3pm BST
