The Irish Mail on Sunday

City the slicker as they revel in good Kompany

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THERE was a biblical cloudburst with hailstones the size of marbles. There was some sublime interventi­on from Jesus. There was even the resurrecti­on of a Manchester City stalwart. And, at the end of it all, it was a comfortabl­e progressio­n to the fifth round for Pep Guardiola.

City did more than just weather the storm. They provided a tantalisin­g glimpse of something better, something more akin to a Guardiola team and something which may yet propel them to some silverware.

There was plenty to encourage in south London. Principall­y, there was 90 minutes from Vincent Kompany, his first start since attempting and failing to make a comeback at this ground in November. He shirked nothing and exuded assurance. It was only Crystal Palace but rarely have City looked stable this season. Maybe, just maybe, Kompany can resolve his injury issues and finally provide the foundation which his team so desperatel­y requires.

‘Vincent being back is one of the better news about today,’ said Guardiola. In addition, City had a front three which not only performed well but provided a necessary counterbal­ance to an ageing squad. Jesus, 19, made his first start and, undimmed by a British midwinter, shone. Alongside him Raheem Sterling, 22, and Leroy Sane, 21, added goals, their pace both exhilarati­ng and decisive.

And at the end, there was a delightful contributi­on from Yaya Toure, his glorious return from exile continuing with a stunning free kick in extra time. Toure just chuckled, as though it were nothing special.

As for Palace, they didn’t quite chuck the towel in, though six changes was an indication that Bournemout­h on Tuesday night in the Premier League is where the real action is.

Palace could point to some erratic refereeing which might have spared City from a more troublesom­e afternoon. Fabian Delph’s horrible challenge on Joel Ward on 21 minutes received nothing more than a telling off, while Toure’s innocuous challenge on Joe Ledley apparently warranted a yellow card on 29 minutes.

That left referee Mike Jones something of a dilemma when Toure pulled back Jordon Mutch two minutes later. Selhurst Park howled for further punishment but Jones correctly resisted, though Palace boss Sam Allardyce disagreed. ‘They should have been down to ten men,’ he said. ‘The referee has not done his job.’

It was Jesus who unlocked the game, with an exquisite pass splitting the Palace defence open from the half way line on 43 minutes. Sterling was alive to the opportunit­y, sprinting on to the ball as Palace struggled to get back. He took a touch and then finished decisively past Wayne Hennesey to ensure City went in ahead at half time.

The visitors went further ahead on 71 minutes, David Silva leading the counter attack and charging up the pitch to released Sane. Much as Sterling had earlier, the young German took a touch, kept his head and finished cleanly.

From thereon in, exhibition football ensued, the result no longer in doubt. Toure, imperious in midfield, would have the final word with his lovely free kick. It was a glorious moment. But both teams have bigger battles ahead.

 ??  ?? HE’S BACK: Kompany with Guardiola (centre)
HE’S BACK: Kompany with Guardiola (centre)

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