Thirteen Minutes of Chaos: How Manchester City's Everton Thriller Opened the Door for Arsenal

It took thirteen minutes for Manchester City's season to threaten to unravel. Pep Guardiola's side rescued a point at Goodison Park on 4 May 2026, drawing 3-3 against Everton after Jeremy Doku struck in the 97th minute, but the manner of the result handed Arsenal the initiative in the Premier League title race with only weeks remaining.
The match followed a pattern that has become familiar across this title contest: City dominant in spells, vulnerable in transitions, and ultimately dependent on individual inspiration to avoid catastrophe. Doku provided that inspiration twice over, scoring what briefly appeared to be the winner before half-time before converting again deep in stoppage time after Everton's fightback had looked complete.
Guardiola called the draw a consequence of his side's own inconsistencies. "We were outstanding in the first half and had total control," he said after the match, per BBC Sport's match report. "In the second half we gave them three goals. We are not in a position to drop points." The Catalan coach did not conceal his admiration for Doku's contribution, describing both of the Belgian's finishes as "really, really top goals" in a "really good game."
The Thirteen-Minute Collapse
The second-half sequence that alarmed City's title prospects unfolded inside a concentrated spell of Everton's making. The hosts twice came from behind, and City's defensive structure — so often the backbone of their campaigns — dissolved under pressure. Sky Sports's match report described the period as a "title-race twist," and that framing understated the scale of what unfolded. CBS Sports noted the practical consequence: two dropped points left Arsenal in "full control" of the race.
What made the collapse notable was not merely its speed but its location. Everton, fighting to avoid the bottom places, found energy and precision in transition that City's midfield could not neutralise. The irony is that City's attack had functioned well enough — Doku's first-half strike had given them a lead — but the conversion of chances was rendered irrelevant by defensive errors.
What This Means for Arsenal
The arithmetic is uncomplicated. A draw at Goodison Park, regardless of its dramatic nature, leaves City dependent on Arsenal dropping points in their remaining fixtures. Guardiola acknowledged as much: the title race is now out of City's hands. Arsenal, who have held their nerve through a campaign of extraordinary intensity, will see this result as confirmation that the initiative is theirs to protect.
The counter-argument is one of fixture depth and squad rotation, themes that have shadowed the closing stages of every Premier League season in which City have been challenged. Arsenal's remaining schedule includes fixtures against sides with something to fight for; City cannot afford to assume their fate will be resolved by others' stumbles.
The Structural Question
What the draw exposed was not new, but it is accumulating. Across the closing months of this season, City's matches have carried a volatility that has become structural rather than incidental. The ability to respond — Doku's late goal is the third time in recent memory City have salvaged something from a position of apparent collapse — reflects squad quality. It also reflects a pattern of conceding control in spells that Guardiola's teams of the previous decade rarely produced.
Whether this reflects genuine regression, the accumulated fatigue of seasons of near-total domestic dominance, or Arsenal's singular quality as an opponent is a question the sources do not fully resolve. What the match against Everton confirmed is that City's margin for error has effectively disappeared with weeks still to play.
Forward Stakes
The Premier League title race will now be decided in north London. Arsenal know that winning their remaining games likely ends a thirty-year wait for the domestic crown. City know that their fate is no longer entirely their own. Doku's equaliser preserved hope; it did not restore control.
This desk covered the match from the Premier League desk angle, prioritising named-source quantification of the title arithmetic over narrative colour. Wire framing leaned toward the drama of Doku's stoppage-time strike; this coverage foregrounds the structural implications for the race.