Monday, 12 March 2018

Manchester City: Dominance and possession mean nothing without winning


Pep Guardiola teams dominate opponents on the pitch. Starving the opponent is a cardinal rule in Pep's tiki-taka bible. From Barcelona to Bayern Munich and now Manchester City, it’s a well-established pattern.
Fortunately for the Catalan, his City side has been scoring goals aplenty. But the team has also suffered dire consequences when failing to score in matches. Even when dominating the opponent. Case in point, the painful defeat to Wigan that crashed the Sky Blues out of the FA Cup. 
Just as when they win, City has bossed possession in every defeat. From the surprise Champions League loss to Shakhtar Donetsk and the 2-1 defeat at the Etihad Stadium to Basel, it’s been that way. Heavy on the ball, dictate the match, but light on the goals. City did score three against Liverpool. That match was the exception, where they simply didn't keep the ball out of their own net.
After the match against Basel, a headline in The Sun read:
Manchester City shatter the Champions League passing record… Pep Guardiola’s men attempted an outrageous 1,058 passes in the 2-1 loss at home to Basel, completing 978.
Why is this celebrated? A child's guinea pig can rotate the wheel in its cage 978 times and still go nowhere. Personally, I’ll take a 2-1 win over a passing record all day long. So would Jose Mourinho.
The most important statistic at the end of the day remains the scoreline. Maybe that is the last part of their game City must improve. Ball possession helps but it does not decide games. Only goals do.
The Citizens can learn a thing or two from post-Pep Barcelona. No side in world football dominates games more than the Catalans. It was said Guardiola's Barcelona would pass a team to sleep on the pitch. That hasn't changed. It’s in the club's DNA to boss the ball.
Barca does not stop there, however. It delivers the killer blow. That is what made the Messi, Suarez, and Neymar partnership world famous. MSN was known for their goals. The trio scored 180 goals in a single calendar year. That killer instinct delivered five trophies. City has already let a trophy slip out of its reach by failing to score a single goal against Wigan. It’s not the Barcelona way. For the Blaugrana, scoring is very much a part of the game; winning, the reason for it.


Pep Guardiola in his usual manner has tried to talk down his team by claiming that Man City is not yet at the level of Barcelona and Real Madrid. This may just be a ploy to deflect attention and pressure away from his side. But the fact remains that the City hierarchy is not paying money for top-class talent only to play second fiddle to European rivals. The club wants to compete with the best on an equal basis.
That’s not to say the club has the same experience Barca and Real have. Don't be silly. But that’s the reason Guardiola was recruited. He’s been there and done it; has the t-shirt.
Manchester City did not sack Robert Mancini and Manuel Pellegrini for failing to win trophies. Each of them won the Premier League title and other domestic trophies in their time. But the Champions League eluded them. That’s Guardiola’s biggest task in Manchester, arguably his only one. A failure to win the Champions League will mean City has made little progress since sacking Pellegrini. 
Jose Mourinho may not play the most beautiful football but he trumps Guardiola on trophies won. He did it last season, winning three while his nemesis went empty-handed. Pep has pegged one back this season, but just as with Mancini and Pellegrini, the League Cup falls into the 'other trophies' category. He must pip Mourinho to another Champions League title.
The Basel loss should be lesson enough for Guardiola and City as a club. If it isn't, City will fall short of winning the Champions League again. All the possession in the world won't matter then.
Read more: http://www.itsroundanditswhite.co.uk/articles/manchester-city-dominance-possession-mean-nothing-without-winning

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