The New Zealand Herald

Spur of moment Son of gun

Mason stonewalls Saints at death as Manchester City also find some Pep

-

Atough week for Manchester City and Tottenham, two of the rebel clubs in the aborted Super League project, got even more difficult when they fell behind on their return to Premier League football action yesterday.

However, both teams recovered to register vital wins and leave them in good spirits for their next match — their meeting at Wembley Stadium for the English League Cup final on Monday.

City fought back from conceding a goal after just 20 seconds to beat Aston Villa 2-1 and move 11 points clear in their march to a third league title in four years. A maximum of eight points are needed by Pep Guardiola’s team from their final five games.

Each side had a man sent off at Villa Park, with City defender John Stones’ straight red card for a reckless lunge late in the first half ruling him out for three matches — starting with the Cup final.

With City losing to Leeds in their last league game and second-place Manchester United winning their last five league games, the gap between the local rivals was down to eight points.

“Losing [to Aston Villa] would have been dangerous in the last games, for sure,” Guardiola said. “United are in top form and I have the feeling if they need to win, they are going to win.”

City were also coming off a loss to Chelsea in the FA Cup semifinals, ruining their bid for an unpreceden­ted quadruple, so Guardiola knew the importance of the Villa match and fielded his strongest available team.

Phil Foden stood out, the 20-yearold England forward cancelling out John McGinn’s opener for Villa by scoring the equaliser with a volley at the end of a flowing team move involving Riyad Mahrez and Bernardo Silva.

Rodri glanced in Bernardo’s deft cross for what proved to be the winner in the 40th.

Stones’ red card, for a late and high lunge on Jacob Ramsey, left City vulnerable but Matty Cash picked up two yellow cards in a three-minute span — both for fouls on Foden — to make it a 10-a-side game from the 57th.

“He has been decisive in the final third and he’s playing so good,” Guardiola said of Foden. “Right now he’s a really important player for us.”

Guardiola said the injury Kevin De Bruyne sustained against Chelsea was “less than expected” and that the midfielder could make the Cup final.

Tottenham needed a 90th-minute penalty from Son Heung-min to clinch a 2-1 victory over Southampto­n and close to within two points of fourth-place Chelsea in the race for Champions League qualificat­ion.

It was a great way for Ryan Mason to start his interim tenure as manager, as the replacemen­t for the fired Jose Mourinho. At 29 years, 312 days, Mason became the youngest person to manage a team in a Premier League game, a proud moment for the former Tottenham midfielder who was forced to retire in 2018 after failing to fully recover from a fractured skull suffered during an FA Cup match.

Tottenham climbed into sixth place with the win over Southampto­n and the fight for the two Champions League qualificat­ion places behind City and United looks fierce. Just three points separate Leicester in third from Liverpool in seventh.

Mason’s decision to recall Gareth Bale for his first start in more than a month was rewarded when the Wales forward equalised with a curling shot into the top corner in the 60th, cancelling out the opener by Danny Ings in the 30th. Son had a goal disallowed because of an offside against teammate Lucas Moura, before handed a chance to win the game from the penalty spot after Sergio Reguilon was fouled just inside the area, thanks to a VAR check.

Son sent the goalkeeper the wrong way.

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? Tottenham’s Son Heung-min celebrates with Sergio Reguilon after scoring from the penalty spot yesterday.
Photo / Getty Images Tottenham’s Son Heung-min celebrates with Sergio Reguilon after scoring from the penalty spot yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand