Manchester City won narrowly at Turf Moor on Wednesday night to move top of the Premier League and relegate Burnley to the EFL Championship.
The match kicked off with chances for both sides as Jaidon Anthony saw his curled effort saved by Gianluigi Donnarumma and Rayan Cherki‘s quick response hit the post after a wonderful Martin Dubravka stop.
At the fifth-minute mark, Burnley decided to press high and were caught off guard – Marc Guehi launched the ball upfield, Jeremy Doku controlled it and set up Erling Haaland with space to run. The Norwegian dinked Dubravka and went on to celebrate his 24th Premier League goal of the season.
The first-half maintained this rhythm until the end as the visitors were dominant in possession and tried to break a congested defence, while the hosts tried to punish the high line on the counter.
It’s all about winning no matter how, says Erling Haaland on Premier League title race
In the second 45 minutes, however, Burnley did not pose any threat to Donnarumma’s goal. Manchester City, on the other hand, kept struggling to finish plays with efforts from Antoine Semenyo, Haaland, Savinho, Nico Gonzalez and Nico O’Reilly – but the ball simply would not hit the back of the net.
Despite not shooting on target during the second-half, the Clarets tried until the very end, when they had a corner – their last and failed chance to avoid the drop. As for the Blues, they now jump to the top of the table, level on points and goal difference with Arsenal, taking advantage of the head-to-head record.
City now shift their focus to the FA Cup semi-final against Southampton at Wembley this Saturday. Kick-off is scheduled for 17:15 UK and only 15 minutes later, Arsenal will host Newcastle United in Premier League action.
Here are five things we learned from a successful visit to Turf Moor!
City now lead the race for the Premier League title after a win that might seem disappointing given the context. However, as Haaland said in his post-match interview with Sky Sports – “it’s all about winning, no matter how.” The Blues needed the victory on the road and grabbed it, leaving all the pressure on Arsenal’s shoulders once again.
The result against the Clarets should boost confidence further ahead of the final sprint of the 2025-26 season. With two pieces of silverware still to play for, captain Bernardo Silva should be more than proud of the dedication his teammates are putting in.
Now more than ever, the squad needs to focus on their “every game is a final” mentality – and if every match is indeed decisive, Wednesday’s result grows in stature. Even though it is crucial to claim top spot right now, it isn’t, or shouldn’t be, the highlight: the most important thing is to end matchday 38 with the trophy in hand.
Match Report & Player Ratings: Burnley 0-1 Manchester City (Premier League)
Just as it was at this same Turf Moor in the 2018-19 season, when City beat Burnley by a single goal thanks to a millimetrical Sergio Aguero strike confirmed by goal-line technology, the Blues struggled to finish chances and kill the game.
This time around, the post denied two celebrations, Dubravka stopped a few others and many went just wide. Thankfully, Premier League top scorer Haaland proved exactly why he is the favourite to win the Golden Boot.
Of 27 shots, only eight were on target. What could have been a comfortable win was instead a performance that made Pep Guardiola furious on the touchline at the missed opportunities. Against an opposition sitting in the relegation zone – and now confirmed to be going down – the title contenders could and should have used the occasion to boost their goal difference.
Even though what truly matters, in the end, are the three points, City cannot afford to sleep on tight leads, especially when every goal scored or conceded could yet prove decisive.
Without Rodri, who picked up a calf injury against Arsenal, the expected starter as a pivot was Gonzalez. However, it was another Nico who kicked off the match in that position: O’Reilly, with Rayan Ait-Nouri deployed at left-back.
Although it is a genuine asset that the academy graduate can perform in multiple roles, the central defensive midfielder position did not appear his most natural – despite having played there before.
The number 33 feels far more comfortable in a function further upfield, closer to the opposing goal, whether inverting from full-back or operating as an advanced creator – his natural role coming through the ranks.
