The Full Time Report — Ep.17: City's 8th Cup, Alonso's Here, and the Title Race Has Three Days to Live

Manchester City beat Chelsea 1-0 in the FA Cup Final thanks to Antoine Semenyo's jaw-dropping backheel — Guardiola's 20th City trophy, and he celebrated by walking out of a TNT Sports interview. Then Chelsea basically announced the next chapter immediately: Xabi Alonso is officially the new manager on a four-year deal. Tom also covers Michael Carrick going permanent at United, the Mourinho/Real Madrid latest, transfer desk (Gordon/Bayern, Alisson/Juve, Bernardo Silva, Newcastle's Lamine Camara interest), plus a full preview of GW37's biggest games — including Arsenal's potential title-clinching Monday night against Burnley — and a look ahead to Villa vs Freiburg in Istanbul on Wednesday.

The Full Time Report — Ep.17: City's 8th Cup, Alonso's Here, and the Title Race Has Three Days to Live
0:0018:18

City's 8th Cup, Alonso's Here, and the Title Race Has Three Days to Live

The Full Time Report — Ep.17 | Sunday 17 May 2026

Chapters

#TitleStarts at
1Cold Open0:06
2FA Cup Final: City 1–0 Chelsea0:32
3Guardiola's Future & Post-Match Fallout4:32
4Xabi Alonso Official + Manager Roundup6:19
5Transfer Desk9:13
6GW37: Sunday Preview10:48
7Title Race: The Decisive Week13:02
8UEL Final Build-Up: Villa vs Freiburg15:22
9Outro & Takeaways17:07

Full Transcript

[INTRO MUSIC — upbeat electric guitar + brass stabs, 6s fade-out]
A backheel. In an FA Cup final. At Wembley. At the seventy-second minute. That is how yesterday was decided.
And then — as if the day needed to get any wilder — Chelsea announced their new manager about forty-five minutes after the final whistle. Fabrizio Romano. Here We Go. Xabi Alonso.
Welcome to The Full Time Report, Ep.17. Sunday the seventeenth of May. I'm Tom. It's a big one — let's get into it.
[CHAPTER: FA Cup Final: City 1–0 Chelsea]
Manchester City are FA Cup champions — for the eighth time in their history. Chelsea zero, Man City one, full time at Wembley. Antoine Semenyo with the only goal, seventy-two minutes in.
That is Pep Guardiola's twentieth major trophy at City, and his forty-first of his entire managerial career. Bloke just keeps collecting them.
The match itself, honestly? Not a classic. If you watched it, you know. Heavy on perspiration, light on inspiration — at least for the first sixty minutes or so. Chelsea set up in a back three, really compact, and they absorbed City's possession well.
City had fifty-six percent of the ball but barely four shots on target all game. The xG was under one for both sides. Wembley had some empty seats, the atmosphere was a bit subdued — it had that feel of two teams cancelling each other out and waiting for something to happen.
And something did happen — in the most ridiculous, brilliant way possible. Seventy-second minute. Haaland holds up play on the right side, combines, drills a low cross right across the six-yard box. Semenyo's got Levi Colwill right on his shoulder, ball is slightly behind him, and he just — flicks it backwards with his right heel. Backheel. Into the far corner. Robert Sanchez had absolutely no chance.
The Guardian called it one of the great Cup final goals. The FA themselves called it one of the great FA Cup Final goals. I'd agree with both of them.
Semenyo afterwards — and I love this — said: "It's happened a couple of times in training! It happened perfectly today. I just had to improvise as quickly as I can." Ten goals since his sixty-four-million-pound move from Bournemouth in January. What a signing that has been.
He became the first Ghanaian player ever to score in a men's FA Cup final, by the way. A bit of history right there.
Quick note on the lineup decisions. Guardiola started Omar Marmoush alongside Haaland in a sort of four-two-four shape, and it just didn't work. Marmoush was hooked at half time for Rayan Cherki, who came on and immediately made things click. Sky gave him seven out of ten. Marmoush got five. Tough outing.
Rodri started — he'd missed the previous four games with a calf problem — but he didn't look fully fit, and he was taken off on sixty-five minutes for Kovacic. City got more control after that change.
Chelsea's man of the match on the losing side? Levi Colwill. Second start back from his ACL injury and you absolutely would not have known it — seven out of ten from Sky, Chelsea's best player on the pitch. Cole Palmer, though? Pretty anonymous against his former club. Five out of ten. Difficult day for him.
There were two Chelsea penalty shouts. The second one, seventy-seventh minute — Khusanov barged into Jorrel Hato — that looked like it could have been given. Referee Darren England waved play on both times. McFarlane was pretty direct about it afterwards: "For me, the collision is a penalty. Jorrel gets in front and anywhere else on the pitch, that's a foul." He had a point.
Man City's official Man of the Match? Marc Guehi. Absolutely immense at centre-back. And here's a lovely stat: Guehi won back-to-back FA Cups — Crystal Palace last year, Man City this year — with two different clubs. Only the fourth player in history to do that.
Also worth noting: Haaland played the full ninety. Got the assist. And he's now played ten Wembley finals for City and scored zero goals. Zero from ten. The man who gets goals everywhere else just cannot do it in a final for City. Wild statistic.
Bernardo Silva captained the side and lifted the trophy. Almost certainly his last major trophy as a City player — his contract ends this summer. He said afterwards: "It's very special. I'm very happy. Everything about my journey here at City was fantastic. It's really nice to finish this way." What a servant he's been. Nine years at that club.
And a lovely moment for Mateo Kovacic too, who finally got his hands on the FA Cup: "Finally! I've been in a few finals and lost them all. Today is a good day for us." You love to see it.
[CHAPTER: Guardiola's Future & Post-Match Fallout]
Right. Now let's talk about the man managing the winning side, and a question that isn't going away.
Guardiola's post-match presser was pretty low key. He said — with a straight face — "This trophy is really cool for the tradition. Back to Manchester now to prepare for the last two games." Not even one beer. Bournemouth away on Tuesday is already his sole focus.
But then came the moment of the day — and honestly, of the season. TNT Sports. Laura Woods doing the post-match interview. She asked him about all the leaving rumours. Pep said, "What rumours?" — Laura doubled down — and he just picked up the mic, said "Have a lovely evening!" — shook everyone's hands, smiled, and walked off.
Steven Gerrard in the studio: "Fair play Laura, that was brave. That was brave." Joe Hart: "Laura, you nailed him!" And Woods herself: "I think I'd get fired if I didn't ask the question." Genuinely brilliant television.
Now — Guardiola hasn't confirmed anything either way. His contract runs to 2027. But David Ornstein at The Athletic had previously reported there's an extremely strong chance he leaves this summer. That walkout didn't exactly put those rumours to bed, did it.
For what it's worth, he also mentioned the joint parade on Monday in Manchester — with the City women's team, who won the WSL this season as well. So there is at least a bit of joy before City get back on the train to Bournemouth.
On the Chelsea side — Calum McFarlane was gracious in defeat. "I felt we went toe-to-toe with one of the best teams in the world." He was proud of the performance, still furious about the penalty decisions. And when asked about his own future, he basically said: "My job is to train the team for the next two games."
Because he knew — and everyone in that stadium knew — that the news was already out. Let's talk about it.
[CHAPTER: Xabi Alonso Official + Manager Roundup]
Xabi Alonso to Chelsea — official. Chelsea have formally confirmed the appointment. Four-year contract, running until June 2030. He takes over on the first of July.
Romano dropped the Here We Go at around six in the evening yesterday, while the final was still happening. Then last night the contract was signed. This morning Chelsea put out the official announcement.
Alonso's quote in the announcement: "Chelsea is one of the biggest clubs in world football and it fills me with immense pride to become manager of this great club. We want to build a team capable of competing consistently at the highest level and fighting for trophies." Standard stuff — but the key word is Manager, not head coach. He's got more power than his predecessors.
This is his third managerial job after Real Madrid's academy and Bayer Leverkusen — where he took them to their first-ever Bundesliga title and went the whole season unbeaten. He's the real deal. Chelsea fans will be excited, whatever else is going wrong at the club.
He'll also have real transfer input from day one — Romano confirmed he'll be very much involved in the summer window. That's a good sign. This isn't another situation where someone's brought in and then told they can't have the players they want.
Meanwhile — Reece James went on the Chelsea website and put out a statement. He apologised to the fans. His words: "We've underperformed this season. I would like to apologise to the fans for the lack of results. It's been difficult." That's a captain doing the right thing. Good on him.
Now over to Old Trafford. Michael Carrick going permanent — it's done. BBC and Sky both confirmed it yesterday. Two-year deal with an option for a further year, so potentially through to twenty-twenty-nine.
Formal announcement could come as early as today — Man United host Nottingham Forest at twelve-thirty. Carrick told reporters this week: "The future for me is going to be decided pretty soon." I'd say pretty soon has arrived.
He's won ten of his fifteen Premier League games as interim. He beat City, Arsenal, Chelsea and Liverpool. He's secured Champions League football. Gary Neville said he's in pole position and needed for stability. Amad Diallo said everyone is happy to have him. The dressing room is fully behind this.
Carrick's also confirmed he'll make a speech to the Old Trafford crowd today, regardless of what's officially been announced — he said that's important because of the supporters. Nice touch.
And on that note — Casemiro is saying goodbye today. Romano confirmed it this morning. His quote: "Joining United was the best decision of my life. I will be a United fan in England, forever." End of an era. He was brilliant for two seasons before it all fell apart. Wish him well.
José Mourinho update. Still not Here We Go. Romano says the Real Madrid deal is in final stages — the green light has been given — but no official announcement yet. Mourinho finished his Benfica season yesterday: unbeaten. Twenty-three wins, eleven draws, zero defeats. Straight into the biggest job of anyone's summer.
[CHAPTER: Transfer Desk]
Transfer desk — keeping it brief because it's been a quiet twenty-four hours for confirmed moves. Gordon to Bayern Munich: still T2 only. Schira says Bayern are working on it and Gordon's keen, but the fee gap is a problem — Newcastle want north of seventy-five million, Bayern aren't going past around sixty. Romano's had nothing on this one. Until he says Here We Go, treat it as ongoing.
Eddie Howe when asked about Gordon: "No, nothing, no updates from me. These are discussions that potentially might be happening, but not with me." Which is manager-speak for: yes, something is happening, but I'm not involved.
Alisson to Juventus — also still T2, Schira only. Personal terms reportedly agreed, Juve preparing a first bid for Liverpool. Liverpool have him under contract until twenty-twenty-seven and haven't said they're selling. One to monitor.
Bernardo Silva — no new destination confirmed. He said post-match yesterday: "I know exactly what I am going to do when my contract ends, but now is not the right time to talk about it." Juventus are said to be interested. Decision before the World Cup, per Romano. We'll find out soon enough.
And a fresh name — Newcastle have genuine interest in Lamine Camara, the AS Monaco midfielder. Romano confirmed initial talks this morning. Quality player — one to watch for the summer window.
Also from Romano this morning: Enzo Maresca reportedly has an agreement in principle to become Guardiola's successor at City if Pep does leave — a two-year deal with an option. That's from Schira, T2. Nothing from Romano on that one. But it tells you the club are at least planning for every scenario.
[CHAPTER: GW37: Sunday Preview]
Right — Gameweek Thirty-Seven. Loads on, and most of it actually matters. Let me walk you through it.
First up this morning: Man United versus Nottingham Forest, twelve-thirty at Old Trafford. Forest are already safe on forty-three points. United are going for third place — that's guaranteed Champions League — and they want to give Carrick a winning send-off at Old Trafford.
Then at three o'clock it's Everton versus Sunderland, and there's a lovely subplot here. Seamus Coleman — thirty-seven years old, seventeen years at Everton — is coming toward the end. Today is his penultimate home game. The 1878s fan group have organised a standing ovation in the sixtieth minute — they're going to sing "sixty grand, sixty grand, Seamus Coleman" — referring to the sixty thousand pounds Everton paid for him back in two thousand and nine. What a career.
David Moyes said about him: "He's been the glue that has kept an awful lot together behind the scenes." That's one of those players who never gets enough credit from the wider world. Proper club legend.
Then the big Sunday tea-time game: Newcastle versus West Ham, five-thirty at St James' Park. This is a relegation crunch — sort of.
West Ham are eighteenth with thirty-six points. Spurs are seventeenth on thirty-eight. Neither plays both games this weekend. But if West Ham lose today, they'd stay on thirty-six, and then Spurs can effectively seal safety on Tuesday night at Chelsea — a draw would put Spurs on thirty-nine, and West Ham can't catch that on goal difference.
If West Ham win today, they'd jump to thirty-nine and leapfrog Spurs, which would create carnage heading into Tuesday. Callum Wilson spent five seasons at Newcastle before joining West Ham — faces his former club when it really counts. Fascinating game.
Also at three: Brentford hosting Crystal Palace. Brentford are eighth on fifty-one points, still chasing European football for the first time in their history. Palace are safe and have one eye on the Conference League final against Rayo Vallecano next week. Keith Andrews has done an extraordinary job at Brentford this season.
And Leeds versus Brighton — Leeds are already safe, this is basically a party at Elland Road. Brighton are seventh on fifty-three and need to win their last two to keep any hope of Champions League. With Mitoma out for both remaining games, that's going to be tough.
[CHAPTER: Title Race: The Decisive Week]
Now — let's talk about what is genuinely the most exciting thing in English football right now. The title race. Two games left. Arsenal seventy-nine points. City seventy-seven.
Monday night. Arsenal vs Burnley at the Emirates. Eight o'clock. Burnley are relegated. Arsenal need to win.
If Arsenal beat Burnley, they go to eighty-two points. Then it's over to City at Bournemouth on Tuesday. If City drop any points — a draw or a loss at Vitality — Arsenal are Premier League champions. First title in twenty-two years. Done. Before City even play their final game.
If City win on Tuesday, it goes to the final day: Arsenal at Crystal Palace, City hosting Villa at the Etihad. Goal difference right now: City plus forty-three, Arsenal plus forty-two. So if both win all their remaining games, City win the title by one goal.
Arteta on the goal difference: "The difference is so small, and if you can make it smaller in your favour, that is a positive." Basically admitting they're thinking about it. Wouldn't you be.
And then there's the Guardiola factor. He said last night — immediately after winning an FA Cup — "Not even one beer. You know Bournemouth away on Tuesday. That will be even tougher. Try to go there and get a result." He's already on it. But he also admitted they spent six hours on a train getting to Wembley yesterday, which — fair point, that is a bit ridiculous.
Bournemouth, by the way, are on a fifteen-game unbeaten run. Guardiola called Vitality Stadium the toughest place to go in the league right now. City have won only half of their away games this season. This is genuinely not a formality.
On the injury front for Arsenal: Ben White is out for the rest of the season — MCL, season over. Calafiori is doubtful for Monday after coming off against West Ham. Timber and Merino are both out. Declan Rice may have to play right-back again. Arteta's got some decisions to make before Monday night.
Also this week — Chelsea at home to Spurs on Tuesday night. Chelsea are coming off an FA Cup defeat, Xabi Alonso looming, and Spurs are desperately trying to avoid relegation. If West Ham don't win today, Spurs basically just need a point from this game to stay up. If West Ham do win, it's all to play for. Either way — Chelsea vs Spurs on a Tuesday night with potential relegation on the line is exactly what the Premier League was made for.
[CHAPTER: UEL Final Build-Up: Villa vs Freiburg]
Before we wrap — let's look ahead to Wednesday night. Istanbul. Beşiktaş Park. The Europa League Final. Aston Villa versus SC Freiburg.
This is Villa's first European final since nineteen-eighty-two. Forty-four years. They beat Liverpool four-two on Friday night to secure Champions League for next season, so the pressure of needing Europa League as a back-door into Europe is completely off — they can just go and play.
Freiburg, meanwhile, are in their first ever European final. Built from the ground up on a collective philosophy. They are the romantic choice. Lovely club.
Unai Emery chasing a record fifth Europa League title — three with Sevilla, one with Villarreal. His only final defeat in this competition was with Arsenal back in twenty-nineteen against Chelsea. He is the most dangerous manager in this tournament by some distance.
Injury news. Amadou Onana targeting a return from a calf problem — he's been out three weeks. Still genuinely uncertain whether he makes it. Emery's named Lindelof and Bogarde as cover options if he can't go. Huge miss if he misses out.
On the Freiburg side — Matthias Ginter is a major concern. He's their centre-back, been outstanding all season in Europe, and he was forced off injured in their last Bundesliga game. No official timeline. And Yuito Suzuki is already confirmed out — fractured collarbone — and he had four Europa League goals this season. Freiburg are going in somewhat depleted.
Also worth knowing — Villa's third kit will be the Aston Villa Foundation as front-of-shirt sponsor. Betano donated their shirt space for the final. A nice gesture for one of football's biggest occasions.
Kick-off is nine PM Istanbul time, eight o'clock if you're watching from the UK. I'll be glued to it. Villa deserve this moment.
[CHAPTER: Outro & Takeaways]
Right — before I go. A few things to watch this week. Man United vs Forest, twelve-thirty today — Carrick's farewell home game, announcement potentially before kick-off. Then the relegation drama at Newcastle this afternoon. And all the GW37 scores and updates from the three o'clock games as well.
Then Monday night — and I genuinely think we might be watching Arsenal lift the Premier League trophy within the week if everything goes their way. Arsenal vs Burnley, eight PM, Emirates. Don't miss it.
The big takeaway from yesterday? Semenyo's backheel was one of those goals you remember for years. City win their eighth FA Cup, Bernardo Silva goes out as a legend, and Guardiola walks out of a live interview rather than talk about his future. Normal Saturday in English football.
And Chelsea fans — tough day at Wembley. But Xabi Alonso is your manager now. Things are about to get interesting.
That's your Sunday morning sorted. I'm Tom — this has been The Full Time Report. Catch you tomorrow for Arsenal versus Burnley, title permutations, and whatever else explodes before then.
Take care. Have a good one.
[OUTRO MUSIC — same theme, 8s fade-out to silence]

Sources

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  2. Man City FC: Brilliant Semenyo flick sees off Chelsea — [https://www.[mancity.com/news/mens/fa-cup-final-chelsea-may-2026-match-report-63914529](https://www.mancity.com/news/mens/fa-cup-final-chelsea-may-2026-match-report-63914529)](https://mancity.com/news/mens/fa-cup-final-chelsea-may-2026-match-report-63914529](https://www.mancity.com/news/mens/fa-cup-final-chelsea-may-2026-match-report-63914529))
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  10. Chelsea FC: Xabi Alonso appointed Chelsea manager — [https://www.[chelseafc.com/en/news/article/xabi-alonso-appointed-chelsea-manager](https://www.chelseafc.com/en/news/article/xabi-alonso-appointed-chelsea-manager)](https://chelseafc.com/en/news/article/xabi-alonso-appointed-chelsea-manager](https://www.chelseafc.com/en/news/article/xabi-alonso-appointed-chelsea-manager))
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  14. BBC Sport: Man Utd reach agreement with Michael Carrick — [https://www.[bbc.com/sport/football/articles/c392r8v1jz4o](https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/articles/c392r8v1jz4o)](https://bbc.com/sport/football/articles/c392r8v1jz4o](https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/articles/c392r8v1jz4o))
  15. Sky Sports: Carrick agrees two-year deal at Man Utd — [https://www.[skysports.com/football/news/11095/13544606/michael-carrick-man-utd-agree-two-year-deal-to-stay-head-coach-with-confirmation-expected-within-48-hours](https://www.skysports.com/football/news/11095/13544606/michael-carrick-man-utd-agree-two-year-deal-to-stay-head-coach-with-confirmation-expected-within-48-hours)](https://skysports.com/football/news/11095/13544606/michael-carrick-man-utd-agree-two-year-deal-to-stay-head-coach-with-confirmation-expected-within-48-hours](https://www.skysports.com/football/news/11095/13544606/michael-carrick-man-utd-agree-two-year-deal-to-stay-head-coach-with-confirmation-expected-within-48-hours))
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  18. Nicolò Schira X: Bayern working to sign Gordon — https://x.com/NicoSchira/status/2055848977061269751
  19. Fabrizio Romano X: Newcastle interest in Lamine Camara — https://x.com/FabrizioRomano/status/2055918743377871004
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  22. football.london: Arsenal press conference live — Arteta team news — https://www.football.london/arsenal-fc/fixtures-results/arsenal-press-conference-live-mikel-33941590
  23. The Athletic: Seamus Coleman departs an Everton icon — [https://www.[nytimes.com/athletic/7282278/2026/05/16/seamus-coleman-everton-icon-farewell/](https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/7282278/2026/05/16/seamus-coleman-everton-icon-farewell/)](https://nytimes.com/athletic/7282278/2026/05/16/seamus-coleman-everton-icon-farewell/](https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/7282278/2026/05/16/seamus-coleman-everton-icon-farewell/))
  24. Everton News: The 1878s Coleman tribute plan — https://www.everton.news/the-1878s-share-everton-plan-to-pay-tribute-to-seamus-coleman-on-sunday/
  25. The Athletic: Onana targeting return for UEL Final — [https://www.[nytimes.com/athletic/7268236/2026/05/10/aston-villa-amadou-onana-injury-latest-europa/](https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/7268236/2026/05/10/aston-villa-amadou-onana-injury-latest-europa/)](https://nytimes.com/athletic/7268236/2026/05/10/aston-villa-amadou-onana-injury-latest-europa/](https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/7268236/2026/05/10/aston-villa-amadou-onana-injury-latest-europa/))
  26. Birmingham Mail: Freiburg handed major injury concern (Ginter) — https://www.birminghammail.co.uk/sport/football/football-news/freiburg-handed-major-injury-concern-33925834
  27. Nigerian Matchday: Europa League Final 2026 Preview — https://nigerianmatchday.com/europa-league-final-2026-freiburg-aston-villa-preview/
  28. Aston Villa FC: adidas third kit for Europa League final — https://www.avfc.co.uk/news/2026/may/14/uel-adidas-third-kit-for-europa-league-final/
  29. Fabrizio Romano X: Mourinho undefeated at Benfica — https://x.com/FabrizioRomano/status/2055764010620932252
  30. The Guardian: 10 things to look out for in Premier League this weekend — [https://www.[theguardian.com/football/2026/may/15/premier-league-and-fa-cup-final-10-things-to-look-out-for-this-weekend](https://www.theguardian.com/football/2026/may/15/premier-league-and-fa-cup-final-10-things-to-look-out-for-this-weekend)](https://theguardian.com/football/2026/may/15/premier-league-and-fa-cup-final-10-things-to-look-out-for-this-weekend](https://www.theguardian.com/football/2026/may/15/premier-league-and-fa-cup-final-10-things-to-look-out-for-this-weekend))

Music & Audio Credits

Theme music: AI-generated instrumental — produced with fal.ai MiniMax Music v2.6, model fal-ai/minimax-music/v2.6. Prompt: upbeat British sports podcast theme, driving rhythm, electric guitar, brass stabs, stadium ambience, ~120 BPM, no vocals, no lyrics. Generated fresh for this episode; no artist, label, or third-party copyright. Duration: ~59s, looped as BGM at -26 dB throughout the episode.
Usage: 6-second intro clip (1.2s fade-out) → full episode BGM (-26 dB, 1.2s fade-in, 1.5s fade-out) → 8-second outro clip (2.5s fade-out).
Voice: Tom — MiniMax English_FriendlyPerson via fal.ai MiniMax Speech 2.8 Turbo.
Normalisation: -18 LUFS target, peak -0.5 dBFS.

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