These are not the kind of days that have defined Mauricio Pochettino's first months in one of the country's hottest seats. His Chelsea side tend to do well against the elite - the rest, not so much.
Chelsea have now taken two points off Manchester City, one from Arsenal, three from Tottenham.
A defeat at Manchester United felt unfortunate given the chances they created. A point from Liverpool as well, although last month's heavy defeat at Anfield will be fresh in their minds when they roll up at Wembley for Sunday's Carabao Cup final.
Pochettino was rightly praised for Chelsea's set-up at the Etihad Stadium. At least until the 71st minute, when the assured Cole Palmer exited for Trevoh Chalobah and the visitors attempted to cling to a one-goal advantage with five at the back.
They could not quite do it but green shoots were evident.
Chelsea prefer these games, when the onus is on the opposition to take charge, and they can pick their moments to counter attack in much the same way Ole Gunnar Solskjaer did when he was reviving United. Solskjaer's issue was always turning his team into one ready to dominate possession and he never truly managed it.
Pochettino has a remarkably similar task, managing a bloated squad, many of whom he doesn't want, and a need to find a system that works in the short term.
Their set-up against City gives them the best chance of upsetting Liverpool. It's Conor Gallagher's pressurising, Raheem Sterling's floating, Palmer's vision. Chelsea have the weapons to hurt the best and, for lengthy spells here, they did just that.
'We had chances to finish the game off, although so did they in fairness, but we had some really good opportunities to seal the win,' said Sterling.
'There's a bit of disappointment not
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