The Star Malaysia

Real pain in the rear

Man City juggernaut runs into defensive problems

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LONDON: Partly out of desperatio­n, partly due to having faith in his players’ versatilit­y,

Pep Guardiola has shown no fear in experiment­ing with Manchester City’s defence during his time at the English club.

Right winger Jesus Navas was briefly redeployed at rightback, to no great success.

Leftback Aleksandar Kolarov was turned into a ball-playing centreback.

Holding midfielder Fernandinh­o sometimes switched to leftback.

Then, this season, Fabian Delph – a central midfielder – has a new home at leftback.

The City manager might require more ingenuity to plug defensive gaps in the run-up to Christmas, with the English Premier League leaders short of numbers heading into the busiest part of the season, when they play 13 games in 43 days across three competitio­ns.

Guardiola confirmed on Monday that John Stones, a mainstay of City’s defence, could be out until the start of January with a hamstring injury sustained in the 2-0 win over Leicester on Saturday.

It leaves Guardiola with a problem, considerin­g leftback Benjamin Mendy (knee) is out until April, Vincent Kompany and Delph have poor injury records, and City’s resources were already bare in that department after missing out on key targets in the off-season.

“I like to (see) how we react with these problems, how many players are going to play in different positions than they are used to play,” Guardiola said, appearing to relish the challenge.

“Always when you’re champions, you have to handle the bad situations, the tough situations.”

Guardiola spoke of maybe playing Kyle Walker or Danilo, two out-andout fullbacks, at centreback. He rates Fernandinh­o so highly that he believes the Brazilian can fill in anywhere across the back line.

“We will find a solution,” he said. “When the spirit is good and everyone can make a step forward, it will not be a problem.”

The scenario appears to have thrown Eliaquim Mangala a lifeline at City.

Mangala was in and out of the team under former manager Manuel Pellegrini and has been largely frozen out by Guardiola, spending last season on loan at Valencia. During the summer, he seemed surplus to requiremen­ts – City failed with repeated bids for West Brom’s Jonny Evans – but didn’t find a club.

Now, he could play a key role for the team, even though his poor standard of distributi­on hardly makes him a Guardiola-type player.

City have already qualified for the Champions League knockout stage so it’s in the Premier League where City’s defensive issues will hit hardest.

Kompany’s return last weekend after six weeks out injured could hardly have been timed better, but Guardiola is aware of the risk of relying on a player who has been plagued by one problem after another over the last two years.

“Of course, we have to take care of him,” Guardiola said.

“We are trying to do that. It is a risk to play him more and more. But now Stones is out, we have a real, real problem in that position.”

It’s something for City’s Premier League rivals to cling to. Guardiola’s men hold an eight-point lead after 12 games and are playing some of the best football ever seen in England’s top division.

This might be something that slows the juggernaut.

 ??  ?? Lifeline: Eliaquim Mangala (left) could play a key role for Manchester City even though his poor standard of distributi­on hardly makes him a Guardiola-type player.
Lifeline: Eliaquim Mangala (left) could play a key role for Manchester City even though his poor standard of distributi­on hardly makes him a Guardiola-type player.

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