AK's 'foots-a-heaven'
By Dave Walker
Serbian hitman Aleksander Kolarov’s lethal left
foot weapon fired champions Manchester City up to second place in the Premier
League in a display of precision shooting.
Kolarov celebrates after opening the scoring Photo: Alex Livesey/Getty Images Europe |
All action Kolarov dispelled the ubiquitous
notion that the reigning English Champions have somehow lost their way, as City
annihilated previously unbeaten Sunderland.
The three goal margin in no way reflected
City’s total domination.
8-0 would not have flattered Roberto’s
resurgent troops as they put Martin O’Neil’s Mackems firmly in their place
after the Wearsiders had the temerity to take four points off Mancini’s men
last season.
Goals from Kolarov, Sergio Aguero and James
Milner could so easily have been supplemented by an exquisite bar-hitting David
Silva chip shot, two headers from a masterful Micah Richards and a tap in from
Pablo Zabaleta if he was one shoe size bigger.
The ever elusive shutout at the other end
of the field was finally achieved, the irony being that Mancini’s preferred
centre back pairing of Vincent Kompany and Matija Nastasic were missing through
injury.
Instead, it was a combination of Joleon
Lescott and Richards – as English as fish & chips – aided by the superb
‘Zabba’ and Kolarov, who helped give Joe
Hart a virtual day off after his midweek heroics against Borussia Dortmund.
City’s superb day in the October sunshine
was off to a flyer as early as the fifth minute, when the irrepressible Carlos
Tevez was hacked down by Carlos Cuellar on the edge of the Sunderland penalty
box.
Kolarov – the Serb with the sweetest left
foot in the Premier League – brushed aside the protestations of Mario
Balotelli, claimed the free kick and duly dispatched a killer shot over the
defensive wall and beyond keeper Simon Mignolet.
Be it either dead ball situations or
crossing the ball at pace, Kolarov has a better delivery than Postman Pat, and
his Man of the Match award was richly deserved.
This was his third goal of the season for
City – in addition to one on international duty – and he is clearly a potent
weapon in Mancini’s armoury.
With seven changes from the chastening
against Dortmund, City seemed somehow rejuvenated, with the willingness to work
harder, chase back and close opponents down, much in evidence.
Mancini said he would fix ‘the problem’ and
on this performance he has, albeit Sunderland were not a patch on the
Bundesliga champions.
The only criticism of this scintillating City
showing was that they could – and should – have scored more, but that had more
to do with Mignolet’s brilliance than Manchester profligacy.
Yaya Toure lashed a stinging shot at the
Belgian keeper after a sublime Silva back heel, ‘Merlin’ Silva lobbed the ball
against the bar from 25 yards after terrier-like Tevez set up the opportunity
and Richards had a shot headed off the line.
The goals, when they did come, were pretty
tasty.
Aguero scores after only just coming off the bench Photo: Alex Livesey/Getty Images Europe |
Kolarov whizzed a cross from the left flank
and, quick as a flash, Aguero lashed his shot past Mignolet from seven yards
out to score his 17th goal in his last 19 league appearances at the
Etihad. He’d only been on the field for four minutes after replacing the
subdued and sadly, surly, Balotelli.
Three minutes from time and it was Kolarov
again – this time as the architect of City’s third goal. He was taken down on
the edge of the Sunderland box, to set up Milner’s curling free kick which
zipped over the defensive wall and deflected beyond Mignolet.
This was City back in top gear. Silva was
bright and inventive, Richards a revelation in his comeback match with Milner
and Gareth Barry indefatigable and composed throughout.
It’s now 13 league games undefeated, 31
wins and 3 draws in the last 34 PL fixtures at the Etihad and a pristine first
clean sheet of the season – yes Manchester City are definitely a team in
crisis!
If the start of the season has been City’s
‘blip’ then heaven help the rest of the Premier League if they are emerging
from these alleged troubled times.
(c) The Sky Blue View 2012
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