The Citizen (KZN)

Pep warning as City crash

MANAGER CALLS ON HIS PLAYERS NOT TO SHOW COMPLACENC­Y Liverpool put it all together to stun the rampant leaders.

- London

Pep Guardiola has challenged his Manchester City stars to use their dramatic 4-3 defeat at Liverpool as a warning to guard against complacenc­y. Guardiola’s side saw their 30-match unbeaten run in the Premier League come to a stunning end at Anfield on Sunday.

The leaders fell behind to Alex Oxlade-Chamberlai­n’s early opener and although Leroy Sane equalised before half-time, City were blown away by three goals in nine second-half minutes from Roberto Firmino, Sadio Mane and Mohamed Salah.

Although late goals from Bernardo Silva and Ilkay Gundogan put a flattering gloss on the scoresheet, Guardiola had no complaints about his side’s first league defeat since April 5 at Chelsea.

It was City’s first domestic defeat since an FA Cup semifinal against Arsenal on April 23.

Conceding that all the talk of City winning the title at a canter and possibly going unbeaten throughout the entire season made it hard to keep his players motivated, the Spaniard said: “In every press conference for the last few months you have said that the Premier League is done.

“I always said no. It’s so difficult to maintain this run, especially against good teams like Liverpool.

“Football is an unpredicta­ble game. We have to fight until the end to win the league.”

Guardiola admitted City had lost their composure in the second half after being rattled by Liverpool’s relentless pressing and the ferocious Anfield atmosphere.

“We lost a lot of balls. Liverpool are so aggressive without the ball and we had little bit of a problem to control that,” he said.

“We started the second half good until the goal from Firmino. After that we lost our control and we become involved in the environmen­t at Anfield.”

Although City stuttered, they remain firm title favourites.

Guardiola, who will be without defender Fabian Delph for several weeks after his first-half injury, believes City will use their Anfield frustratio­n to bounce back in their next game against Newcastle.

“Now we must be positive, analyse why we lost and look to the game against Newcastle,” said Guardiola.

For Liverpool boss Juergen Klopp the victory was a cathartic moment after City thrashed his team 5-0 earlier this season.

It was also significan­t because it proved Liverpool can still thrive without Brazil forward Philippe Coutinho, who got his wish to join Barcelona earlier this month.

“To score four in the week after Phil Coutinho leaves the club is a very big statement,” Klopp said.

“It’s not like we held a meeting and said ‘guys, can you win today because then no-one will talk about Phil’.

“But of course it was important to show it’s possible to play well without him.”

Klopp believes the game – undoubtedl­y one of the best in England this term – showed the need to be fearless when facing a team of City’s class.

“They are so strong but I really think we deserved it.

“You can sit in your box and hope they don’t score but that’s not really likely.

“We are Liverpool, so we shouldn’t play that way. We have to attack. There is no alternativ­e against City.” – AFP

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? DESOLATE. Manchester City’s players show their disappoint­ment at Anfield on Sunday after suffering their first domestic loss in over nine months.
Picture: AFP DESOLATE. Manchester City’s players show their disappoint­ment at Anfield on Sunday after suffering their first domestic loss in over nine months.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa