Man of the match, Kevin de Bruyne scored
his first
goal of the season, assisted City's second and came
closest to
breaking the second-half deadlock
|
Pep Guardiola emerged victorious from his
first Premier League battle with old adversary Jose Mourinho as Manchester City
secured a fully deserved win in a frantic Old Trafford derby.
Kevin de Bruyne's cool finish and
KelechiIheanacho's tap-in after the Belgian hit the post put City in complete
control as they outclassed Mourinho's Manchester United for most of the opening
45 minutes.
United
were handed a lifeline just before the break when City's debutant keeper
Claudio Bravo summed up his desperately uncertain display by dropping a
free-kick to allow ZlatanIbrahimovic to pull a goal back.
They
mounted an aerial siege in front of the Stretford End but City held firm to
maintain their position at the top of the table, coming closest to scoring when
De Bruyne struck an upright from Leroy Sane's pass.
The
long-time rivalry - and acrimony - between former Real Madrid manager Mourinho
and ex-Barcelona boss Guardiola meant this fixture was ringed on the calendar
from the moment it was announced.
A
truce was called in the build-up to the game as Guardiola announced he would
accept an invitation for a post-match glass of wine with Mourinho and there was
an embrace when they met before kick-off.
And
when the game started, Guardiola stalked his technical area, micro-managing every
moment of City's approach, while Mourinho crouched and made notes as the game
progressed.
The
Spaniard will have been delighted to see such early superiority, a magnificent
first 40 minutes of clinical passing and movement leaving United's midfield, including
£89m world record buy Paul Pogba, as virtual passengers.
It was only that moment of indecision from
Bravo that disrupted City - and Guardiola's congratulations for his players at
the end were also an expression of delight for their resilience when the going
got tough late on.
He
showed his willingness to shore things up when he sent on Fernandinho for
Iheanacho - but it was not such a good day for Mourinho.
The Portuguese gave summer signing
HenrikhMkhitaryan his first start in an unfamiliar right flank role and it was
no surprise when he was replaced by Marcus Rashford after a nightmare first
half.
Mourinho
also brought on Ander Herrera for Jesse Lingard for the second half but City
survived an improved United showing to maintain their flawless start to the
season.
This
was exactly how Pep Guardiola would have wanted it - a crucial victory that
keeps Manchester City top of the Premier League table and marks them down
already as the team to beat this season.
And
in that opening half, City's hierarchy were able to sit back and watch the sort
of football they had in mind when their long courting of Guardiola finally came
to fruition.
City
- without suspended striker Sergio Aguero - were simply in a different class to
Mourinho's expensively reassembled Manchester United as they overran them in
midfield, created space and chances while remaining cool under pressure.
It
was only when Bravo's ill-judged dash to claim a free-kick and subsequent poor
handling cost them a goal that they showed any signs of being unsettled.
The
33-year-old keeper was brought to Etihad Stadium in preference to Joe Hart,
whose style did not find any favour with Guardiola.
One
of Bravo's big selling points was supposedly his ability with the ball at his
feet - but here he was shaky and indecisive, twice having to launch himself
into desperate challenges on Mkhitaryan and Rooney after dawdling in
possession.
Bravo
is, however, a vastly experienced keeper whom Guardiola rates highly and so
should be given time to settle.
Jose
Mourinho is a perfect fit for Old Trafford but this was never going to be a
quick fix after the last three years of David Moyes and Louis van Gaal.
United
look more physically imposing with the addition of players like Ibrahimovic,
Pogba and defender Eric Bailly - but it is up front where he has the big
dilemma.
Ibrahimovic
is the main man but how does Mourinho fit in his array of attacking riches
around him?
The
United boss has Wayne Rooney, Marcus Rashford and Antony Martial, while he must
also work out how to utilise Juan Mata and Mkhitaryan.
This
selection looked mix and match - but Mourinho is a manager who specialises in
finding successful solutions.
Manchester
City manager Pep Guardiola: "We are happy. I think the spectators enjoyed
it because it was open until the end. First half we were better - in the second
half it was difficult. We had counter-attacks and we didn't finish.
"These guys have a heart - in the
first half we won a lot of duels against a team physically stronger. In the
second half, the long balls, you just pray because it's almost impossible to
control that."
Manchester
United manager Jose Mourinho: "The two halves were completely different.
In the first half we were below the level to play this match. You have to be
completely ready in terms of the speed of your thinking and decision-making.
"The
second half was completely different. We were a team that had the courage and
honesty and dignity to chase with pride the result which I think we deserved -
we deserved a goal in the second half."
No comments:
Post a Comment