GUEHI’S DISASTROUS PERFORMANCE WASN’T A COINCIDENCE!

By the final whistle at the Etihad Stadium, the mood around Manchester City had shifted from irritation to outright paranoia.

A 3–3 draw against Everton on a rainy Monday night was supposed to be remembered as another frustrating stumble in a tightening Premier League title race. Instead, it became something far uglier — a social-media-fueled conspiracy storm centered on Crystal Palace defender Marc Guéhi.Within minutes of the result, the internet had already delivered its verdict.

“It wasn’t a mistake — it was betrayal.”

The phrase exploded across X, TikTok, and football forums after Guéhi’s costly second-half error helped Everton erase what had been a comfortable two-goal City lead. Under pressure near midfield, the England international miscontrolled a routine pass before being dispossessed by Everton striker Beto, whose breakaway finish ignited an astonishing comeback that may ultimately reshape the title race.

Man City fan who went viral from drinking from Arsenal bottle – spotted head in hands during Everton draw — Tribuna.com

For City supporters, already rattled by Arsenal’s relentless late-season form, the mistake felt catastrophic.

For online conspiracy theorists, it became “evidence.”

Soon after the match, an image began circulating rapidly showing a young Guéhi supposedly wearing an Arsenal shirt during his childhood. Accounts with hundreds of thousands of followers reposted the image alongside accusations that the defender had secretly “helped” Arsenal by collapsing in a critical moment against City.

Manchester City to lobby EFL to allow Marc Guehi to play in Carabao Cup final – Guardiola – The Athletic

The implication was absurd.

But in modern football culture, absurdity rarely slows virality.

By Tuesday morning, the altered image had accumulated millions of views across platforms, with some users treating the doctored photo as genuine proof of hidden loyalties. Others went even further, dissecting clips of Guéhi’s body language and replaying the turnover frame-by-frame as though investigating a criminal act rather than a footballing mistake.

Caught on camera: Arsenal stars share moment with Marc Guehi at full time of Palace win — Tribuna.com

The reality, however, was far simpler.

The viral image was fake.

The original childhood photo actually showed Guéhi wearing a Chelsea kit, not Arsenal colors. Before becoming one of the Premier League’s most respected defenders at Crystal Palace, Guéhi spent 14 years in Chelsea’s academy system, rising through the youth ranks before eventually leaving Stamford Bridge in search of regular first-team football in 2021.

There is no Arsenal connection.

Marc guehi” – 6.000 Ảnh báo chí, ảnh và hình chụp có sẵn | Shutterstock Editorial

No hidden agenda.

No betrayal.

Just a brutal mistake on one of the sport’s biggest stages.

Yet the speed at which the false narrative spread revealed something deeper about modern football fandom — particularly in the pressure-cooker environment of a Premier League title race.

City entered Monday night knowing anything less than victory could dramatically alter the championship equation. Arsenal, who had spent weeks chasing Pep Guardiola’s side, suddenly found themselves with momentum and belief after Everton’s comeback. Betting markets immediately shifted toward Mikel Arteta’s squad, while City supporters searched desperately for someone to blame.

Marc Guehi gây sốt với phản ứng lạ trước Arsenal: Tín hiệu chuyển nhượng?

Guéhi became the perfect target.

The defender’s mistake was glaring enough to dominate highlight packages, but social media transformed it into something more sinister. Emotion overtook logic. A manipulated image became “proof.” Algorithms rewarded outrage over accuracy.

And once the conspiracy narrative took hold, facts barely mattered.

Several media analysts noted Tuesday that the incident mirrors a growing trend in online football discourse, where edited photos, clipped videos, and fabricated quotes can spread globally before verification ever catches up. In hyper-emotional moments — title races, relegation battles, controversial refereeing decisions — misinformation now travels almost instantly.

Man City dressing room reaction after Marc Guehi errors costs club in Arsenal title race – The Mirror

“This is the danger of modern fan culture,” one Premier League media consultant said. “People no longer wait for confirmation. If something supports the emotion they already feel, they share it immediately.”

For Guéhi, the episode added another painful layer to what was already a nightmare evening.

The 25-year-old has built a reputation as one of England’s calmest and most reliable center backs, admired for his composure in possession and leadership qualities. His performances over the last two seasons have attracted interest from several elite clubs, including reported admiration from both Manchester United and Liverpool.

Marc Guehi: Từ người hùng của Man City tới ân nhân của Arsenal – Bongdaplus.vn

But defenders live differently from attackers.

A striker can miss four chances and still be forgiven after scoring a winner. A defender may play brilliantly for 89 minutes, then become the story because of one lapse.

Monday night was that reality in its cruelest form.

 

Inside the City dressing room, sources described players as stunned by the collapse but supportive of Guéhi, understanding that the mistake came from an attempt to play progressively out of pressure — exactly the kind of football modern elite managers demand.

Guardiola himself appeared irritated by the online reaction when asked about the controversy after training Tuesday.

“In football, mistakes happen,” he said. “Social media now wants drama for everything. Tomorrow it will be another player.”

Still, the damage online had already been done.

By midday Tuesday, fact-checking accounts and football journalists had debunked the edited Arsenal image, posting the original Chelsea version side-by-side. But corrections rarely travel as far or as fast as outrage.

And that may be the real lesson from the Guéhi saga.

Not that one defender made a costly error.

Not that Arsenal suddenly seized control of the title race.

But that in modern football, perception can become reality before truth even gets its boots on.