The Star Malaysia

Go for 100 points

City seek 100-point record as Swansea hope for a miracle

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Only the most prepostero­us turnaround can spare Swansea from relegation on the final Sunday of the Premier League season but if any team can help fashion this mission improbable, it is Pep Guardiola’s dazzling Manchester City. Only if the Welsh outfit can beat already-relegated Stoke at the Liberty Stadium and champions City thrash Southampto­n at St Mary’s to effect a 10-goal swing, will the Saints tumble out of the top flight instead of the Swans. Rampant City are also seeking to underline their recordshre­dding campaign with a landmark century of points.

LONDON: Only the most prepostero­us turnaround can spare Swansea from relegation on the final Sunday of the Premier League season but if any team can help fashion this mission improbable, it is Pep Guardiola’s dazzling Manchester City.

While Liverpool and Chelsea contend for the one remaining Champions League spot, Swansea fans are steeling themselves for the most deflating of afternoons at the other end of the table.

For only if the Welsh outfit can beat already-relegated Stoke at the Liberty Stadium and champions City thrash Southampto­n at St Mary’s to effect a 10-goal swing will the Saints tumble out of the top flight instead of the Swans.

It remains highly unlikely but because rampant City are seeking to underline their record-shredding campaign with a landmark century of points, few Southampto­n or Swansea fans can quite convince themselves it is over yet.

“We have to be careful. If there is one team in this league who have the capability of scoring a lot of goals, it’s City,” warned Southampto­n manager Mark Hughes.

Hughes should know. Managing Stoke earlier this season, he saw City rain in seven goals – one of 14 times Guardiola’s side have scored four or more in all competitio­ns this term.

Getting the three points on Sunday to finish with exactly 100 clearly means a good deal to the Spaniard, who noted after City’s 3-1 steamrolle­ring of Brighton on Wednesday that it would “finish this almost perfect season”.

Guardiola talked again of ”trying to write a new page” in English football to emulate the Liverpool side of the late 1970s and 1980s and Manchester United in the 1990s.

“To be the best, to be alongside those teams, we have to win more,” he added. “But (this season) we’ve done better than the others, we cannot deny.”

Indeed, a win at Southampto­n would make City’s league season, statistica­lly at least, the finest-ever in the English top-flight.

Bob Paisley’s 1978-79 Liverpool side would have ended up with 98 if three points, rather than two, for a win had been employed then. Yet that season was over 42 games not 38 so, by any yardstick, City have been truly exceptiona­l.

Swansea’s manager Carlos Carvalhal can only hopes the champions have one more exceptiona­l 90 minutes in them.

“Well, at this moment we’re not relegated,” he shrugged.

“We can’t depend on ourselves and we don’t like that. We must win the game and hope for a miracle to happen.” The ”miracle” would not be Man City running riot, it would be Swansea, without a league goal in over six and a quarter hours, actually rousing themselves to hammer Stoke.

The good news for Carvalhal is that the Potters certainly look the most accommodat­ing opposition after a week in which their owners Peter and John Coates admitted the club needed a major overhaul after losing some of their “core values”.

In the battle to seal the final topfour spot alongside City, Manchester United and Tottenham, it’s advantage Liverpool, who need just a point at home to Brighton to foil Chelsea.

The only way the Londoners can nick the fourth spot is by winning at Newcastle and hope Liverpool, perhaps distracted by the upcoming Champions League final, lose their first league game at Anfield all season.

 ?? — AFP / Reuters ?? Swan song: Manchester City’s Yaya Toure posing with an award after playing his last game for the club in the English Premier League match against Brighton at the Etihad on Wednesday. Right: City manager Pep Guardiola applauding.
— AFP / Reuters Swan song: Manchester City’s Yaya Toure posing with an award after playing his last game for the club in the English Premier League match against Brighton at the Etihad on Wednesday. Right: City manager Pep Guardiola applauding.
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 ?? — Reuters ?? Thank you!: Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola shaking hands with midfielder Yaya Toure during the Premier League match against Brighton at the Etihad on Wednesday. It was Toure’s final home game for City.
— Reuters Thank you!: Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola shaking hands with midfielder Yaya Toure during the Premier League match against Brighton at the Etihad on Wednesday. It was Toure’s final home game for City.

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