Man City enjoys easy European night with 3-0 win v Marseille

Manchester City's German midfielder Ilkay Gundogan (L) celebrates after scoring a goal during the UEFA Champions League Group C football match between Olympique de Marseille and Manchester City on October 27, 2020 at the Velodrome Stadium in Marseille. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 28 October 2020
Follow

Man City enjoys easy European night with 3-0 win v Marseille

  • “We played really well, we didn’t concede much,” says City coach Pep Guardiola

MARSEILLE, France: Manchester City enjoyed a respite from domestic difficulties and found its scoring touch in a resounding 3-0 win at Marseille in the Champions League on Tuesday.
Once so dominant in the Premier League, the cash-rich club has made an unconvincing start. City sits in 13th place with only two wins from five games and eight goals scored, amid suggestions its usually prolific attack has been found out by English defenses.
A poor Marseille side was not the stiffest test to prove the doubters wrong, but Ferran Torres, Ilkay Gundogan and Raheem Sterling all netted to give City a boost and first place in Group C after last week's 3-1 home victory against Porto.
“We played really well, we didn’t concede much,” City coach Pep Guardiola said. “We were controlled, we were so aggressive without the ball. I’m so satisfied with the performance.”
Marseille, on the other hand, has not even scored yet and is already starting to stare elimination in the face.
“It’s a different level and we have to be honest about that. We need to learn from these matches and improve, but it’s a tough defeat,” Marseille winger Florian Thauvin said. “When you spend the whole match 30 meters from your own goal and you have 70 meters to cover in order to score a goal, it’s difficult to have the legs to do that.”
The home side gifted City the lead in the 18th minute when midfielder Valentin Rongier's sloppy sideways pass was intercepted by Kevin De Bruyne on the right flank. He quickly teed up Torres to sweep home from close range and claim another goal after also scoring against Porto.
Another panicky moment nearly offered City a second goal, but left back Oleksandr Zinchenko's low strike from the edge of the penalty area shaved the post.
City's second came in the 76th when Phil Foden sprinted down the left and his back-post cross was headed down by Sterling. The loose ball landed near the penalty spot and Gundogan assuredly clipped it past goalkeeper Steve Mandanda.
“When they played with five at the back we had to make the pitch high and wide," Guardiola said. "Raheem was exceptional and Phil as well.”
Five minutes later, City attacked down the right and De Bruyne offered Sterling a tap-in.
“It was a tough match to play and we paid for our mistakes," Marseille coach Andre Villas-Boas said.
Perhaps one of those mistakes was deploying Thauvin as a makeshift striker and surprisingly leaving playmaker Dimitri Payet on the bench. The home side offered nothing during the first half, except for when City goalkeeper Ederson made a simple stop from Nemanja Radonjic's tame shot late on.
Ederson patted away a speculative drive from Thauvin early into the second half as Marseille improved slightly on a largely comfortable night for City.
There were no fans inside the 67,000-capacity Stade Velodrome because of coronavirus restrictions, but some Marseille fans lined the streets outside and lit flares when the home team’s bus arrived.
City’s players all took a knee against racism before the start, but Marseille’s players stayed standing.
In Group C's other match, second-place Porto beat third-place Olympiakos 2-0 at home to leave both sides on three points.
Marseille travels to Porto and City hosts Olympiakos in next Tuesday's games.


Mbappe and Asencio strike as Real Madrid calm storm with 2-0 win over Levante

Updated 4 sec ago
Follow

Mbappe and Asencio strike as Real Madrid calm storm with 2-0 win over Levante

  • Real stayed second in LaLiga on 48 points from 20 matches, one behind leaders Barcelona
  • The win also snapped Real’s two-match losing run and offered brief respite after a bruising week

MADRID: Real Madrid ended a turbulent week with a 2-0 LaLiga win over lowly Levante on Saturday courtesy of second-half goals from Kylian Mbappe and Raul Asencio, after being met with boos from a restless Bernabeu crowd before the breakthrough arrived.
Real stayed second in LaLiga on 48 points from 20 matches, one behind leaders Barcelona, who have a game in hand and visit Real Sociedad on Sunday. Levante are 19th with 14 points.
The win also snapped Real’s two-match losing run and offered brief respite after a bruising week.
They looked flat in the first half, still carrying the scars of Sunday’s 3-2 Spanish Super Cup final defeat by Barcelona, followed by the departure of manager Xabi ⁠Alonso and a shock 3-2 Copa del Rey exit to second-division Albacete.
Boos greeted the players at kickoff, with sections of the crowd also directing chants at club president Florentino Perez. Real finally eased the tension when defender Dela tripped Mbappe in the box, and the French forward converted the penalty in the 58th minute to extend his league-leading tally to 19 goals.
Seven minutes later, Real doubled their advantage through center-back Asencio, who rose to meet Arda Guler’s corner with a ⁠powerful header to make it 2-0, giving new coach Alvaro Arbeloa a crucial cushion and settling the mood inside the stadium.
“It was a very important day. Everyone wanted to turn the situation around,” Asencio told RMTV. “What happened in Albacete shouldn’t have happened. We felt guilty and wanted to make up for it.”


ARBELOA REACTS
Tensions at the Bernabeu spared no one, with the crowd particularly aggressive toward Vinicius Jr. and Jude Bellingham, whistling both players whenever they touched the ball during a cagey first half.
Vinicius, who scored 22 goals last season, has managed only six across all competitions this campaign, while Bellingham has found the net five times, compared with 15 last season.
Asked about Vinicius, Arbeloa — a former Real right back — said he is determined ⁠to help the 25-year-old Brazilian winger rediscover his best form.
“I’ve been booed a lot myself, and one of the things that makes this club great is the high standards demanded,” the Spaniard said.
“We know what kind of week we’ve had, and the demands placed on us, and we have to take it in our stride because they know we can give more. I have no complaints about them — it’s on us to give much more at the Bernabeu.
“I’m going to work on improving Vinicius. I’m going to ask his teammates to give him as many balls as possible. He’s the most unpredictable player in the world.”
When asked about chants aimed at Perez, Arbeloa defended the club president: “I believe the shouts are not from people who dislike Florentino, but from people who dislike Real Madrid. All Madrid fans know how fortunate we are to have him.”