Sergio Aguero scored twice as Manuel Pellegrini's men
roared to victory at the Etihad Stadium with a magnificent late free-kick from
Wayne Rooney scant consolation for the visitors.
Manuel Pellegrini was an emphatic winner in the battle of
the Manchester derby debutants in the dugout on Sunday, as his side ruthlessly
took apart David Moyes' reigning champions at the Etihad Stadium.
Sergio Aguero opened the scoring in impressive fashion as
he volleyed home early in the first half, before Yaya Toure forced the ball
over the line just before the break to put City firmly in the ascendency.
And, after another well-taken goal from Aguero - his
fifth in six derby appearances - Samir Nasri completed the rout with 50 minutes
gone as he sent a side-footed effort past the helpless David de Gea.
Where do you start with that? For every department in
which Manchester City excelled, their bitter rivals were equally woeful.
City were too strong for United technically, mentally,
tactically and physically and blew them away with four goals in the first 50
minutes to put the game beyond reach. It was City’s best big-match performance
in well over a year.
Aguero’s finishing was masterful for his two goals, Yaya
Toure dominated the midfield and deserved his goal, while Samir Nasri, scorer
of the fourth, was my man of the match.
United have faced a tough run of early fixtures but on
this evidence they lack the quality to even challenge to retain their Premier
League title this season. The only bright point for David Moyes after a
dreadful derby debut will be the performance of goalscorer Wayne Rooney.
But Manchester is blue today and Manuel Pellegrini’s side
have made a statement - both within this city and to the rest of the Premier
League. A late consolation goal from Wayne Rooney, which came courtesy of a
brilliant free-kick, will have done little to lighten the mood among the United
camp ahead of a midweek League Cup clash with fierce rivals Liverpool.
The absence of Robin van Persie from the visitors' squad
made headlines, with the prolific Dutchman omitted with a groin strain. And,
although United were boosted by the return of Danny Welbeck, they were faced
with the unenviable task of keeping an opposition pairing of Alvaro Negredo and
Aguero quiet at the other end.
Their chances of doing so appeared slim in the opening
exchanges, as City began with impressive fluency despite the frenetic nature of
the occasion.
And they were rewarded for their endeavour after just 16
minutes when Aguero opened the scoring with a fabulous left-footed finish from
inside the box. The Argentinian had plenty of work still to do after Aleksandar
Kolarov had picked up the ball from Nasri on the overlap before crossing, but
he controlled his volley beautifully to give the hosts the lead.
Kolarov's adventurous running from full-back caused
problems again a few moments later, as the Serbian went down in the area
following a challenge from Chris Smalling, but referee Howard Webb showed
little interest in awarding a penalty.
Despite a lack of further breakthroughs, City continued
to dominate possession, with the frustration of the visitors clearly evident
when Rooney picked up a needless booking. The England international was given
short shrift by the dominate City centre-back pairing of Matija Nastasic and
Vincent Kompany in the aftermath, and Antonio Valencia's woeful effort from the
edge of the box was the nearest United went to getting back into the game.
Their hopes of taking anything from the game were
severely dented on the stroke of half-time, as Negredo rose highest to flick on
a corner and the unmarked Toure reacted quickly to divert the ball in off his
knee from close range.
Moyes could at least take solace from the fact that the
interval offered an opportunity to disrupt City's dominance, but just two
minutes into the second half the hosts grabbed a third. Negredo was the
provider again, the Spaniard holding up the ball brilliantly under the
attentions of Nemanja Vidic in the box before turning and teeing up Aguero for
a close-range volley he could hardly miss.
And City fans already in dreamland saw their day get even
better just three minutes later, as Kompany's rampaging run from the back ended
in a lofted cross that Nasri emphatically turned home at the back post.
The hosts were happy to concede possession to United and
attack on the counter given the size of their lead, but a long-distance effort
from Marouane Fellaini, which Joe Hart easily kept out, was the best the
visitors could muster despite controlling the ball for long periods.
United's day was perhaps best summed up by a flurry of
activity in the opposition goalmouth that saw Patrice Evra hit the post and Rooney
somehow denied by the legs of Hart when his well-struck effort from inside the
box looked bound for the back of the net.
0 comments:
Post a Comment