In a performance that will echo through Chelsea’s history books, Cole Palmer orchestrated a remarkable 3-0 victory over Paris St-Germain, securing the newly expanded Club World Cup title for the Premier League side at the MetLife Stadium in New Jersey.
Palmer, the 22-year-old England international, was at the heart of everything. He netted two first-half goals and provided a sublime assist for new signing Joao Pedro, dismantling a PSG team Chelsea manager Enzo Maresca had described pre-match as “the best in the world.”
Palmer opened the scoring in the 22nd minute, slotting a low finish past Gianluigi Donnarumma after a sharp run and cross from Malo Gusto. Just eight minutes later, he doubled the lead with a carbon-copy move, this time fooling the defence with a dummy before curling another low shot from the edge of the area.
The final blow came just before half-time when Palmer threaded a perfect pass through PSG’s backline. Joao Pedro responded with a composed lob over the advancing Donnarumma, marking his first Chelsea goal in stunning fashion.
“We believed in our plan and stayed compact. Cole was unbelievable tonight,” Maresca said post-match.
PSG showed flickers of a comeback early in the second half. Robert Sanchez was called into action twice—first tipping away a long-range effort from Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, then denying Ousmane Dembele from close range.
The French champions were made to rue early missed chances by Joao Neves and Desire Doue, whose wayward efforts came while the game was still level. By the 85th minute, their frustration boiled over. Neves was shown a straight red card after a VAR review confirmed he had pulled Marc Cucurella’s hair during a tussle in the box.
Adding to PSG’s woes were ugly scenes at full-time. Manager Luis Enrique was seen appearing to slap Joao Pedro amid a heated confrontation. He later claimed, “I was trying to separate fighting players to avoid a situation getting worse,” attributing the incident to post-match pressure.
The historic night was witnessed by a record-breaking crowd of 81,118, including US President Donald Trump and FIFA president Gianni Infantino. Chelsea’s triumph not only secured their first Club World Cup title under the new format but also swelled their tournament earnings to around £90 million.
