Arsenal recover pride but City maintain title momentum

Shock Chelsea defeat and Liverpool victory sets up crunch clash at Anfield

Arsenal’s Mathieu Flamini challenges Manchester City’s David Silva as Pablo Zabaleta takes up a watching brief. Photograph: Reuters
Arsenal’s Mathieu Flamini challenges Manchester City’s David Silva as Pablo Zabaleta takes up a watching brief. Photograph: Reuters


Manchester City manager Manuel Pellegrini had an admission. "Maybe I was more worried before this week," he said as he reflected on the two away fixtures in five days that always seemed to have the potential to define his club's Premier League title challenge.

First Manchester United, then Arsenal. Never mind the former’s toils, it was still the derby at Old Trafford, while Arsenal’s nightmarish countdown to Saturday evening’s confrontation had them slavering to prove a point. Pellegrini has found the intensity of his first season in English football relentless and, as Arsenal finished strongly, he felt that peculiar combination of adrenaline and draining anxiety.

City were sloppy at times in the second half, they were on the back foot for much of it and there was the heart-in-mouth moment on the hour when, after a double ricochet, Lukas Podolski found himself in on Joe Hart from an angle on the left. It was a similar position from which Edin Dzeko had hit the post in the 18th minute and led to David Silva prodding City in front on the rebound. But this time Hart deflected the ball wide of the same upright.


Mourinho kidology
City, though, were value for the draw, largely on the back of their Silva-inspired first-half performance and, following the 3-0 win at United, Pellegrini sounded like a man whose glass was half-full. He and his players had seen Chelsea lose at Crystal Palace and heard Jose Mourinho, the kidology ninth dan, declare that Chelsea were out of a race they had never been in.

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City have simply embraced a single truth. Whatever anyone else says or does, they know that they retain control of their destiny. The trip to Liverpool on April 13th seems pivotal but Pellegrini will back his team to get what they need at Anfield and elsewhere.

“I don’t know if you think that managers that seem to play mind games are more intelligent,” said Pellegrini. “I don’t think so. It’s not my duty to respond to what Mourinho says. We can only influence what happens in the future and the important thing is to win the matches between now and the end.”

City defender Gael Clichy said: "From the first game of the season, Mourinho has been declaring the same thing. We're not surprised and . . . we know what we have to do and these kind of performances will take us to where we want to go."


City work rate
There was a steel about City that boded well for the battles ahead and they were even happy to accept yellow cards to stifle Arsenal. The first-half challenges from Yaya Toure and Vincent Kompany on the breaking Tomas Rosicky and Mikel Arteta respectively were cynical, although not as bad as Rosicky's 11th-minute dive under Pablo Zabaleta's non-challenge. Rosicky went into the book for a lunge at Clichy and he was lucky to avoid censure for a trip on Silva towards the end.

Pellegrini could be pleased at how Arsenal were restricted. Apart from Mathieu Flamini's equaliser and the Podolski chance, the home team had little of clear-cut note to show for their second-half revival. Silva is ever capable of making the difference and Pellegrini still has Sergio Aguero to return from injury.

Arsenal will surely not win the title now and the statistics show they have taken only nine points from the last eight matches. But after the 6-0 loss at Chelsea and the morale-sapping nature of the 2-2 home draw with Swansea City there was courage from the players here, not least in demanding the ball when they trailed, and the crowd responded.

Mercifully, this was not an occasion when the future of Arsene Wenger came in for scrutiny. "We have gone through an absolute nightmare, we have gone through a storm [since Chelsea]," said Wenger. "It has been very, very bad and . . . the only way you can deal with it is to respond on the pitch like we did.

"It's a real courage still to . . . want the ball when your confidence is not there. [Michel] Platini once told me: 'With the French national team, for the first 20 minutes, everyone gives me the ball. When we are 3-0 up, nobody gives me the ball any more.' I am very proud of my players."
Guardian Service