‘He did not believe, now he can’

01 Dec, 2017 - 00:12 0 Views
‘He did not believe, now he can’

The ManicaPost

MANCHESTER City manager Pep Guardiola says Raheem Sterling’s new self-belief is behind his brilliant form after seeing him sink Southampton with a 96th-minute winner. Sterling’s 13th goal of the season gave City a club-record 12th successive Premier League victory which restores their eight-point lead at the top of the table.

Sterling had scored decisive late goals in City’s previous two wins, over Feyenoord and Huddersfield, but his third strike of the week was his most dramatic of the lot, and sparked wild celebrations from City boss Pep Guardiola and his bench.

“Raheem is a match-winner, it was a fantastic goal, I am so happy for him,” Guardiola said.

“As I have said many times, he is making steps. Before he was a little bit more shy and he did not believe, but now he can do that.

“I think his team-mates give him the confidence and say ‘we trust in you’ but then you have to have the personality to do what he did in the last minute.”

The referee Paul Tierney spoke to Guardiola to calm him down before play restarted and the City boss admitted he lost control of his emotions.

“I apologised, I could not control it,” he added. “I was so happy like all the fans and all the players. I wanted to run behind ‘Ras’, but I am not fast enough. We are so happy.”

Among the City players and staff who tried to catch Sterling as he ran the length of the pitch to celebrate his goal was Benjamin Mendy, who is sidelined until spring with a anterior cruciate ligament injury.

“Mendy is crazy,” Guardiola said with a smile. “He has a six-month injury, and he is running. Disaster!” City had taken the lead at the start of the second half when Saints defender Virgil van Dijk got the final touch on Kevin de Bruyne’s free-kick.

But it appeared Saints got their reward for a determined display when Oriol Romeu swept home Sofiane Boufal’s pull-back with 15 minutes remaining. Sterling, who is enjoying the most prolific season of his career, had other ideas.

He had already seen a goal disallowed for a foul on Saints keeper Fraser Forster moments earlier, but was not to be denied – cutting in from the left, exchanging passes with De Bruyne and bending the ball past Fraser Forster.

Guardiola’s side had already made the most successful start in Premier League history, with 37 points from their first 13 games. This win saw them become the first side to reach 40 points from 14 games, and maintains the advantage of eight points over Manchester United that they had at the start of the week.

Earlier this month, Guardiola said he could not play Sergio Aguero and Gabriel Jesus together without the width of Mendy on the left.

With Mendy a long-term absentee and Sane not fit enough to make the squad, Guardiola asked Jesus to fill in on the left against Saints, with Aguero in the middle. David Silva, who so often sets the tempo for City’s attacks, began the game on the bench and it all left City looking less than fluid going forward.

They struggled to break down a Southampton side that put 11 men behind the ball and although they still created enough chances to keep Forster busy, many of their efforts were from distance and easily saved. Even after Van Dijk had sliced into his own net, City rarely looked like making the game safe, with misplaced passes bringing groans of frustration from their fans.

Forster’s best save of the night saw him deny Jesus after Aguero sent him running clear but, for the third time in a week, City were grateful to Sterling for turning an unconvincing performance into a victory. – BBCSPORT

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