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Season 2025-26
Chelsea (a) Premier League

 


Date:
Saturday 14th March 2026, 5.30pm
Live on Sky Sports

Venue: Stamford Bridge

Conditions: Rare

Programme: £4



 

Chelsea

 

Newcastle

 

0 - 1
 


 

Teams

Goals

18 mins A goal of stunning simplicity spanning four passes: Aaron Ramsdale bowled the ball out to Malick Thiaw to his right, just outside the Newcastle box. His short pass infield found Tino Livramento and he had ample time to push forward as Mamadou Sarr made a half-hearted attempt to follow.

Reaching the centre circle, Livramento released Joe Willock, whose forward run down the centre of the field took him clear of Reece James. Reaching the Chelsea box and with Sanchez off his line but pausing and James catching him up, Joe moved the ball to his left rather than attempting a shot.

That played in Anthony Gordon, whose first touch was slightly clumsy, but still gave him the opportunity to run the ball into the unattended net from the left corner of the six yard box.

Gordon's finish echoed his first Toon goal, at the same end in May 2023. Just one team mate was on the pitch for both, Sven Botman. The other nine who started that were all absent or gone: messrs Dubravka, Trippier, Schar, Targett Guimaraes, Anderson, Almiron, Isak and Saint-Maximin.
1-0

Half time: Chelsea 0 Newcastle 1

Full time: Chelsea 0 Newcastle 1

We Said


Eddie Howe said:

"As I said on Friday, I wasn't aware the record was that bad here for us, so it's nice to end that and get the win on so many levels today.

"That was such an important victory with what we have coming up ahead this week with the two massive games
(Barcelona and the mackems).

"It's great to go into those games with the good feeling that we have. And I thought the mentality, the effort today was very, very good. You mentioned the mentality and effort.

"It gives us huge belief. I think we needed to win today to give us any chance of winning in Barcelona and progressing through the Champions League. It's such a difficult game, but you need that confidence that winning gives you.

"That's back-to-back wins in the Premier League now, which is so important. We'll be in a better place for today and now all eyes are on Barcelona.

"I think our defensive mentality was key. We were really good off the ball today, in every respect. We rode our luck at times in the second half, but with the amount of times we've been hurt this season I thought we deserved it.

"It was an excellent goal and we were very much in the game. It was a great pass from Tino (Livramento) to slip in Joe Willock and very unselfish from Joe to pick out Anthony (Gordon).

"It's our first clean sheet in a long time. It's been a difficult spell for us. We've defended really well at times. We know it's in there, it's just about bringing it all together.

"When you make changes from the outside, there's maybe more noise than there should be. I thought Nick Woltemade was excellent. Jacob Murphy was outstanding.

"When you have players with the experience of Joelinton and Dan Burn to bring on, it's huge."

On his side's improved away form:

"I think, of course, we've analysed our away form almost as much as you (journalists) have, I think. I'd probably say our athleticism's returned.

"I think we've had really, really good physical returns on the road recently, and I think that's helped our results. I think that's always been the hallmark of what we've done over the years.

"We try to really compete athletically. I think you have to away from home, and today I thought our quick players really sprinted and gave them problems, so I'd say that's probably been the biggest difference.”

On Anthony Gordon:

"
I thought he was magnificent today. He’s so single-minded and focused on what he wants to do."

On Jacob Murphy:

"
He's been magnificent since my time here. I can't speak highly enough of him on and off the pitch. Just selfless, wants to help the team. He's also a very, very good player. Very underrated in my opinion.

"He was elected as part of the leadership group by the players themselves, and I think that's the biggest accolade you can get.

"With all the other guys missing, it was his turn to lead the team, and that'll be a magical moment for him, being a Newcastle fan as a child. I'm delighted for him.”


On Sandro Tonali:

"He was feeling unwell after training yesterday. It quickly became apparent that he would not be able to travel.

"Fingers crossed it follows a similar pattern with the other illnesses we've had and it is a quick recovery. There has been something going around now for two or three weeks in the squad and hopefully this is the same."

They Said

Liam Rosenior said:

"The result isn't the one we wanted. We just lacked the cutting edge today. At the moment, the lads aren't getting what they deserve. We need to find ways to have more quality in the final third.

"In the first 15 minutes we found Cole (Palmer) and Joao (Pedro) in really good positions.

"The goal knocked the wind out of our sails. Football's about momentum and that goal gave them momentum.
We tried to find a tactical solution rather than a personnel solution, and we didn't do that this evening.

"Things aren't always as great as you think they are when they're going well, and things aren't always as bad as they are when you're going through a difficult spell. I can't remember Rob (Sanchez) having much to do (although NUFC had five shots on target to Chelsea's three).

"We need to make sure the players recover. We need to monitor them and see who's fresh."

On the bizarre pre-match centre spot huddle that surrounded the referee:

"I'm going to make it really clear. I want to protect my players. I'm respectful to the game. My players made the decision that they wanted to be around the ball, to respect the ball and show unity and leadership.

"That is not my decision. That was a decision between the leadership group and the team.
There is nothing that they're doing with that huddle that is disrespectful to the opposition.

"We had a meeting with the referee (before the game), my assistant goes in, the first thing he talks about is our huddle. He says about when I complained about Arsenal being in our half, it wasn't the goalkeeper coach that was in our half. People were at that game at Arsenal, I said what I said. We're not being disrespectful to the opposition.

"If Paul (Tierney) had focused more on his job, which was to make the right decision, we have a penalty today. I don't think anybody in this room can say that (Nick) Woltemade doesn't kick Cole Palmer down in the box (hopefully someone in the room did, as he clearly doesn't....)

"So let's focus on the things that are important. My team showing unity is not as important as getting the decisions right on the pitch.

"I didn't speak to Paul (Tierney) today or his officials. I thought it wasn't the right thing to do today. But I'll be speaking to PGMO.

"I'll be speaking to the refs and just trying to get an understanding of why that happened today. We were told in the rule book it's about timing. You can be where you want on timing.

"I just want to find a solution to this because we're actually talking about something that's nowhere near as important as what's happening on the pitch."

On conceding the winning goal:

"There’s a tactical issue. It’s a new way of pressing. We don’t step on the press and then we don’t cover in the position that we should have done. Mistakes happen. They had nothing in the game and we gave them a goal. It feels like every mistake we're making is ending up in the back of the net".

Stats


The Magpies collected their fourth PL away win of the season, following victories at Everton, Burnley and Spurs. They also ended a run of 14 successive league and cup games without keeping a clean sheet since a 3-0 CL home win over PSV Eindhoven in January.

Following the home victory over Manchester United, success here saw Eddie Howe's side record back to back PL wins, something they'd managed only in November (Manchester City home then Everton away) and December/January (Burnley away, Palace home, Leeds home).

Lewis Hall reached a half century of PL starts for the club.

Anthony Gordon scored his fifth PL goal of the season and the 16th in all club competitions. He has 23 PL goals for Newcastle, moving one ahead of Jacob Murphy, drawing level with Kieron Dyer and sitting one behind Joelinton.

NUFC after 30 games - last 10 PL seasons:

2015/16 25 points, 19th
2017/18 32 points, 13th
2018/19 34 points, 13th
2019/20 38 points, 13th
2020/21 29 points, 17th
2021/22 31 points, 15th
2022/23 56 points, 4th
2023/24 44 points, 8th
2024/25 53 points, 5th
2025/26 42 points, 9th


Newcastle registered only their third win in 38 league and cup visits to Stamford Bridge in the PL era - two in the PL and one in the League Cup. This was only their third clean sheet in that sequence.


Magpies @ Stamford Bridge - PL era:

2025/26 Won 1-0 Gordon
2024/25
Lost 1-2 Isak
2023/24 Lost 2-3 Isak, Murphy
2023/24 Drew 1-1 Wilson (lost 2-4 pens) (LC)
2022/23 Drew 1-1 Gordon
2021/22 Lost 0-1
2020/21 Lost 0-2
2019/20 Lost 0-1
2018/19 Lost 1-2 Clark
2017/18 Lost 0-3 (FAC)
2017/18 Lost 1-3 Gayle
2015/16 Lost 1-5 Townsend
2014/15 Lost 0-2
2013/14 Lost 0-3
2012/13 Lost 0-2
2011/12 Won 2-0 Cisse 2
2010/11 Drew 2-2 Gutierrez, S.Taylor
2010/11 Won 4-3 Ranger, R.Taylor, Sh.Ameobi 2 (LC)
2008/09 Drew 0-0
2007/08 Lost 1-2 Butt
2006/07 Lost 0-1
2005/06 Lost 0-1 (FAC)
2005/06 Lost 0-3
2004/05 Lost 0-4
2003/04 Lost 0-5
2002/03 Lost 0-3
2001/02 Lost 0-1 (LC)
2001/02 Drew 1-1 Acuna
2000/01 Lost 1-3 Bassedas
1999/00 Lost 0-1
1998/99 Drew 1-1 Andersson
1997/98 Lost 0-1
1996/97 Drew 1-1 Shearer
1995/96 Drew 1-1 Ferdinand (FAC)
1995/96 Lost 0-1
1994/95 Drew 1-1 Hottiger
1993/94 Lost 0-1
1992/93 Lost 1-2 Lee (LC)

Our all-time league record at Chelsea isn't much better, today just win number 12 in 80 visits:

2025/26 won 1-0 (PL)
2011/12 won 2-0 (PL)
1986/87 won 3-1 (D1)
1982/83 won 2-0 (D2)
1953/54 won 2-1 (D1)
1952/53 won 2-1 (D1)
1949/50 won 3-1 (D1)
1948/49 won 3-2 (D1)
1932/33 won 1-0 (D1)
1914/15 won 3-0 (D1)
1913/14 won 1-0 (D1)
1908/09 won 2-1 (D1)

This was United's 155th Premier League away win, coming in their 589th road trip:

13 Spurs
12 West Ham
9 Aston Villa
8 Everton
7 Fulham, Leeds United, Leicester City
6 Boro
5 Burnley, Crystal Palace, mackems, Southampton
4 Arsenal, Bolton Wanderers, Nottingham Forest, West Bromwich Albion
3 Blackburn Rovers, Brentford, Coventry City, Derby County, Ipswich Town,
QPR, Sheffield United, Sheffield Wednesday
2 Birmingham City, Bournemouth, Chelsea, Hull City, Manchester United,
Norwich City, Stoke City, Swansea City, Wolves
1 Cardiff City, Charlton Athletic, Huddersfield Town, Liverpool, Manchester City,
Oldham Athletic, Portsmouth, Wigan Athletic
0 Barnsley, Blackpool, Bradford City, Brighton, Luton Town, Reading,
Swindon Town, Watford, Wimbledon

Aaron Ramsdale kept his first NUFC PL clean sheet on his ninth appearances, matching Rob Elliot:

0 games (aka clean sheet on debut) Dubravka, Hislop, Hooper, Krul, Pope.
2 games Given
3 games Harper, Karelse
4 games Darlow, Srnicek
9 games Elliot, Ramsdale

No clean sheets in NUFC PL career (figure is total PL NUFC appearances):

1 Karius
4 Woodman
6 Alnwick, Wright

(NB: no differentiation made between starts and sub appearances)
 

Waffle

Newcastle ended their long wait for victory at Stamford Bridge on Saturday night, Anthony Gordon's first half goal and some resolute defending afterwards propelling Eddie Howe's side to a first success here since Papiss Cisse's famous brace almost fourteen years ago.

Thirty previous Premier League visits here had harvested just 10 points from a possible 90 before tonight, but hopes of improving that tally were raised as early as the 18th minute, when Joe Willock raced on to Tino Livramento's pass down the centre of the field and played in Gordon to tap home.

Taking the lead here isn't completely unheard of, but retaining a clean sheet was a rather different matter - fourteen failures in league and cup following Tim Krul's contribution to that 2012 victory.

Despite starting a Premier League game for the first time under Eddie Howe minus
Bruno Guimaraes, Joelinton and Sandro Tonali though, United made the most of a home display that had disgruntled fans heading to the exits well before the final whistle - and the tubes weren't off, for once.

Taking to the field after a 2-5 humbling at PSG in midweek, Chelsea stuttered and spluttered with talisman Cole Palmer less than red hot and Joao Pedro contributing little on what would be the first time in his career that he finished on the losing side in a meeting with the Magpies.

Wesley Fofana headed over and Palmer lashed a shot wide before Gordon's goal and Ramsdale saved from Palmer before Jacob Ramsey saw a deflected shot pushed away.

A challenge on Malick Thiaw by James in the home box that was more suitable for the six nations was ignored by referee Paul Tierney and VAR upheld that view without recourse to a pitchside check.

After the break, Ramsdale denied Delap and then a Gordon penalty shout was rightly ruled out after he intercepted the ball in the box before taking a tumble. Gordon saw a shot saved, Delap headed over and Trevoh Chalobah nodded wide after Ramsdale had missed a cross from the left.

Another Gordon strike was easily saved and Delap headed wide again before James came within inches of an equaliser in the third minute of eight added on - another inexplicable addition - hitting the foot a free-kick from similar range to that which beat Aaron Ramsdale at Gallowgate last December.

Chelsea's last chance of preventing Newcastle from emulating Brighton, the mackems and Villa from sauntering down the Kings Road with maximum points this season saw Pedro's header end up on the roof of the net before the whistle blew and the celebrations begin in a delighted away end.

The players and staff soaked up that applause, Howe pushing Jacob Murphy forward to brandish his captain's armband. The ovations acknowledged the collective effort though, from Sven Botman's calm presence to the assured return of Livramento, Willock's decisively calm contribution and the gratifying industry and consistency of Hall and Ramsey. The display of Ramsdale en route to collecting a first clean sheet is also worthy of note, showcasing his sweeper keeper strength to good effect.

Consistency is something we've craved all season - to acquire that at a crucial time despite multiple personnel changes is pleasing, but the real fist-pumping euphoria comes from winning games like this at places like this. The satisfaction today was immeasurable, payback for so many fruitless visits.

Victory took United up to ninth, four places above the mackems who lost 0-1 at home to Brighton - thanks to SJP old boy Yankuba Minteh's suspiciously offside and possibly unintended strike. That means Newcastle will remain above them in the table regardless of the result in Sunday's derby.

Of more immediate concern is Wednesday's Champions League visit to Barcelona, when the Magpies attempt to turn a 1-1 first leg draw a Quarter-final spot in what would be the most memorable of European nights for the club, rivalling previous exploits in Budapest and Rotterdam.

The Catalans may be in rather better nick than Chelsea, a 5-2 beating of Sevilla 5-2 at the weekend their fifteenth successive home win, but the concentration and cohesion Newcastle demonstrated here today gives cause for optimism that they can rise to the occasion in the Nou Camp. 

Biffa