Sam Kerr and Ellie Carpenter were on target for Chelsea Women as the Blues edged a 2-0 win against London City Lionesses in their first London derby in the Women’s Super League.
It was the first time the two sides had met in a league game, but the two head coaches – Sonia Bompastor and Jocelyn Precheur – are well known to each other from their time in France.
And as was the case across the channel, Bompastor got the better of her opponent – although it was far from a comfortable win, with London City matching their illustrious counterparts for much of the game.
Carpenter – coming up against the side her wife, Danielle van de Donk, plays for – put Chelsea into an early lead with her first goal for the club.
Sandy Baltimore held the ball up wonderfully down the left-hand side before sending a ball fizzing through the box. Carpenter was unmarked at the back post to slot home.
London City had a strong appeal for a penalty late in the first half. Sjoeke Nusken went into the back of Wassa Sangare as a corner was delivered. With no VAR and the referee not awarding the spot kick, nothing was given, although it was difficult to tell on replay angles if Nusken touched the ball first.
The second half saw both sides guilty of wasting opportunities. And for all of their good play, it was a late error from London City that allowed Chelsea to score another, with the Blues’ depth and quality once again evident.
Erin Cuthbert’s long throw was initially met by the oncoming Elene Lete, with her clearance reaching Poppy Pattinson. However, the latter’s touch was very heavy and instead the ball landed in Kerr’s path.
She needed no more encouragement to lob the goalkeeper, who was off her line, to ensure Chelsea remain unbeaten domestically under Bompastor.
The Blues stay one point ahead of Manchester City Women at the top of the WSL, who themselves beat West Ham Women on Saturday. London City remain in sixth place on nine points.
Campbell: Hard to tell if London City should’ve been given a pen
Megan Campbell on Sky Sports:
“We’ve seen different angles three times and we’re struggling to figure out if it is or not. They [the officials] don’t have the luxury of having VAR.
“You can tell it’s controversial. Nusken takes a defensive touch, Sangare steps in and tries to nick it in front of her.
“Nusken isn’t aware that she’s around her maybe but you can’t really tell if she’s touched the ball before the player.
“She has touched the player, it’s whether she’s touched the ball first.”


