Montreal Gazette

Man City chases global success but struggles at home

- ROB HARRIS The Associated Press

Manchester City is on a mission to become soccer’s global power, with its network of clubs sweeping up trophies from east to west.

There’s one major stumbling block in the Abu Dhabi owner’s grand project: The principal team can’t even dominate at home in England.

With an aging squad and lameduck manager, City is regressing in the Premier League while ambitiousl­y expanding internatio­nally with offshoot clubs in New York, Melbourne, Yokohama and another mooted in China. The business was valued at $3 billion when a Chinese consortium took a 13-per-cent stake last year.

City won the Premier League in 2012 and 2014 but meekly surrendere­d the trophy on both occasions. This season, City isn’t even a contender as Manuel Pellegrini keeps the hot-seat warm for the incoming Pep Guardiola.

The squad Guardiola inherits after swapping Munich for Manchester from July is in desperate need of a revamp. City’s shortcomin­gs were visible in Sunday’s home humbling by United, its apparently ailing neighbour.

The 1-0 loss was its third consecutiv­e game without scoring; a barren run not seen at City since its destiny was transforme­d in 2008 by a member of Abu Dhabi’s ruling family deciding to invest billions of dollars into awaking a dormant team.

Sunday’s wretched derby afternoon was encapsulat­ed by Pellegrini’s explanatio­n for substituti­ng Martin Demichelis early in the second half. It didn’t reflect well on the coaching abilities of Pellegrini, the man who restored calm to City after the chaotic reign of Roberto Mancini.

“He was nervous,” Pellegrini said of an experience­d internatio­nal who played for Argentina in the semifinals at the last World Cup.

The 35-year-old defender’s lack of pace was brutally exposed when 18-year-old forward Marcus Rashford went past him with ease before scoring the only goal of the game at the Etihad Stadium on his derby debut.

United didn’t just secure local bragging rights but barged back into contention for the fourth Champions League place.

It is not completely bleak in the blue half of Manchester, however, with the League Cup already collected and a first-ever Champions League quarter-final game to come next month against Paris Saint-Germain.

But City’s grip on the top four has never looked more precarious as West Ham and United sit only a point behind with eight matches to go.

Guardiola is preparing to leave Germany’s ultimate power for a club 15 points behind Leicester, which has surged to the top of the Premier League with a modest outlay on players.

Fortunatel­y for Leicester, it has enjoyed a quiet treatment room this season. City’s medics on the other hand are being kept far too busy by a succession of first-team regulars requiring care. The injury list expanded on Sunday, with goalkeeper Joe Hart (calf) and forward Raheem Sterling (groin) now facing a month out.

City’s defence has already been shorn of captain Vincent Kompany while the midfield trio of Kevin De Bruyne, Fabian Delph and Samir Nasri remain sidelined and sorely missing from Pellegrini’s plans.

 ?? JON SUPER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? United’s Jesse Lingard, left, and Manchester City’s Martin Demichelis challenge for the ball during their English Premier League match on Sunday at the Etihad stadium in Manchester.
JON SUPER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS United’s Jesse Lingard, left, and Manchester City’s Martin Demichelis challenge for the ball during their English Premier League match on Sunday at the Etihad stadium in Manchester.
 ??  ?? Manuel Pellegrini
Manuel Pellegrini

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