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City 3 - 2 Tottenham: Five Thoughts

MANCHESTER, ENGLAND - JANUARY 22:  David Silva of Manchester City tangles with Luka Modric of Tottenham Hotspur during the Barclays Premier League match between Manchester City and Tottenham Hotspur at the Etihad Stadium on January 22, 2012 in Manchester, England.  (Photo by Alex Livesey/Getty Images)

On such days can title bids be made. The old adage of grinding out wins when not quite at your best is often bandied around, but perhaps as telling (if not important) is to come away with the points from a game that should have been won, was thrown away and almost lost before snatching a late winner out of nowhere and rescuing points that in the context of the day (with United subsequently winning) that could provide so important.

Whilst an injury time winner will always be tinged with fortune - added to this Jermain Defoe's miss a matter of minutes earlier - it was a game City contrived to throw away, ceding both advantage and momentum to Tottenham with Stefan Savic's mis-placed header that allowed Defoe to stop them in their tracks when they appeared to be completely dominating. So far at The Etihad Stadium City have swept all before them: 10 wins from 10 games, 31 goals scored and only four conceded heading into the game, but this was a Tottenham side that would not be fazed by the reputation City have forged, nor be cowed as some visiting teams have been. It was a remarkable second half to a game that promised much but delivered little over the first forty-five minutes before a moment of David Silva quality sparked the game into life that saw City go two goals ahead, only to be stunned as Tottenham draw level - all within the space of ten minutes at the start of the second half.

Star-divide

Since he de-camped to the African Cup of Nations, City's midfield has had a Yaya Toure-sized hole through it but today was possibly the midfields best performance in his absence. When the teams were announced I wondered if Nigel de Jong may have got the start - to counter the effect of van der Vaart and Bale (cutting inside) - but the two partnerships of two midfielders worked well amidst the pressure put on them but a Tottenham attacking that was constantly threatening. James Milner in particular (he, rather than Barry playing the more restrictive 'de Jong' role) deservedly took the man of the match award; dynamic, tenacious and obstinate in equal measure, restricting Tottenham in the main to long range shots and allowing the creative talents of David Silva and Samir Nasri to thrive. Silva, off colour of late and troubled with an ankle injury, showed a welcome return to form, whilst Nasri was as industrious and creative as he has been since he shone at White Hart Lane in the earlier game between the two sides.

Whilst Tottenham were a constant threat, the tempo and tone of their play being set by Gareth Bale, it was clear that despite his willingness to work Jermain Defoe was not able to fill the sizeable presence of Emmanuel Adebayor. Although short of goals in recent weeks, his size and ability to link with van der Vaart and Modric was a big miss for a side who attempted 50% more long balls (66 to 42) than their opponents and whose game is based on quick breaks and catching opponents out. For the most part - aided by the duo of Barry and Milner - both Joleon Lescott, a commanding presence in Vincent Kompany's absence, and Stefan Savic (prior to his misjudgement at least) held Tottenham at bay.

Inevitably perhaps, for a game that had so many talking points, it would be Mario Balotelli that would steal both the limelight and the headlines. Having only been introduced into the fray with only twenty-five minutes remaining, the Italian picked up a yellow card (that appeared to be based largely on reputation) before appearing to kick out at Scott Parker following a challenge. Replays, whilst indicating guilt on his part, may well not be conclusive enough for retrospective action but he could well face an inopportune four game ban. Not content though with potentially grabbing the headlines, he then made sure the story was all about him when after being fouled by Ledley King in the final minute of injury-time before calmly stroking the spot kick home to give City what could be a decisive victory.

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Robbed

Fellow fans, now I’ve eventually calmed down at the woeful decisions by a certain Mr H Webb, it leads me to conclude that there is such a long way to go this season that anything is yet possible.
We at Spurs have many things in common with City, we both like to play entertaining, attacking football, our most despised rivals both wear red & we are both looking to upset the premier league apple cart.
Yet, I feel so proud of the display from Spurs today. We gave you a proper run for ALL your money & on reflection I’d obviously think we deserved the 3 points. Lescott should have been off & as for Balotelli, he is just a hooligan, he will get his. Nothing short of disgraceful.
Great game though & as I said to my 2 sons who were proper upset at losing like that, that’s why football is the best game in the world. Its not over yet.
Come on you spurs………..

by COYS27 on Jan 22, 2012 10:24 PM GMT reply actions  

Fair play, COYS27

We City fans know all too well about being on the business end of a referee’s decision or non-decision as the case may be. Tell your two boys that Tottenham looks very good a top 3 position and I’ll be very interested to see what your Spurs do against United. On that day, we are all Spurs fans.

All the best…

by SufferingBruin on Jan 22, 2012 10:29 PM GMT up reply actions  

SufferingBruin

Thanks mate, nice response. Me & my boys will be at the lane for the match. To be honest if we get top 3 i’ll be very happy. We’ve some tough away games coming up plus Man u at home so i just hope our displays are as positive as can be. Good luck !!

by COYS27 on Jan 22, 2012 10:35 PM GMT up reply actions  

It's pretty ugly

Over at soccernet, all of the reporters (Martin, Jolly, et. al.) are claiming Balotelli should have been tossed. Additionally, a number of people are claiming that the FA might suspend both Balotelli and Lescott retroactively.

You know what? If Mario and Joleon get suspended, I won’t be surprised. Angry, bitter and deeply concerned, yes, but not surprised.

by SufferingBruin on Jan 23, 2012 4:24 AM GMT up reply actions  

soccernet?

dont beleive anything on that website.
It is like reading the national inquierer everyday they post another stupid rumor.
until the fa comfirms something dont get to worked up.

especially since the fa has had a history of not giving suspensions unless the ref saw the play.

by realfootballer on Jan 23, 2012 5:04 AM GMT up reply actions  

I don't get the argument for the Lescott case.

That wasn’t intentional. Anyone who thinks that Lescott honestly wanted to hit Kaboul in the face with his elbow in the middle of a game like this is just stupid.

Big players make big plays

by sonics097 on Jan 23, 2012 5:28 AM GMT up reply actions  

Why would Balotelli want to do what he did?

Most of the stupidity soccer players engage in on the pitch is madness. It’s not like they sit back and think it out rationally before acting.

by Joamiq on Jan 25, 2012 8:49 PM GMT up reply actions  

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