Man City 1 – Dortmund 1
Manchester City have to step up or the Champions League dream is over (Martin Samuel, Mail) Even as it is – and bookmakers still have them odds-on to qualify, inexplicably – they face a tough task. City must play Ajax home and away next but even if they were to win both matches, which is far from guaranteed, it does not make a whole lot of difference. Dortmund have already beaten Ajax at home, Real Madrid pulverised them away, so qualification in this group is likely to come down to the results of matches between the big beasts: the title winners from England, Spain and Germany. A real Champions League. And City look the weakest of the three.
Hart heroics save the day after Rodwell error (Matt Lawton, Mail) Inside the mind of Jack Rodwell it was still acceptable to deliver a blind pass across the City defence in the vain hope that nobody representing the Germans would be quick enough to exploit his stupidity.
Roberto Mancini hails ‘incredible’ Joe Hart after stunning display (Mark Odgen, Telegraph) Two weeks after urging Joe Hart to “stay in goal and make some saves” following Manchester City’s dramatic loss against Real Madrid, Roberto Mancini was left thanking the goalkeeper for saving his team from an “incredible defeat” at home to Borussia Dortmund.
Manchester City 1 Borussia Dortmund 1: match report (Henry Winter, Telegraph) City’s manager, Roberto Mancini, was furious with his players after this painfully laboured performance; he hinted darkly at an unspecified deep-seated problem which he would deal with. Barring the particular lethargy seizing Samir Nasri, and a lack of concentration from Jack Rodwell, City’s main malaise appears defensively where they have yet to manage a clean sheet this term. Yet it is Mancini who has broken up the Vincent Kompany-Joleon Lescott axis that was so successful last season. It was Mancini who experimented with three at the back in pre-season, using up valuable preparation time.
Composed Balotelli keeps City’s European dream alive (Ian Herbert, Independent) Jack Rodwell has only played 311 minutes since his £15m transfer from Everton but has already been directly responsible for City conceding three goals. On his City debut, on 19 August, the 21-year-old gave the ball away allowing Southampton to counter attack sharply and for Steven Davis to score. A week later, Rodwell handled the ball to concede a free-kick which Liverpool’s Luis Suarez put in. And last night Rodwell passed the ball straight to Marco Reus to give Borussia Dortmund the lead.
Joe Hart’s brilliance saves Manchester City from embarrassment (Paul Wilson, Guardian) If City barely merited a draw, their outstanding goalkeeper most certainly did. A point is better than nothing, and given their outrageous luck in this game it is still possible City might salvage something from the group, but to do that they must learn to live up to their promises. Not to mention pacify Balotelli and keep an eye on an unused and mutinous-looking Carlos Tevez.
london blue 2 wrote:Hard to stay positive when game after game we are all waiting for us to snap out of this shit form but we seem to be moving backwards. I don't know what the answer is, I'm sure we will get it right eventually but I can't help but think that the signings we have made are no where near the quality we need.
MR IMAINEROAD wrote:london blue 2 wrote:Hard to stay positive when game after game we are all waiting for us to snap out of this shit form but we seem to be moving backwards. I don't know what the answer is, I'm sure we will get it right eventually but I can't help but think that the signings we have made are no where near the quality we need.
Herein is the elephant in the room. Scum get Van Persie. Chelski get Hazard.
City get.... sinclair, garcia, over the hill maicon, rodwell....
Ergo sum.
MR IMAINEROAD wrote:london blue 2 wrote:Hard to stay positive when game after game we are all waiting for us to snap out of this shit form but we seem to be moving backwards. I don't know what the answer is, I'm sure we will get it right eventually but I can't help but think that the signings we have made are no where near the quality we need.
Herein is the elephant in the room. Scum get Van Persie. Chelski get Hazard.
City get.... sinclair, garcia, over the hill maicon, rodwell....
Ergo sum.
Goaters 103 wrote:On initial impressions neither Rodwell or Garcia are better than De Jong, Sinclair is inferior to Johnson, Maicon cant defend (shock horror), and Nastasic is talented but very raw.
Has our squad been improved since last season? Its exceedingly debatable. Milner is continually overlooked and Lescott cast aside in the 2 games where he was needed most - Real/Dortmund - not good. I'd agree Mancini hasnt exactly covered himself in glory so fa this season, but then again neither have several of our vaunted big players, some of whom pulled a Reggie Perrin last night.
johnny crossan wrote:collected insights from the gentlemen of the pressMan City 1 – Dortmund 1
Manchester City have to step up or the Champions League dream is over (Martin Samuel, Mail) Even as it is – and bookmakers still have them odds-on to qualify, inexplicably – they face a tough task. City must play Ajax home and away next but even if they were to win both matches, which is far from guaranteed, it does not make a whole lot of difference. Dortmund have already beaten Ajax at home, Real Madrid pulverised them away, so qualification in this group is likely to come down to the results of matches between the big beasts: the title winners from England, Spain and Germany. A real Champions League. And City look the weakest of the three.
Hart heroics save the day after Rodwell error (Matt Lawton, Mail) Inside the mind of Jack Rodwell it was still acceptable to deliver a blind pass across the City defence in the vain hope that nobody representing the Germans would be quick enough to exploit his stupidity.
Roberto Mancini hails ‘incredible’ Joe Hart after stunning display (Mark Odgen, Telegraph) Two weeks after urging Joe Hart to “stay in goal and make some saves” following Manchester City’s dramatic loss against Real Madrid, Roberto Mancini was left thanking the goalkeeper for saving his team from an “incredible defeat” at home to Borussia Dortmund.
Manchester City 1 Borussia Dortmund 1: match report (Henry Winter, Telegraph) City’s manager, Roberto Mancini, was furious with his players after this painfully laboured performance; he hinted darkly at an unspecified deep-seated problem which he would deal with. Barring the particular lethargy seizing Samir Nasri, and a lack of concentration from Jack Rodwell, City’s main malaise appears defensively where they have yet to manage a clean sheet this term. Yet it is Mancini who has broken up the Vincent Kompany-Joleon Lescott axis that was so successful last season. It was Mancini who experimented with three at the back in pre-season, using up valuable preparation time.
Composed Balotelli keeps City’s European dream alive (Ian Herbert, Independent) Jack Rodwell has only played 311 minutes since his £15m transfer from Everton but has already been directly responsible for City conceding three goals. On his City debut, on 19 August, the 21-year-old gave the ball away allowing Southampton to counter attack sharply and for Steven Davis to score. A week later, Rodwell handled the ball to concede a free-kick which Liverpool’s Luis Suarez put in. And last night Rodwell passed the ball straight to Marco Reus to give Borussia Dortmund the lead.
Joe Hart’s brilliance saves Manchester City from embarrassment (Paul Wilson, Guardian) If City barely merited a draw, their outstanding goalkeeper most certainly did. A point is better than nothing, and given their outrageous luck in this game it is still possible City might salvage something from the group, but to do that they must learn to live up to their promises. Not to mention pacify Balotelli and keep an eye on an unused and mutinous-looking Carlos Tevez.
http://www.101greatgoals.com/comment-an ... aced-evra/?
Douglas Higginbottom wrote:Goaters 103 wrote:On initial impressions neither Rodwell or Garcia are better than De Jong, Sinclair is inferior to Johnson, Maicon cant defend (shock horror), and Nastasic is talented but very raw.
Has our squad been improved since last season? Its exceedingly debatable. Milner is continually overlooked and Lescott cast aside in the 2 games where he was needed most - Real/Dortmund - not good. I'd agree Mancini hasnt exactly covered himself in glory so fa this season, but then again neither have several of our vaunted big players, some of whom pulled a Reggie Perrin last night.
I do have real hopes for Rodders but at the moment he is like a rabbit in the headlights. He seems to panic when on the ball if he cant give it to Yaya which is what he seems programmed to do.There is much more in his game than just sitting and giving the ball to the nearest player and he has to be given the license to do more.
Mase wrote:We need more one sentence responses in my opinion
Ted Hughes wrote:
If you gave Moyes or even Alan Pardew Mancini's squad, they would not play the fantastic pass & move football we saw at Fulham, but whatever the results they would have turned in much more competent displays v Southampton, QPR, Liverpool, Arsenal, Villa, Real & Dortmund.
Mancini has been fucking hopeless in the majority games this season. Trhe new signings are no excuse whatsoever. It's time he did the fucking job he gets paid for: MANAGE.
ashton287 wrote:
He has done too much managing if you ask me. That's the problem.
Original Dub wrote:ashton287 wrote:
He has done too much managing if you ask me. That's the problem.
No such thing mate.
Too much changing. Too much whinging. Too much molly coddling some players and bad mouthing other players.
Not enough managing at all.
He is a very good manager underneath it all, but his stubborness could possibly be his, and our, undoing.
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