Doku's 97th-minute equaliser rescues Man City but hands Arsenal Premier League initiative
Manchester City twice trailed and twice recovered at Goodison Park on 4 May 2026, with Jeremy Doku's 97th-minute leveller salvaging a point — but the result leaves Pep Guardiola's side with work to do as Arsenal sit in the driving seat with two games remaining.
Jeremy Doku struck in the 97th minute to rescue Manchester City a 3-3 draw at Goodison Park on 4 May 2026, in a match that swung violently between both sides and may yet determine who lifts the Premier League trophy at season's end. The result, however, handed Arsenal the initiative in a title race that City had appeared to be reasserting control over just weeks ago.
City had led twice in the match — first through Doku's first-half finish, then through a second-half response after Everton's rally — only to find themselves behind on each occasion. The drama unfolded across thirteen chaotic second-half minutes that one BBC Sport analyst described as potentially decisive come May's final reckoning. Doku's last-gasp intervention kept City top of the table on points, but with Arsenal holding a game in hand and superior goal difference, the margin for error has all but vanished for Pep Guardiola's side.
The immediate narrative belongs to Doku. The Belgian winger gave City their first lead just before half-time with what Sky Sports called a "wonderful finish," cutting inside and finishing past Jordan Pickford. But Everton, playing with urgency amid their own battle against relegation,Equaliser twice in the second half, with the home side's third goal arriving amid the kind of defensive disarray that has occasionally surfaced in City's campaign. When Doku converted at the death, the visiting fans erupted — but the celebration carried an edge of relief rather than triumph, as the arithmetic of the title race filtered through. City had taken a point they needed; they had also handed Arsenal a gift.
The game was not without troubling interruption. Merseyside Police confirmed the arrest of an Everton fan on suspicion of racially abusing Antoine Semenyo during the match. The alleged incident took place while Semenyo was on the pitch and was reported immediately by club officials. Everton issued a statement deploring the conduct and confirmed the club is cooperating with the police investigation. Football's ongoing struggle with racism at matches has produced repeated calls for stronger deterrents, and the timing — in a season that has seen multiple high-profile abuse cases across English football — will intensify pressure on clubs and authorities to demonstrate that repeat offenders face meaningful consequences.
The title-race mathematics are unforgiving. City sit top, but Arsenal, with two games still to play, control their own destiny. A draw and two points dropped in the space of thirteen second-half minutes at Goodison Park have rewritten the calculation City had been working with. Guardiola spoke after the match of the need to win both of City's remaining fixtures, a requirement that was true before kick-off but feels more acute now. The title race, which appeared to be settling in City's favour, has snapped back open.
For Arsenal, the path is straightforward in its simplicity if not in its execution: win their games in hand, and the trophy is theirs regardless of what City do. That City put themselves in this position — having led, having recovered, having then trailed again, and having only avoided defeat through a piece of individual quality in the final seconds — speaks to the fine margins that define championship races. The thirteen-minute collapse that handed Everton their leads is the kind of sequence that haunts title campaigns. Whether City can steady and win out, and whether Arsenal can capitalise, will define the final chapter of the English season.
This desk lead with Sky Sports and BBC Sport match reporting; Monexus framed the racism arrest as a first-order fact requiring prominent placement, consistent with editorial guidelines on conduct incidents.
