Daily Dispatch

Aguero and Jesus improve partnershi­p

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PEP Guardiola is certain Gabriel Jesus and Sergio Aguero can play together for Manchester City despite suggesting it was a disaster when they first linked up.

Guardiola surprising­ly started with the fit-again Aguero on the bench as City moved a step closer to Champions League qualificat­ion by beating Leicester 2-1 at Eastlands on Saturday.

Third-placed City are three points ahead of fifth-placed Arsenal with two games remaining as they battle for a top-four finish.

Jesus scored the penalty that put City two goals in front after David Silva had given them the lead with an effort that Leicester believed should have been disallowed for offside.

Jesus’s arrival from Palmeiras in January has cast doubt over Aguero’s long-term future, even though the Argentine has scored 31 goals this season.

The two forwards did start together for the 2-2 draw at Middlesbro­ugh on April 30, but struggled initially before clicking, and they had 12 minutes alongside each other against Leicester after Aguero came on as a substitute.

“They play at Middlesbro­ugh together, and in the first half it was a disaster.

“The second half was much better. Both of them have quality enough to see who wins the game for the side,” Guardiola said.

“Of course they can play together. It depends on their behaviour and mood.”

City made heavy weather of beating Leicester, with Shinji Okazaki’s spectacula­r volley bringing the visitors back into the game just before half-time.

Craig Shakespear­e’s side looked set to equalise when Riyad Mahrez was tripped by Gael Clichy 15 minutes from the end, but the winger slipped as he scored the resulting penalty, touching the ball twice and causing the goal to be ruled out.

“In the second half, we didn’t know whether to attack or defend.

“You have to understand how important the game was for eve Guardiola said.

“When you are in the middle of that, you are not sure if you defend or attack.

“But with the 10 minutes of injury time we had at the end, they defended quite well.”

Shakespear­e acknowledg­ed the decision to rule out Mahrez’s penalty was the right one.

However, he felt that City’s first goal should not have stood, with Raheem Sterling swinging a leg at Silva’s goal-bound shot, and missing it, while standing in an offside position.

“It is a freak penalty, a double touch. Clearly the letter of the law states it doesn’t stand,” Shakespear­e said. — AFP

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