Iran Daily

Pep, Mou to battle for EPL title in different styles

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They do things differentl­y in Manchester. City and United are two clubs working toward different directions, and their methods are so distinct that they are almost polar opposites.

On one side of town, City is playing with a joyful, sweeping brilliance. They have turned the Etihad into a temple of entertainm­ent, ESPN reported.

A handful of miles away at Old Trafford, United is built around power and mean-eyed pragmatism with few frills in its approach.

What the neighbors have in common, however, is that they are unbeaten in the Premier League. Early indication­s are that the title battle will be conducted in a small area of the northwest, and as disparate as these teams are, they are on a collision course.

City’s performanc­es have been seductive. The latest, a 7-2 rout of Stoke City, has generated a whirlwind of superlativ­es, and there are already suggestion­s that Pep Guardiola’s team could go unbeaten through the Premier League season. A year ago, after City won its ¿rst six league games, there were similar prediction­s, but Guardiola’s team went on to ¿nish third, 15 points behind Chelsea.

After a transfer window in which the club spent £225 million, Guardiola’s squad is stronger than it was 12 months ago. To imagine that the Citizens are unbeatable is a mistake, though. As good as they are, City has a number of Àaws.

Guardiola has clear ideas about how he wants his team to perform. The side is packed with attacking players who press the opposition deep in enemy territory. Gabriel Jesus, Leroy Sane and Raheem Sterling are quick and skillful on the ball, but Guardiola values their work rate in squeezing defenders almost as much as their ability to score. The manager believes the side is better without Sergio Aguero, the club’s most clinical goal scorer, because the 29-year-old is less inclined to chase down opposition ball carriers.

Guardiola believes the team functions more effectivel­y with his younger forwards harrying defenders. That’s because when that front line puts the opposition back four under pressure close to their own goal, it allows City’s defense to push up and play a high line. The former Barcelona boss wants to condense play in the opponents’ half so that David Silva and Kevin De Bruyne can ¿nd space with which to strike. Silva’s awareness and touch with the Belgium internatio­nal’s explosiven­ess make them a formidable threat.

The Àaw in the system is that it means City often operates with just one dedicated mid¿elder, Fernandinh­o.

Against stoke, full-backs Kyle Walker and Fabian Delph (the latter in a make-shift role) tucked in to supplement the middle of the park and make sure the mid¿eld is not overrun.

The policy has worked well in the Premier League. City has racked up 27 goals and beaten two of their top-six rivals. However, even when Guardiola’s men concertina the game into their attacking half, there is still a lot of empty space between the defenders and the attackers. Better sides will exploit this room and take charge of the mid¿eld. If teams can get a foothold in the centre of the park, they can get at City.

For all Guardiola’s spending in the summer, the back line still looks uncertain. Delph has been co-opted as a makeshift left-back following Benjamin Mendy’s long-term injury, while John Stones and Nicolas Otamendi still show signs of uncertaint­y at the heart of the back four. The suspicion remains that at some point City’s defense will undermine its brilliant forward line.

Mourinho’s approach is very different, and where City has drawn praise, United has engendered scorn.

Red Devils’ performanc­e at An¿eld in the 0-0 draw with Liverpool was generally derided as United seemed to show scant ambition and was more interested in killing the game. Mourinho was delighted to take a point and took malicious pleasure in quashing any sense of entertainm­ent.

The 54-year-old former Chelsea manager is a curmudgeon; at times he looks like a relic of another generation compared to the likes of Guardiola, Jurgen Klopp, Antonio Conte and Mauricio Pochettino.

Mourinho gets things done no matter how many people he alienates. He is up to mischief off the pitch, too, Àirting with Paris Saint-germain in what seems to be a fairly transparen­t attempt to gain more power over the transfer policy at Old Trafford.

Mourinho has also spent big in the two summers he has been in Manchester, both literally and ¿guratively. United’s outlay of more than £300 million has been spent almost completely on players with signi¿cant physical power. The only Mourinho signing who is not a 6-footer is Henrikh Mkhitaryan. This has been a manager shopping for power as well as pace.

If City aims to dazzle the Premier League, United plans to bully it.

When United players cannot compete with speed (as at An¿eld), they concentrat­e on neutralizi­ng the opposition. City gives rival sides a chance to play against the Citizens, while Mourinho’s side browbeats lesser teams and turns dif¿cult matches into wars of attrition.

For all the sneering aimed in the United manager’s direction, he’s had repeated success in England, and none of the pretenders to his crown have landed too many blows on Mourinho yet. City’s 29 league goals have provoked gushing praise, but United’s tally of 21 is impressive, too.

Up until the Liverpool game, Romelu Lukaku & Co. were averaging three goals a game in the league: pretty impressive for a team that had been lambasted as negative.

The battle of philosophi­es will continue in Manchester. The ¿rst derby is not until December, and any Àaws in their managers’ approaches are likely to be highlighte­d by the time the game comes around.

Despite all the excitement surroundin­g City, Àamboyance does not necessaril­y lead to titles; after all, Mourinho has spent a career proving this. Guardiola has a real battle on his hands in the quest to rule Manchester.

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GETTY IMAGES

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