
Pep
Guardiola refused to blame Erling Haaland for missed chances after
Manchester City were held to a frustrating 1-1 draw by Chelsea on Saturday
Night Football.
The normally prolific Haaland spurned a number of opportunities, including
one glaring free header from six yards out as the champions were held in a
compelling Premier League contest at the Etihad Stadium.
City ultimately needed an 83rd-minute equaliser from Rodri to rescue a point
after their former forward Raheem Sterling had put the Londoners on course
for an unexpected win with a 43rd-minute effort.
City manager Guardiola said: "It's good to have nine shots and next time
he's going to score.
"I was a football player for 11 years and scored 11 goals. What stats! One
goal a season. I'm not a proper man to give advice to strikers.
"We create the chances, he had the chances and next time he's going to
score. I don't blame him. It's football, it's human beings."
Haaland looked frustrated at the end of the game and pushed away a TV camera
but it has been a difficult week for the Norway international after the
death of his grandmother.
The result left City four points off the top of the table in third place,
after title rivals Liverpool and Arsenal won earlier in the day.
City dominated the second half but Guardiola felt they paid the price for a
poor first-half display.
Guardiola said: "As a team and a group, the first half was not like we are.
"The demands are so high because no-one is going to give it to us, we have
to do everything. We are Manchester City so we have to do it for ourselves
all the time.
"We had to improve the first half and the second half was unbelievable, how
we played and how we made transitions.
"In general, it was really good after we conceded from Raheem but when we
play teams with composure and prestige of Chelsea you have to perform at
your best for 95 minutes."
Pochettino: We need to live this type of
game
Chelsea's season has been one of inconsistency but manager Mauricio
Pochettino felt they showed their true character against strong opposition.
Pochettino said: "We tried to prepare, all the coaching staff, to make the
plan for the game but football is always a game that belongs to the players
and today the execution and the performance was from them. They showed
character.
"It was a really important game for us to keep the momentum to realise we
are in a good way and improving.
"Still we are not at the level of Manchester City but that is our aim.
"We need to live this type of game to improve and to create the spirit we
need. We show in every single game we want to be competitive."
A blueprint to frustrate City?
Sky Sports' Jamie Carragher:
"I don't think Liverpool and Arsenal will now just copy Chelsea when they
play City as they're really good teams but I don't think it's a secret how
to play against them.
"It's just difficult to stop them as they're so good. It's always been a
case of forcing the ball wide and make them cross.
"It's always been about getting numbers into the centre of the pitch, don't
let them penetrate between the thirds.
"Chelsea had a bit of luck towards the end of the game with the chances
Haaland missed. We saw the real City towards the end of the game with them
getting to the byline and pulling the ball back which makes it so hard for
defenders.
"I think the result is more for Liverpool and Arsenal, to give them belief
that this City team can drop points. I don't think it's the end of the world
for Manchester City but there's so long to go as well.
"All three teams going for the title just need to get to that March
international break and make sure they're still n a great position.
"Who knows when the run-in really starts? Some will say it's now, but it's
March and April when it really hurts you a lot more [dropping points]."
Chelsea getting their act together?
Sky Sports' Adam Bate:
Guardiola had spoken of Chelsea's quality beforehand, describing them as "an
exceptional team" but the suspicion was that this might be the familiar
sound of the City boss praising opponents only for them to leave the Etihad
Stadium on the end of a beating.
But Chelsea had their tactics spot on. They knew that City would have most
of the possession but if they were able to keep their composure when under
pressure and play that extra pass rather than just clear it, the openings
would appear. They managed it time and again.
Palmer has that calmness, Gusto has the energy from deep. Jackson and
Sterling have not always been as ruthless as they should have been this
season - to say the least - and they missed chances in Manchester. But the
goal was superb.
Pochettino will be just as pleased by the resilience shown. Conor Gallagher
ran himself into the ground. Axel Disasi came up with block after block.
Chelsea lost the lead late on. But they have found their spirit recently.
That could be more important in the long run.
What's next?
Man City play again in the Premier League on Tuesday as they host Brentford;
kick-off 7.30pm. They return to Sky Sports next Saturday as they travel to
Bournemouth on Saturday Night Football; kick-off 5.30pm.
It is another huge game for Chelsea next weekend as they take on Liverpool
in the Carabao Cup final at Wembley on Sunday February 25, live on Sky
Sports; kick-off 3pm.