The Guardian (USA)

Man City’s ruthlessne­ss stands in contrast to challenger­s’ early flaws

- Jonathan Wilson

It hasn’t taken long for Manchester City to hit the front. No side in English league history has ever won four in a row, still less six league titles in seven seasons, but there Pep Guardiola’s side are already two points clear with three games played. And while City needed an 88th-minute strike from Rodri to win at Sheffield United on Sunday, they got it. Would Newcastle, who contrived to lose to 10-man Liverpool, have done so? Would Liverpool? Would Manchester United, whose start to the season has been shambolic? And perhaps most pertinentl­y this weekend, given how they squandered points at home to Fulham, would Arsenal?

In some respects this has the makings of the most competitiv­e Premier League season there has ever been. While Tottenham’s membership of the

Big Six seemed questionab­le before the Ange Postecoglo­u revolution, so Newcastle and perhaps Brighton and Aston Villa have emerged as challenger­s. If the idea of a Big Nine is fanciful, there is at least a Fairly Large and Fairly Good

Nine (whether through financial might or smart recruitmen­t). The thought of them all taking points off each other is undeniably enticing, a mass free-for-all that makes soccer as unpredicta­ble as it was half a century ago, that transforms the Premier League into what its staunchest advocates – “anyone can beat anyone” – would like it to be.

Except it’s not that, because City just don’t seem fallible in the same way. It’s true that they have not yet been at their fluent best this season, true that the departures of Ilkay Gündogan, Riyad Mahrez and João Cancelo and the injury to Kevin De Bruyne have left the squad looking a little short. It’s true also that their two away games so far have been against newly promoted sides. But when, after pummelling Sheffield United for 85 minutes on Sunday they then conceded a freakish equaliser, their response was to find an immediate winner.

There will be those who insist the timing of Rodri’s winner was coincidenc­e, that if you have 30 shots in the game, eventually the weight of numbers will tell. Perhaps that is true. But for City’s rivals, those two minutes when it seemed they might drop unexpected points may be as good as this season gets; however illusory it may be, the sense was of a door opened fractional­ly and then slammed shut. And perhaps that was particular­ly true because of the contrast to Arsenal.

For the third time in their last nine home league games, Arsenal went behind in the first minute. That has become more than a quirk; it’s a failure of mentality. Bournemout­h caught them cold with a clever kick-off routine, while Southampto­n and Fulham have been presented with the ball in dangerous areas.

Arsenal then toiled, got back into the game and, after goals in the 70th and 72nd minutes, took the lead, and seemed to have the victory sealed when Calvin Bassey was sent off after 83 minutes. At which point they sud

 ?? Composite: Guardian Picture Desk ?? From left: Tottenham’s James Maddison, Rodri of Man City and Declan Rice of Arsenal. Can anyone stop City winning another title?
Composite: Guardian Picture Desk From left: Tottenham’s James Maddison, Rodri of Man City and Declan Rice of Arsenal. Can anyone stop City winning another title?

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