Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

City dominance another death knell for League Cup

- Agence France-presse

LONDON: Manchester City have another piece of silverware to show for the billions invested by the club’s Abu Dhabi owners after lifting a third straight League Cup on Sunday with a 2-1 win over Aston Villa.

The legacy of Pep Guardiola’s reign in charge of the English champions is assured with this his eighth trophy of the last 11 competitio­ns City have entered. However, the long-term future of the League Cup is less secure with pressure being applied for English football to get in line with the rest of Europe’s major leagues and lose one of its two domestic cup competitio­ns.

Despite his success in the competitio­n, Guardiola is even among those calling for its head. “Eliminate competitio­ns, take out this competitio­n,” he said last month when asked how to ease fixture congestion in between the two legs of his side’s semi-final with Manchester United.

“So less games, less competitio­ns, less teams, more quality, less quantity. People can live without football for a while. It’s too much.”

While City gorge on success, defeat for Villa meant their wait to win a trophy since 1996 goes on. The League Cup is meant to offer a shot at glory for those not bestowed with the wealth to compete at the top end of the Premier League for titles.

But City have won the competitio­n for five of the past seven seasons with Chelsea and Manchester United the only other victors in that time.

City’s latest success was played out among plenty of empty seats in their end of the ground for what was unquestion­ably not even the most important game of their week.

That was Wednesday’s 2-1 win at Real Madrid in the Champions League, a result that keeps alive the club’s dream of finally winning the competitio­n they really desire before a two-season ban from UEFA comes into force.

City’s dominance of the competitio­n in recent times comes from a strength in depth that means they are simply too good for most opponents even when it is not their top priority.

Guardiola could afford the luxury of making eight changes for what was once one of English football’s showpiece occasions.

The gulf in class still showed as Sergio Aguero, David Silva, Raheem Sterling and Fernandinh­o were among those restored to the City’s line-up, along with Phil Foden, who picked up the man-of-the-match award.

After Aguero and Rodrigo fired City into a 2-0 lead after half an hour a repeat of a 6-1 win for the visitors when the sides last met at Villa Park last month looked a distinct possibilit­y.

Mbwana Samatta’s goal just before half-time helped restore Villa’s pride and some credibilit­y for the competitio­n.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? Manchester City players celebrate after beating Aston Villa 2-1 in the League Cup final on Sunday.
AFP PHOTO Manchester City players celebrate after beating Aston Villa 2-1 in the League Cup final on Sunday.

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