Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

City crowned champs after United defeat

-

MANCHESTER City were confirmed as Premier League champions yesterday as second-placed Manchester United suffered a shock 1-0 home defeat by bottom club West Bromwich Albion.

United had to at least draw to keep the title race mathematic­ally alive but were stunned at Old Trafford when Jay Rodriguez headed home after the break.

City manager, Pep Guardiola, might have missed the moment that his first English title was sealed, however, after admitting on Saturday he had a round of golf booked with his son.

He would have been as surprised as everyone else Munich that the title, seemingly a foregone conclusion for months, was rubber-stamped in such strange circumstan­ces.

A week after City surrendere­d a 2-0 lead to lose 3-2 to United and squander the chance to wrap up the title in perfect style against their arch-rivals, it was relegation­bound West Brom who served it up on a plate.

West Brom had lost eight of their previous nine games and last won on January 13.

City, who rebounded from the United loss and a European exit at the hands of Liverpool by beating Tottenham Hotspur on Saturday, have 87 points with five games left. United have 71 also with five to play. It is Abu Dhabi-owned City’s third title in seven seasons and their first since former boss Manuel Pellegrini achieved the feat in 2013-14.

Guardiola has won the League Cup already for City this season but a first Premier League title, to go with the three La Liga titles he won as manager of Barcelona and the three Bundesliga titles he delivered for Bayern Munich, will be particular­ly satisfying for the Spaniard.

“You cannot imagine,” Guardiola said on Saturday. “It would be one of the best three seasons I have ever had as a player and as a manager.

“The amount of goals, chances and points, to do that in the Premier League, with the contenders we have, is because the players are so good.” — Reuters ARSENAL crashed to a fifth consecutiv­e away defeat in the Premier League as Matt Ritchie fired Newcastle to a 2-1 win at St James’ Park yesterday.

Arsene Wenger’s side took an early lead through Alexandre Lacazette, but Ayoze Perez equalised before Ritchie bagged the second half winner.

Newcastle’s fourth successive win ended Arsenal’s unbeaten run of seven games in all competitio­ns.

The sixth-placed Gunners are 13 points behind fourth-placed Tottenham with only five games remaining in the race to qualify for the Champions League.

Realistica­lly, Arsenal already had no chance of making the top four and Wenger had been prioritisi­ng their Europa League campaign for several weeks.

Arsenal saw off CSKA Moscow in the Europa League quarterfin­als last Thursday.

They face Atletico Madrid in the last four and will qualify for the Champions League if they win the competitio­n.

With little to play for in the league, Arsenal were unable to find enough momentum to maintain their recent revival, even though Lacazette opened the scoring in the 14th minute.

Just moments after he was left writhing on the turf following a crunching challenge from Kenedy, Lacazette exacted revenge.

Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang ran onto a long ball into the Newcastle area and picked out Lacazette, who stretched to volley home at the far post for his 13th goal of a difficult first season following his move from Lyon.

Alex Iwobi almost doubled Arsenal’s lead moments later with a stinging strike that forced a good save from Martin Dubravka.

Jonjo Shelvey’s long pass picked out Dwight Gayle in the Arsenal area and, with Gunners’ defender Shkodran Mustafi out of position, he was able to lay off to DeAndre Yedlin.

Perez made a perfectly-timed run to meet Yedlin’s cross with a fine finish that flashed by Petr Cech at his near post.

The Spanish forward’s third goal in his last three appearance­s was a clinical effort, but Wenger would have been furious with how easily Newcastle carved open his defence.

Calum Chambers could have restored Arsenal’s lead before the interval, but the defender shot wide from Mustafi’s knock down.

Ritchie tested Cech before 18-year-old Arsenal midfielder Joe Willock’s poor finish wasted an opportunit­y to mark his Premier League debut with a goal.

Iwobi lashed narrowly wide from long-range as Arsenal chased their first away point of 2018.

But it was Newcastle who landed the knockout blow in the 68th minute.

More sloppy Arsenal defending let in Islam Slimani and his header was flicked on by Perez to Ritchie, who beat Cech from close-range.

Ritchie clearly saves his goals for the big occasion, having scored the winner against Manchester United in February.

Kenedy, on loan from Chelsea, came close to putting the result beyond doubt with a looping effort that hit the crossbar with Cech beaten.

Lacazette should have equalised in the closing stages, but he shot into the side-netting. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe