Manchester City winning simply by the quality of their being

manchester city winning simply by the quality of their being

Phil Foden is now a senior player at Manchester City. Photograph: Conor Molloy/ProSports/REX/Shutterstock

Perhaps this is just what happens when a team gets into the habit of winning: they keep on winning. They don’t have to dominate, they don’t have to carve out dozens of chances, they don’t have to hold possession for hours at a time. They just have to be, and by the quality of their being, they find goals when they need them.

Manchester City aren’t Real Madrid, not quite. They’re not yet able to doze away from kick-off, watching idly on as the opposition squander a handful of chances before, yawning, taking the first chance that comes their way. But equally they have gone 32 games unbeaten since the defeat at Aston Villa in December without being anywhere near the exceptional standards they set last season. Having exceptional players capable of turning games in a moment really helps.

One of them, Phil Foden, was named Football Writers’ Player of the Year this week, due reward for the season that has seen him reach new levels of maturity and influence. He is still only 23, but the days when there were fears that Pep Guardiola was holding him back by not fully trusting him seem a long, long time ago. Even his cheeky scamp performance away to Atlético the season before last, gamesmanship with a grin, seems another age. Foden is a senior player these days and plays with the responsibility that goes with that status.

Another, Erling Haaland, last season’s FWA player of the year, has been out of sorts, at least by his own absurdly high standards, since returning from a foot injury at the end of January, scoring four goals in his first nine league appearances back. The issue of his lack of involvement in general play raised its head again. And it’s not unproblematic to have a player who engages so little if he’s not also scoring.

But, just as the run-in has reached its critical point, Haaland is scoring again. He had the fewest touches of any City outfielder again on Saturday, but nobody was fretting about that because four of them brought goals. That’s seven now in his last four outings, one of which was off the bench. His form has returned and that is very ominous for the title race.

The fourth goal in particular suggested his confidence; he is once again reaching the levels he did last season when he started to threaten records set by Dixie Dean and George Camsell. His touch after taking down Foden’s pass wasn’t great but it didn’t matter; he brushed aside Max Kilman and thumped a shot past José Sá with the ease of a grown-up in the schoolyard. This was the Haaland of old, a creature built on a different scale to most humans, looking for all the world as though he’d been stitched together from the discarded parts of legends of the past then brought to life in a tower at midnight.

It’s true that two of his goals were penalties, the first pretty soft. But the second of them, the hat-trick goal, was brought about by Haaland’s bullocking surge through the middle, Nélson Semedo’s clumsy lunge into his standing leg born of desperation. His second goal, though, was perhaps of more significance: Rodri’s cross was floated beyond the back post where Haaland rose above Semedo and guided a majestic header back across goal and in at the far post. It was the goal of an old-fashioned English number 9, a Tommy Lawton, a Nat Lofthouse, an Andy Carroll, not of somebody who hadn’t scored with his head since the Manchester derby in October.

Yet the oddity is that when Haaland scored that header, City weren’t playing especially well. They were giving the ball away a lot and there was a half-sense that Wolves, goaded into action by the early penalty against them, might get back into it. It wasn’t quite like last week at the City Ground, when Nottingham Forest were very clearly on top before Haaland came off the bench to make the game with safe with a crisply taken second, but City weren’t entirely comfortable. It happened again when Hwang Hee-chan pulled one back for City. They weren’t nervous exactly, but the game didn’t feel over at that point: a minute later, it did.

The upcoming games at Fulham and Tottenham always looked more testing for City as they close in on a fourth successive title but this, in the end, was an emphatic dismissal of a team who had beaten them earlier in the season. A towering header, two penalties, one won with a surging run, a brutal fourth… it’s safe to say Haaland is back. And when he’s in that sort of form, the team behind him doesn’t have to be playing with the slick cohesion of which it is capable. They get dragged to excellence anyway.

OTHER NEWS

25 minutes ago

Biden launches fresh bid for election support from Black voters

32 minutes ago

I’m looking for the FTSE 100’s best value stocks to buy now. Have I found them?

32 minutes ago

Tigritudes: pan-African film anthology comes to London

32 minutes ago

Where Can You Find The Best Preserved Warplanes In The USA?

32 minutes ago

Paul unveils body transformation ahead of Tyson bout

32 minutes ago

What I Rent: 'I pay £1,925 for a one bed flat but it revived my social life after divorce'

32 minutes ago

Lions center Frank Ragnow reiterates he is not considering retirement

32 minutes ago

High levels of weedkiller found in more than half sperm samples, study finds

32 minutes ago

Newcastle struck gold on free signing who's now worth more than Joelinton

32 minutes ago

’20 years younger’ – Ferrari tipped to ‘galvanise’ Lewis Hamilton after Mercedes ‘decline’

32 minutes ago

‘Don’t wallow in self-pity, instead help others’: Telegraph readers on how to combat loneliness

32 minutes ago

Shoppers take shelter in Costco as monster storm batters Houston

33 minutes ago

Nate Smith Accepts the Rookie Of The Year Award | Billboard Country Power Players 2024

33 minutes ago

Why was Slovakia's Prime Minister attacked?

37 minutes ago

St Albans, Melbourne: Man riding a scooter dies after colliding with a car in horror crash

37 minutes ago

Duncan Bannatyne, 75, reveals he 'almost died' after contracting an infection when he was stung by a dragonfly while on holiday with his wife in Mexico

38 minutes ago

Emma Raducanu’s French Open hopes could be about to get a big boost

38 minutes ago

Armstrong hat-trick fires Knights to win over Titans

38 minutes ago

From Grand Slams to Grand Slopes: Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal Star In New Louis Vuitton Campaign

38 minutes ago

Tyler Alexander flirts with perfect game, Rays win 4-3 win over Toronto Blue Jays

38 minutes ago

MasterChef viewers shocked at contestant's controversial theme for a dish

38 minutes ago

Patchy rain expected across the UK today, Friday, May 17th

38 minutes ago

Lions welcome top of the table Glasgow Warriors to the den

45 minutes ago

Russian guided bombs kill three, injure 28 in Ukraine's Kharkiv

45 minutes ago

Blind date: ‘My shirt went straight in the wash when I got home’

45 minutes ago

Inside Anne Robinson and Andrew Parker Bowles' unlikely romance - and how a retired MONK played key role in uniting love birds

47 minutes ago

From Louvre to Expo: Free entry to popular UAE attractions today; here's a guide

47 minutes ago

Girls Aloud kick off reunion tour dedicated to late bandmate

47 minutes ago

Arizona baseball crushed by Oregon State, falls out of 1st place in Pac-12

47 minutes ago

3 underrated Netflix shows you should watch this weekend (May 17-19)

47 minutes ago

DC clears out encampments as homelessness rises

51 minutes ago

Video: I'm an American man living in the UK... here are THREE things I find weird about your country

51 minutes ago

Basketball coach who had hopes of playing in the NBA charged with rape of girl, 14, he met on Snapchat

51 minutes ago

Elections 2024: IFP raises banner as a ‘sign of hope’ over Cape Town

51 minutes ago

Erin McGregor recalls moment she first realised son Harry might have autism

51 minutes ago

Arsenal could set new Premier League prize money record with Manchester United fighting for £6.2m

51 minutes ago

Chelsea ready bid for future Ballon dOr winner who'd thrive with Palmer

51 minutes ago

Transparent Solar Panels: What Do They Cost, And Are There Any Disadvantages?

51 minutes ago

Sam Kerr’s fight to clear her name of criminal charges hits fresh hurdle

51 minutes ago

91-Year-Old Man Rescues Struggling Fire Department with $500,000 Donation

Kênh khám phá trải nghiệm của giới trẻ, thế giới du lịch