Raheem Sterling akishangilia bao alilofunga na kuipa ushindi wa bao 1-0 timu yake ya Manchester City.KWA PICHA ZAIDI GONGA HAP>>>>>>>
Manchester City imeendelea kuonyesha kandanda la kuvutia na kuwaacha wapinzani wao wa karibu Manchester United kwa pointi 14 sasa na kuonyesha msimu huu wanadhamiria kutwaa ubingwa.
Mchezo wa usiku wa kuamkia leo ilichapa bao 1-0 Newcastle
na kufanya kujiimarisha kileleni mwa ligi Kuu ya EPL.
Sterling's Manchester City team-mates congratulate him after his 17th goal of the season put the away side in front
City players celebrate in front of the away supporters at St James' Park after recording their 18th successive league victory
This really was the strangest spectacle. Newcastle began the game with a shot from their own kick-off and then retreated to the edge of their own penalty area and raised the shields not in combat but in what was largely a rather meek symbol of defence.
We have seen teams defend against City, and against other good teams, before. Going toe-to-toe with a team like this one will not generally get you very far.
But somehow this was different. Newcastle were at home but were so meek it was extraordinary. There was no fast start like you may expect from a team with more than 50,000 people crammed in to watch. There was no press or energy when City had the ball, no attempt to unsettle them or hurry them.
There was only passiveness, only acceptance of what was to come. Only in the last 10 minutes did Newcastle emerge and when they did they almost grabbed the most unlikely point. Dwight Gayle stopped to head with two minutes left and missed by only about a foot.
Vincent Kompany was forced off the pitch with an injury after just 11 minutes to be replaced by striker Gabriel Jesus
Jacob Murphy escaped without a caution despite this horrific late challenge on Ilkay Gundogan 17 minutes into the match
De Bruyne charges forward with Newcastle midfielder Mohamed Diame in close pursuit as City advanced in possession
Pep Guardiola watches on during the first half at St James' Park as City looked to extend their winning run to 18 matches
DeAndre Yedlin challenges City's Brazilian defender Danilo for an aerial ball in midfield as the away side looked to go 2-0 up
So maybe this was the plan after all. Maybe Newcastle manager Rafael Benitez is a visionary. He is the man who has made a rather modest group of players competitive in this league so we certainly must afford him the assumption that he knows what he is doing.
But this is an assessment more reflective of City and what they have brought to this season than it is of Benitez and Newcastle anyway. There is an argument to say that Newcastle's next game - at home to Brighton - is much bigger than this one and the one thing Benitez's team didn't suffer here is great damage to their goal difference. Maybe there is something to be said for that.
None of that made this any less weird to watch, though. Statistics can often be misleading but here they weren't.
City completed about 400 more passes than Newcastle in the first half. At one stage the possession percentage was running at 85% to 15% and this was reflected by the subdued nature of the home crowd. In Newcastle they usually see their team have a go but not here.
Benitez's teamsheet suggested a three-man defence but in truth it had five members. From the outset they sat across the edge of their own penalty area and hardly moved.
Sterling slid in to poke home De Bruyne's pass despite the close attentions of Newcastle duo Jamaal Lascelles and Rob Elliot
The trio watch as the ball rolls in for Sterling's 12th Premier League goal of the season in a remarkable year for the winger
City's players embrace after Sterling's effort just past the half-hour mark put Guardiola's men on their way to 18 straight wins
Gundogan passes forward ahead of Jonjo Shelvey during the Premier League clash at St James' Park on Wednesday
City have been presented with this puzzle before, though usually at home. So Guardiola's team set about moving the ball around the way that they so often do and looked for the spaces, and the goal, that they doubtless hoped would open up the game.
They probably should have scored sooner than they did. Kevin De Bruyne was their best player - he very much is their best player - and saw an early free-kick headed towards goal by Gabriel Jesus and touched over by Rob Elliot. It was a great save.
De Bruyne also shot over twice from distance while Sergio Aguero should have done better than side-foot wide when presented with an early chance by a lovely cross field pass by left-back Danilo.
Then, when the breakthrough arrived on the half hour, De Bruyne was involved. The Belgian's chipped pass down the inside left channel found Raheem Sterling darting intelligently beyond the Newcastle defence to volley past Elliot with his instep from an angle. Elliot may have done better on this occasion but it was still a very good goal.
De Bruyne unleashed an effort on goal from outside the area as Guardiola's men went in search of a second goal
Elliot appeared to get his gloves on De Bruyne's long-range shot before it rebounded back off the frame of the Newcastle goal
Sergio Aguero pounced to poke home after De Bruyne's shot came off the post but the goal was disallowed for offside
Aguero reacts after his effort was ruled out for offside as he was denied scoring a third goal in two games for City
Briefly this drew Newcastle out. Almost immediately Rolando Aarons chipped towards goal after Kyle Walker slipped over and Nicolas Otamendi had to head clear from the line. Hopes grew among the home support that Newcastle were about to change their tactics but it was not to be. Not yet anyway.
Into the second half and not much changed at all. The only thing that didn't come was another City goal and, ultimately, it was this that gave Newcastle a glimmer of hope late on.
De Bruyne miscued early in the second period after a sumptuous one-two with Jesus and then struck a post from distance. Jesus rolled in the rebound but was offside. There was also a low effort from Ilkay Gundogan that was pushed aside by Elliot.
Dwight Gayle shows his frustration after being shown a yellow card for simulation after he went down in City's penalty area
Newcastle manager Rafa Benitez roars his side on from the sidelines as they grew into the game on Wednesday evening
Diame holds his head in his hands after Newcastle saw an opportunity for an equaliser go begging during the second half
The Newcastle goalkeeper had a decent game on the whole while at the other end City's Ederson only got warm in the final passages of play.
For Benitez, these were the moments when opportunity briefly showed itself. His players pushed forwards late on as City, strangely, began to lose some of their self-assurance. Was something really quite extraordinary in the offing?
The home crowd clearly thought so and they found their voice. Gayle, on as a substitute, fell under a Danilo challenge in the box but was booked for diving. It was the right call.
Gayle was subsequently to have his chance and, set up by a Christian Atsu cross, his 89th minute header pointed briefly to an incredible climax.
But as it was City's wagon rolled on. Who can stop them? More pertinently, does anybody really believe that they can?
Aguero was hooked for Eliaquim Mangala as City brought on a defender to tighten up with Newcastle in the ascendancy
Gayle flashed a header just past Ederson's post as Newcastle came close to equalising against the Premier League's leaders
Benitez shakes hands with Guardiola at the end of the which saw City go 15 points clear at the top of the Premier League
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-5216211/Newcastle-0-1-Manchester-City-Match-report.html#ixzz52X63zI00
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