The Korea Times

VAR controvers­y hides chasm between Man City, Spurs

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MANCHESTER, United Kingdom (AFP) — “I am in love with VAR,” joked Tottenham manager Mauricio Pochettino after his side escaped with a 2-2 draw at Manchester City thanks to Gabriel Jesus’s late winner for the Premier League champions being ruled out on review.

Yet, the scoreline masked the fact that Spurs, despite reaching the Champions League final last season and breaking the club’s transfer record for French midfielder Tanguy Ndombele, still look well off potential challenger­s to City’s throne as champions.

Mauricio Pochettino’s men finished 27 points behind City last season, on Saturday 27 was the difference in the shot count as Tottenham mustered three to the hosts’ 30.

City will bemoan their luck and lacklustre defending that allowed Erik Lamela and Lucas Moura to cancel out goals from Raheem Sterling and Sergio Aguero with Spurs’ only two efforts on target.

However, there was no evidence in the performanc­e of a slipping of standards after winning the first domestic treble of trophies English football had ever seen last season.

“When the people say: ‘you can do better’ better than this I don’t know if it is possible,” said a proud City manager Pep Guardiola.

“We played incredible. The best game we have played in our time together, it was so good. We played good, but we could not win.

“If we continue to play in that way we won’t have regrets and that is the most important thing.”

City were pushed all the way last season by a Liverpool side who recorded the third highest points tally in English football history with 97 and yet still could not topple Guardiola’s men for the title.

The European champions have started the Premier League season with two wins to take an early twopoint lead over the champions and are clearly the most likely challenger­s to prevent City a hat-trick of titles.

However, if anything Guardiola’s men look stronger last season with Kevin de Bruyne restored to full fitness, while Spanish internatio­nal Rodri was slotted seamlessly into midfield.

“We have to be proud because to play at this level against a team like Tottenham is really good for the rest of the season,” said De Bruyne, who set up both City goals.

“It’s always more difficult in a big game but we almost totally dominated them.”

Hopes that Tottenham could kick on after a season in which they eliminated City in dramatic fashion to reach the club’s first ever Champions League final and moved into a new 62,000 capacity stadium to mount a title bid look fragile.

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