The Irish Mail on Sunday

Classy City define art of winning

Pep brushes aside Pellegrini

- By Ian Herbert

MANCHESTER CITY drive on so imperiousl­y and inexorably that it is impossible not to fear for the competitiv­e balance of this Premier League season.

The inevitabil­ity of losing to them is becoming so great that defeatism lurks. Liverpool are unbeaten, just like City, yet every point they drop now has grave consequenc­es.

The usual narrative about the league leaders’ supreme technical merit applies. The third goal was the high point: a drilled, 20-yard diagonal from Fernandinh­o, cushioned on the volley by Raheem Sterling into Leroy Sane, who ‘sat down’ Fabian Balbuena and clipped past Lukasz Fabianski. It was divine, football in art form and a privilege to watch.

But the Premier League needs infinitely more mettle than West Ham showed if there is to be any hope for some dramatic tension in the six months ahead.

It’s never promising when a manager is arguing the merits of a draw against Huddersfie­ld Town in his programme notes but Manuel Pellegrini’s modus operandi against his old side beggared belief. To beat this City you require muscle, cussedness, physical intent. Yet Pellegrini left his captain Mark Noble on the bench.

You require tactical purpose. Yet Pellegrini ripped up the midfield structure he seems to have settled on and went into the match with full backs who were palpably inadequate. The struggle of left back Arthur Masuaku to get anywhere near Sterling or Sergio Aguero was painful to behold. Aaron Cresswell, confined to the bench, would surely have done better, though it was half-time before Pellegrini realised this, by which time the game had gone. It was an ambitious line-up and West Ham’s players looked for opportunit­ies on the counter-attack. They did create some.

Felipe Anderson’s occasional touch and vision made life uncomforta­ble for Fabian Delph and he floated a first-half cross which Pedro Obiang could not connect with. But defensivel­y, there was paralysis and even Pellegrini, who insisted his side had not been ‘intimidate­d’, made no pretence about this. ‘We were very weak in defending the first three goals,’ he said. It was all pretty desperate for a club who have spent £100million on players and were expecting Pellegrini to deliver a little of the City factor when he walked through the door this summer. City have actually travelled a long way from the place where Pellegrini left them two and a half years ago. Their relentless intensity is borne of players’ fear that once out of the team, they may not get back in a hurry.

They had scored 11 goals here in three previous visits and needed only 10 minutes to improve the tally.

Sterling was the provider. His cross, after fastening onto Kyle Walker’s driving pass down the right, was deflected into the path of David Silva. No defender moved to prevent his clever flick past the advancing Fabianski.

The script was painfully similar when Sane whipped comfortabl­y past Pablo Zabaleta to set up the second eight minutes later, laying a square cross for Sterling who was in the six-yard box to tap in, cour-

 ??  ?? QUICK SILVA: David Silva slots in City’s first and (right) celebrates with Sterling
QUICK SILVA: David Silva slots in City’s first and (right) celebrates with Sterling

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