The Manchester City (The Citizens) | Special Thread

The Manchester City (The Citizens) | Special Thread

In many ways, Manchester City's battling win over Tottenham was the perfect response to their troubling week.
Sure, Pep Guardiola would have probably wanted his side to have built on their early 2-0 lead and rampaged to a resounding victory, especially having made Spurs look so rudderless in that first half an hour.
After those damaging defeats against Liverpool and Manchester United, City started superbly at Wembley, instantly reminding the chasing pack of what they can do at their best, and what they have done for the majority of the season

They could not keep up that domination against a side as good as Mauricio Pochettino's but to record a battling victory will do them the world of good, especially as it now puts them just three points from the title.
This was a timely reminder of their credentials, given City headed into this game with question marks against them, their previous achievements only viewed through the prism of their past three games.

Some even wondered if they would throw the title away; Oddschecker, the bookmakers' odds compiler, showed that one of their most popular bets on Grand National day was an outlandish 200/1 shot - Manchester United to win the Premier League title.
Those odds would have tumbled had City fallen to a defeat here that many had predicted, even when they were leading.
That's because they diced with throwing it all away again, as they did a week ago against United. Spurs put the pressure on following Christian Eriksen's goal and City were pegged back, forced to do the kind of defending that many argue they are incapable of producing.

But they stood up to the task, physically and mentally, something they did not do to any degree in their last three games. And against one of the best sides in the country, too; indeed, Spurs had not lost in the league since they were dismantled at the Etihad Stadium back in December.

Guardiola rejected the notion that his side struggled emotionally in their three big games but it is understood that, privately, he was disappointed that his players wilted when the going got tough.
That was not the case here; City dug in for the first 20 minutes of the second half, not allowing Eriksen and Dele Alli any space to create an opening for the prolific Harry Kane. And, without the banned Fernandinho, that is a task worth applauding.
Vincent Kompany and Aymeric Laporte were dependable at the back and Guardiola himself proved a point, having faced accusations that his tactics are too one-dimensional in the last 10 days. The Catalan withdrew Leroy Sane, put on Nicolas Otamendi and moved to a three-man defence, with Fabian Delph and Kyle Walker as wing-backs. That pushed his creative players into the midfield and helped keep control of the match.

That substitution came just after Gabriel Jesus wasted a gilt-edged chance to give his side a 3-1 lead, which would have relieved the pressure even further. The Brazilian raced in on goal but produced a poor first touch and an even worse finish.
Raheem Sterling then missed two other good opportunities and, having done the same against United, it looked inevitable that Spurs would find an equaliser, however it came.
The City fans must have been fearing the worst at that point given what they have seen recently but suddenly their fortunes changed. After Hugo Lloris pushed out Jesus' shot Sterling reacted quickest to leather the ball into the top corner. No hesitation that time and City restored their two-goal advantage.

This time it was the opposition who had had the wind taken out of their sails, and City retreated, closing off the spaces and closing out a victory that few expected, in a manner that few expected.
City now just need to find three points from games against Swansea, West Ham, Huddersfield, Brighton and Southampton - and that's if United don't slip up first.
This was a huge victory.
 
Manchester United suffered a humiliating 1-0 defeat to rock-bottom West Brom at Old Trafford to confirm Manchester City's coronation as Premier League champions.
Jose Mourinho's side had prevented their neighbours winning the title with a stirring comeback last weekend, but an unlikely defeat to the Baggies secured a third Premier League title for their cross-city rivals.
United were second-best all afternoon and Darren Moore's men earned their reward for a spirited display thanks to Jay Rodriguez's close-range header 17 minutes from time.
Romelu Lukaku was twice denied by smart saves from Ben Foster, while Jesse Lingard also came close after his introduction from the bench at half-time.
The hosts threw everything at West Brom in the closing stages, but were unable to find a breakthrough that would have delayed City's title confirmation until at least Wednesday when United take on Bournemouth.
Victory for West Brom moves them up to 24 points, but they remain nine away from safety with just four games remaining.

Not for the first time this season at Old Trafford United started sluggishly and could have been a goal down after 12 minutes.
Ander Herrera had his pocket picked midway through his own half by Rodriguez before the ball was rolled into the path of Jake Livermore. The England midfielder's effort lacked venom, though, and was parried to safety by David de Gea.
Herrera had a penalty appeal waved away after seemingly being tripped by Craig Dawson, while Lukaku's powerful drive from Juan Mata's through ball was kept out by the face of Foster.
United's insipid half was then summed up when Paul Pogba received a yellow card for inexplicably trying to convert a deep cross with his hand.

Lingard replaced Herrera at the interval and the new man almost made an immediate impact with a fierce goal-bound drive that was bravely blocked by Dawson.
Mata sliced wide from just outside the penalty area before the ineffective Pogba was hauled off for Anthony Martial just before the hour in a desperate attempt to inject some spark into United's lifeless attack.
Lukaku must have thought he had broken the deadlock after 65 minutes but former United goalkeeper Foster got down superbly to repel the Belgian's powerful header from Nemanja Matic's cross.
And the importance of that save was brought into sharp focus eight minutes later as Rodriguez stole in unmarked to nod in Matic's wayward header from a corner.
United pushed numbers forward in the closing stages, but Foster never really looked in danger of being tested again as United succumbed to a defeat that was celebrated by the blue half of Manchester with even more vigour than usual.
 
Da1rKk2WAAE80Ys.jpg
 
Mashabiki wote wa man city rudini kwenye club zenu, wengi wenu mmekimbia Liverpool, Arsenal na Chelsea
 
Back
Top Bottom