Sunday Tribune

Pep’s men back on top

Gabriel’s brace key to City sinking Everton

- REUTERS Yesterday: Today:

GABRIEL Jesus scored twice as Manchester City beat Everton 3-1 at The Etihad Stadium yesterday to pile the pressure on Premier League title rivals Liverpool, who host Manchester United today.

The win takes Pep Guardiola’s side, who lost for the first time in the league this season with a 2-0 loss at Chelsea last week, back to the top with a twopoint advantage over Liverpool.

It was not a vintage performanc­e but City avoided a second straight slip-up, silencing any suggestion that they may be about to stutter in their title defence. “The players responded in a marvellous way. Everton have top players and today was tricky, a dangerous, dangerous game,” said Guardiola.

It is two years since City lost consecutiv­e league games, and they have never gone successive league matches without scoring under the Spaniard.

A midweek win over Hoffenheim in the Champions League should have dealt with any lingering hangover from the Stamford Bridge defeat but City started poorly yesterday.

Their passing was unusually imprecise, the movement a little disjointed and Everton, set up for a counter-attacking game, should have taken the lead in the 15th minute when Lucas Digne skinned City fullback Kyle Walker and curled in a cross from the left but Richarliso­n’s attempted volley was off target.

Seven minutes later and City showed that even when they are offrhythm they can still punish any sloppiness. A poor clearance from Yerry Mina, Everton’s Colombia defender, gifted City possession and Leroy Sane, chosen ahead of Raheem Sterling, slipped in Jesus who confidentl­y slotted past Jordan Pickford.

As so often at the Etihad the opening goal changed the match with Everton on the back foot from then on.

“Until the moment they scored the game was what we expected – we were blocking them and they didn’t create one chance,” said Everton manager Marco Silva. “The biggest chance was our chance with Richarliso­n. Against these teams we have to be effective when we create opportunit­ies to score.

“We made a mistake with the first goal. They scored and after that they were more comfortabl­e,” he said.

Sane was the creator again when Jesus doubled City’s lead five minutes after the break, with a header from a pinpoint cross by the Germany winger.

Silva was disappoint­ed that, despite playing with three central defenders, Jesus was left unchalleng­ed to convert a goal that put City in firm control.

Everton showed some resilience though, fighting back with a fine header from Dominic Calvert-lewin in the 65th but the hosts restored a two-goal cushion when substitute Sterling was left unmarked to head in a Fernandinh­o cross with his first touch.

City have won their last 10 home league matches scoring a total of 36 goals and Guardiola, while aware of his team’s slow start, was pleased with the reaction to the Chelsea defeat: “It was a tricky game with less than three days recovery after a Champions League game and it was in our minds we were going to suffer today and we did,” added Guardiola.

“But we have fantastic players and they made a fantastic effort.”

AT A GLANCE

Man City 3, Everton 1; Palace 1, Leicester 0; Huddersfie­ld 0, Newcastle 1; Tottenham 1, Burnley 0; Watford 3, Cardiff 2; Wolves 2, Bournemout­h 0; Fulham v West Ham United

Brighton v Chelsea; Southampto­n v Arsenal (both 3.30pm SA time); Liverpool v Man Utd (6pm)

 ??  ?? MANCHESTER City’s Gabriel Jesus scores their second goal |
MANCHESTER City’s Gabriel Jesus scores their second goal |

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