Paul Pogba spoiled Manchester City’s anticipated Premier
League title party by scoring twice in two minutes as Manchester United
came from 2-0 down to win a thrilling derby 3-2 on Saturday.
Chris
Smalling completed the comeback that looked so improbable when City
were well on course to round off a resounding march towards the title by
racing into a 2-0 first-half lead.
Goals from captain Vincent
Kompany and Ilkay Gundogan put the hosts in a commanding position, who
were left to rue huge missed chances from Raheem Sterling to extend
their lead.
City manager Pep Guardiola added more spice to an
already hotly-anticipated clash when he claimed on Friday he had been
offered the chance to buy Pogba two months ago by the player’s agent
Mino Raiola.
Pogba has endured a desperately disappointing season having often been dropped by Jose Mourinho for United’s biggest games.
But
after so much criticism, Pogba showed why he was the world’s most
expensive player when United splashed out £89 million to bring him back
to the club from Juventus in 2016 by hauling United back into a game
that looked lost at half-time.
Guardiola kept his pre-match
promise to prioritise Tuesday’s Champions League quarter-final second
leg against Liverpool with City needing to overturn a 3-0 first leg
deficit.
Kevin de Bruyne, a leading candidate for player of the
year awards, was left on the bench alongside Gabriel Jesus and City’s
all-time top goalscorer Sergio Aguero.
Guardiola and Mourinho have
a long-running rivalry dating back to their time in charge of Barcelona
and Real Madrid respectively.
And the game quickly settled into
the usual pattern when the two face off with City dominating possession
and United happy to get plenty of men behind the ball.
Yet, for
all City’s possession, just like when City won 2-1 at Old Trafford in
December, it was from a set-piece that United were undone.
City’s
Abu-Dhabi owners have splashed an estimated 878 million euros over the
past decade to assemble a squad that has tilted the balance of power in
Manchester from red to blue.
Kompany was one the Emiratis’ first purchases, and he was a fitting scorer on what seemed destined to be a historic day.
The Belgian outmuscled Smalling to power home Leroy Sane’s corner on 25 minutes.
Five
minutes later City doubled their lead in a style that has characterised
their season as Gundogan brilliantly turned onto Sterling’s pass before
slotting into the far corner.
City should have been out of sight
by half-time as Guardiola screamed in frustration after Sterling fired
two glorious chances well over the bar.
Unlike in many big games this season, Mourinho played Pogba in his favoured role on the left of a midfield three.
Like
the rest of his teammates, Pogba was overrun in the first 45 minutes,
but came alive to slot home from Ander Herrera’s cushioned pass with his
chest to get United back into the game eight minutes after the break.
That goal was the first Mourinho’s men had scored away from home against top-five opposition in the Premier League all season.
And
they soon had two in two minutes when Alexis Sanchez picked out Pogba’s
late run into the box and his header beat Ederson low to his right-hand
side.
City’s Champions League hopes were likely ended by conceding three times in 19 minutes at Anfield in midweek.
And
United took just 16 minutes to complete an incredible turnaround when
Smalling capitalised on some slack City marking to turn home Sanchez’s
free-kick.
Guardiola threw on Aguero, Jesus and De Bruyne in an attempt to prevent just a second league defeat of the season.
And
City should have had a penalty when Ashley Young somehow escaped
without punishment from a knee-high lunge on Aguero inside the area that
sparked a bad-tempered finale.
Aguero was denied by a brilliant
De Gea save two minutes from time and Sterling then hit the post as
United somehow held on for a famous win.
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