The Citizen (KZN)

Kevin blow leaves void

BIG LONDON DERBY: EMERY, SARRI ON COLLISION COURSE

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London – Kevin De Bruyne (above) will be hard to replace, said Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola after it was announced the Belgian would be out of action for three months because of a knee injury.

The 27-year-old midfielder – who scored eight goals and provided 16 assists as City romped to the Premier League title last season – will not have to undergo surgery on the injury which he suffered in training on Wednesday. But his recovery will mean he misses the Premier League clash with the team many think will be City’s main title rivals, Liverpool, on October 7 and the Manchester derby on November 11, as well as part of the Champions League group stage.

“For Kevin and his family it’s hard, but we accept it,” said Guardiola.

“Human beings have a limit and these things happen. He will be a big miss.

“It is not easy to replace Kevin. We are going to try and do our best without him and try to be there by the time he returns.

“We will support him and my advice to him is to rest and take the holiday he didn’t get this summer.

“When he is ready ... we will welcome him with open arms.”

Earlier, City had revealed De Bruyne had suffered a “lateral collateral ligament lesion in his right knee”, after the player had undergone a scan.

De Bruyne, who enjoyed a superb World Cup as Belgium reached the semifinals, suffered a similar injury in a league game with Everton in January 2016, which kept him out of the team for two months.

He came on for half an hour in the 2-0 opening Premier League victory over Arsenal last Sunday.

While Guardiola said he would be hard to replace, City have more depth than most thanks to their Abu Dhabi owners spending generously on players.

No De Bruyne, but Huddersfie­ld unlikely to trouble Pep’s City.

Chelsea and Arsenal’s new regimes under Maurizio Sarri and Unai Emery got off to contrastin­g Premier League starts, but today’s clash between the two will provide a truer test of where the London rivals stand.

Failure to qualify for this season’s Champions League provoked big changes at both clubs.

But while Chelsea are used to the upheaval of managers coming and going under Roman Abramovich, Arsenal are still settling into Emery’s new era after 22 years with Arsene Wenger in charge.

The early signs suggest it will take Emery time to stem years of decline towards the end of Wenger’s reign.

However, the Spaniard had the misfortune to face champions Manchester City on his Premier League debut as Arsenal were outclassed in a 2-0 defeat on home soil last weekend.

But, despite a disrupted pre-season due to Sarri’s late arrival to replace Antonio Conte, the departure of Thibaut Courtois and speculatio­n over a host of other key players, Chelsea were too good for Huddersfie­ld in a 3-0 win last Saturday.

There were already clear hallmarks of Sarri’s influence as Jorginho, who followed his boss from Napoli to Chelsea in the summer, controlled the midfield.

Chelsea are likely to be even stronger this weekend as Eden Hazard could return to the starting line-up after he shone in a 15-minute cameo at Huddersfie­ld following his World Cup exertions with Belgium.

City’s victory at Arsenal without ever hitting top gear last weekend was ominous for the challenger­s trying to stop Pep Guardiola’s men becoming the first side in a decade to retain the title.

But City were dealt a huge blow when Kevin de Bruyne suffered a serious knee injury in training on Wednesday. The club confirmed yesterday the Belgian will be sidelined for three months.

If any squad is equipped to deal without a world-class talent like De Bruyne, it is probably the one at Guardiola’s disposal.

Bernardo Silva starred against Arsenal and Chelsea in the Community Shield from a more central role with new signing Riyad Mahrez starting on the right.

David Silva is yet to play a minute this season and 18-year-old Phil Foden has been tipped to be given his chance in De Bruyne’s absence.

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 ?? Pictures: Getty Images ?? THE NEW BOYS. Arsenal manager Unai Emery (left) and Chelsea counterpar­t Maurizio Sarri face off for the first time in the Premier League today.
Pictures: Getty Images THE NEW BOYS. Arsenal manager Unai Emery (left) and Chelsea counterpar­t Maurizio Sarri face off for the first time in the Premier League today.

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