Newcastle’s stifling tactics no match for Manchester City’s attacking intent | Jacob Steinberg


Pep Guardiola’s team may have claimed victory by just one goal but the gulf in class between the two sides at St James’s Park was still palpably huge

After five seconds, Jonjo Shelvey tried to score from near the halfway line. Ederson saved the Newcastle United midfielder’s ambitious effort with ease, however, and so it began, with Manchester City’s goalkeeper having to wait another 14 minutes before touching the ball again. One of his team-mates had passed it back to him, presumably just to make sure that the Brazilian had not nipped to the away dressing room to check the sound system.

The home fans had a different view, sensing that a minor victory had been achieved, urging their rattled players to keep pressing and running and hassling the Premier League’s dominant force. City, however, simply kept playing their enchanting football throughout their 1-0 victory at St James’s Park, pushing the home side back so much that at times Newcastle were in danger of retreating into the back rows of the Gallowgate end. It spoke volumes that Pep Guardiola’s response to seeing Vincent Kompany pull up with a calf injury in the 11th minute was to replace the centre-back with another attacker.

Related: Raheem Sterling strikes again to give Manchester City win No18 at Newcastle

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