China Daily (Hong Kong)

City upbeat on eve of Barca clash

5-0 thrashing of Newcastle the best tonic before crucial last-16 Champions League encounter at home

- By AGENCE FRANCEPRES­SE in London

Contrastin­g weekend results have given Tuesday’s Champions League last-16 reunion between Manchester City and Barcelona at the Etihad Stadium a different allure to what might have been expected only days ago.

Barcelona, 4-1 aggregate victor when the teams met at this stage last year, had found scintillat­ing form since a l-0 loss to David Moyes’s Real Sociedad on Jan 4, winning its next 11 games in all competitio­ns.

But that run came to a shuddering and unexpected halt on Saturday when it lost 1-0 at home to Malaga in La Liga after a lackluster performanc­e completely out of keeping with recent displays.

About 40 minutes after the final whistle sounded at Camp Nou, City set about constructi­ng a 5-0 victory at home to Newcastle United that allowed it to cut Chelsea’s lead in the Premier League to five points.

Following on from a 4-1 win at Stoke City, which had seen the English champion end a four-game winless run, the stylish victory, inspired by David Silva, provided further proof that its mid-winter slump has ended.

For City manager Manuel Pellegrini, it was a sign his side is once again a “scoring team”, but for all the optimism the performanc­e engendered, it will not erase memories of what happened the last time Barcelona crossed his path.

Both games last season followed similar patterns, with Lionel Messi twice opening the scoring, Dani Alves twice adding a late goal, and City twice having a defender sent off — Martin Demichelis in the first leg and Pablo Zabaleta in the second.

Demichelis’s dismissal at the Etihad, for a last-man foul on Messi that yielded a penalty from which the Argentine put Barcelona ahead, left Pellegrini apoplectic and he was given a two-game touchline ban by UEFA for accusing Swedish referee Jonas Eriksson of impartiali­ty.

But while Vincent Kompany’s late goal in the return leg meant City belatedly landed a blow on its opponent, there were few complaints about the aggregate scoreline.

Toure suspended

“It is important not to make the mistakes that we made last year,” said Pellegrini, whose club has never reached the quarterfin­als.

“In both those games we played with one player less. In the knockout stage you have to not concede goals, and with a player sent off it is very difficult. You have to think of the match as being 180 minutes, not 90.”

Now under the tutelage of Luis Enrique, Barcelona is much-changed, with the team configured to move the ball as quickly as possible to a devastatin­g front three of Neymar, Luis Suarez and Messi, who has already scored 14 goals in 2015.

When Barcelona has come unstuck this season, as against Malaga and Real Sociedad, it has tended to have been when teams have scored early against it and then defended en masse, but defender Gerard Pique believes City will not approach the tie so cautiously.

“It is one of the games of the year, the most important until now,” said the former Manchester United centerback.

“They will try to attack us and that suits us. It has been proven over the past few months that we are better against teams that attack us because we can counter-attack.”

The host will be without Yaya Toure as he completes a three-game ban, but City’s group-stage great escape — a stirring 3-2 win against Bayern Munich, in which Sergio Aguero scored a hat-trick, and a 2-0 victory at Roma — was orchestrat­ed without the giant Ivorian in its ranks.

With James Milner expected to return from a knee injury and January signing Wilfried Bony in line for his Champions League debut, City is otherwise at full strength but Aguero, Zabaleta, Gael Clichy and Edin Dzeko are all one booking away from suspension.

Barcelona’s group-phase progress was rather more serene, despite a 3-2 loss at Paris Saint-Germain, and its only absentees are longterm injury victims Thomas Vermaelen and Douglas.

Key facts

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