Business Day

Man City’s Guardiola not afraid to make bold moves

- Philip O’Connor

One of the reasons Manchester City have done so well over the past few years is they have a superb manager unafraid to make bold decisions.

This was illustrate­d yet again when Pep Guardiola took off City’s brilliant midfielder Kevin De Bruyne with more than 20 minutes of Sunday’s match against Liverpool to go.

These and other talking points from the weekend’s Premier League games are below:

Guardiola shows ruthless touch as De Bruyne hooked:

When Manchester City’s Kevin De Bruyne was substitute­d after 69 minutes of a rip-roaring contest at Anfield with the game locked at 1-1 and top spot up for grabs there was widespread surprise, not least from the Belgian playmaker.

De Bruyne, a key component of five Premier League title triumphs, was not impressed and made his feelings known to manager Pep Guardiola who sent on the more defensivel­y minded Mateo Kovacic.

It showed the high standards Guardiola sets and that no player, not even De Bruyne, is bigger than the collective.

“He will have a chance in the next game to prove how wrong I was, so next time he’ll have it. It’s fine,” Guardiola said.

Quansah shows future is bright at Liverpool: Jürgen Klopp may be entering the final months of his Liverpool reign but the German will leave behind a squad equipped to battle for silverware for many years.

A lengthy injury might have derailed Liverpool but Klopp’s faith in youth has been richly rewarded and Jarell Quansah typified that on Sunday against Man City.

The 21-year-old centre back, making his sixth league start of the season after injury ruled out Ibrahima Konate, was superb alongside Virgil van Dijk in nullifying the threat of City’s goalmachin­e Erling Haaland.

With Conor Bradley (20) and Harvey Elliott (20) also starting, it was the first time Liverpool had named three players aged 21 or under in a league clash against City since 2015.

Villa’s tactics unravel in Spurs thrashing: Five points ahead of Tottenham Hotspur ahead of Sunday’s clash, Aston Villa’s pursuit of Champions League football for the first time suffered a serious blow as their defensive tactics backfired, resulting in a 4-0 drubbing for Unai Emery’s side.

The 1982 European Cup winners have never played in Europe’s premier club competitio­n in its modern form, and Sunday’s comprehens­ive defeat at the hands of Spurs means they might have to wait another year for the chance to do so.

Rice leading the way for Arsenal in title race: It was about this time in 2023 that Arsenal began to wilt in a twohorse title race with Manchester City.

Twelve months on, however, they look far more durable and one of the main reasons for that is Declan Rice.

There were some raised eyebrows when Arsenal forked out £100m to sign Rice from West Ham United, but there is no price on what he brought to the team.

The midfielder’s calm authority was evident again on Saturday as he scored Arsenal’s opener against Brentford and then cajoled his teammates after a mistake by goalkeeper Aaron Ramsdale had allowed the visitors to level.

Unconvinci­ng United make Everton pay the penalty: On the face of it, Saturday’s 2-0 win over struggling Everton is a runof-the-mill Premier League victory for Erik ten Hag’s Manchester United, but winning thanks to two penalties suggests that all is not yet right at Old Trafford.

Languishin­g in 16th spot, 10 places and 22 points behind United after Saturday’s clash, Everton’s statistics told a different story to the scoreboard, suggesting United were lucky to get away with all three points.

The Toffees registered 23 efforts on goal, splitting possession almost evenly with their illustriou­s opponents and winning the corner count by a margin of eight to five.

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