Cape Argus

De Bruyne hits form at right time

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KEVIN de Bruyne has delivered so many outstandin­g performanc­es for Manchester City that it is pointless trying to rank them, but his display in Saturday’s 2-0 win over Leicester City was certainly an exhibition of his qualities.

Back to full fitness and in his preferred central midfield role, the Belgian struck the bar with a thundering free-kick before the break and then set-up City's opener with a superb defence-splitting pass to Gabriel Jesus.

With City still in the running for an unpreceden­ted four trophies and a big Uefa Champions League quarter-final against Borussia Dortmund coming up today, De Bruyne is hitting peak form at just the rate moment.

"Kevin was injured for some part (of the season) and some players struggled after we finished late last season. He has arrived in a good moment," said manager Pep Guardiola. “Kevin is talent. I say to Kevin to score goals. He was unlucky he hit the post but he has his vision and ideas."

Arsenal surrender a worry for Arteta

When Mikel Arteta described Arsenal's 3-3 draw with West Ham before the internatio­nal break as evidence of the "two-faced" nature of his side, he presumably hoped it would be the better one that emerged when the league resumed.

Sadly for the Spaniard, his Arsenal side offered up a meek, mild and sterile display against Liverpool and were duly spanked 3-0 – and in truth, it could have been a lot worse for the Londoners.

As the season reaches its final weeks, the worry for Arteta is that rather than show signs of progress, his side appear to be regressing and loud questions are being raised about whether he is the man to point the club back in the right direction.

He has now been in charge of 50 Premier League games, winning only 21 and losing 17 – a worse record than Unai Emery, the man he replaced, who won 25 of his 51 games at the helm.

United grind out another vital win

Manchester United took a big step towards securing Champions League football next season after they came from behind to beat Brighton and Hove Albion 2-1 at Old Trafford and stay second.

Despite yet another unimpressi­ve home performanc­e against struggling opposition, United eked out three valuable points as their newly-found steel under manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer made the difference.

With eight games remaining, United are in a commanding position to seal a top-four finish as they head into the Europa League quarter-finals against Spanish side Granada on Thursday aiming to win the continent's second-tier competitio­n.

Newcastle tune out noise in survival bid

While it seems like Newcastle United fans want Steve Bruce out with the club hovering above the relegation zone, the players seem to be fighting for him and it was evident when they snatched a point against Tottenham Hotspur.

"We all believe in the manager," Joe Willock, who scored an 85th-minute equaliser, said after the game, while Bruce praised the "spirit and togetherne­ss" in the squad after putting up with "so much nonsense" in recent weeks.

Newcastle sit three points above 18th-placed Fulham in the 20-team league with a game in hand, but Bruce's side are yet to play Liverpool, Arsenal, Leicester City and Manchester City, with Fulham on the final day potentiall­y becoming a relegation dogfight.

 ?? | REUTERS ?? MANCHESTER City’s Kevin De Bruyne shoots at goal against Leicester.
| REUTERS MANCHESTER City’s Kevin De Bruyne shoots at goal against Leicester.

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