Holders Manchester City play Chelsea in Sunday’s Carabao Cup final at Wembley. Here, Press Association Sport looks at five talking points ahead of the final.

Serial winner versus late bloomer

Chelsea manager Maurizio Sarri (left) and Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola are friends
Chelsea manager Maurizio Sarri (left) and Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola are friends (Nick Potts/PA)

Pep Guardiola has won every club honour during his management career, with Barcelona, Bayern Munich and Manchester City. Maurizio Sarri, 60, has never won a trophy, belatedly getting his chance at the top level with Empoli, Napoli and now Chelsea. The pair are friends – Arrigo Sacchi is a shared mentor – and share a similar, possession-based philosophy. Sarri has taken the advice of Guardiola in his first season in England, to concentrate on 14 players.

Predictable, yet totally unpredictable

Jorginho
Jorginho is central to Chelsea’s system, as is Fernandinho to City’s (Adam Davy/PA)

Chelsea are perhaps the epitome of a cup side. They are recklessly inconsistent, but capable of beating the top teams. Sarri has stuck stubbornly to the 4-3-3 formation he favours, with Jorginho as a central playmaker and N’Golo Kante played out of position in right midfield, despite the Frenchman proving to be the best defensive midfielder in the world. Results are unpredictable. Chelsea beat City 2-0 at Stamford Bridge in December but lost 6-0 at the Etihad Stadium on February 10, their heaviest defeat in 28 years.

Congested calendar

City will be on a high after coming from behind with 10 men to win at Schalke in the first leg of their Champions League last-16 tie in Germany on Wednesday night. Chelsea beat Malmo 3-0 to complete a 5-1 aggregate success in their Europa League last-32 tie on Thursday night, three days after the 2-0 loss to Manchester United in Monday’s FA Cup tie. Guardiola has a full squad of players he can rely upon; Sarri, going by recent performances, has none. With Sarri focusing his energies on a core group and jettisoning serial achiever Gary Cahill, Premier League-winning midfielder Danny Drinkwater and others, squad strength could determine success in the cup.

An appetiser

Manchester City’s Vincent Kompany celebrates with the trophy alongside team-mates after the final whistle during the Carabao Cup Final
Manchester City won the Premier League and Carabao Cup last season (Nick Potts/PA)

Since Swansea beat Bradford 5-0 to win the 2013 League Cup, only once have the competition’s winners finished the season with just the one trophy. In 2014, City won the League Cup and Premier League title; it was Chelsea who did likewise in 2015; Manchester United won the League Cup and Europa League in 2017; and, City won the League Cup and Premier League in 2018. City, under Manuel Pellegrini, were the exception in 2016.

The end? The continuation?

Maurizio Sarri is under increasing pressure as Chelsea boss
Maurizio Sarri is under increasing pressure as Chelsea boss (Nigel French/PA)

It will take a dramatic turn in fortunes and results for Sarri to continue in his job. The 60-year-old’s seven-month tenure started promisingly, but has featured embarrassing results which mean even victory in the League Cup might not spare him the axe. A return to the Champions League will be Chelsea’s priority and Wednesday’s Premier League clash with Tottenham is important in their top-four bid. For City, the League Cup is about sweeping silverware and a staging post en route to further glories domestically and in Europe.