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James Lawton: Mancini's men look up to making a little history

 

Tuesday 01 May 2012 09:54 BST
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Sir Alex Ferguson and Roberto Mancini had to be kept apart on the touchline last night
Sir Alex Ferguson and Roberto Mancini had to be kept apart on the touchline last night (PA)

In the end it was too hard and too unyielding for any glowing and definitive statement from champions-elect but we could say something of significance indeed of Manchester City when they took a massive stride towards the championship of England after a break of 44 years.

We could say that on the most important night of their football lives they looked a team who were more than enough to beat the team who have set the standards of professionalism and unbreakable ambition in this football land.

They won, deservedly, and in the taut process they showed a depth of talent and resolve upon which it is entirely reasonable to believe they can build.

Maybe they will also put behind them the sense of a team too easily disrupted by a shortfall in discipline, but for the moment that is another chapter, another challenge.

Last night they met the one that pressed on them so heavily as well as anyone could have expected. There are a couple more left and most difficult is the one that faces them at Newcastle at the weekend. In 1968 they won there, gloriously, for their last title.

As last night wore on, City looked increasingly equipped to achieve a new piece of football history.

United came out bristling with Sir Alex Ferguson's assertion that his is not a team you can programme for a draw. It is not in their DNA and still less their guts. You would have as much chance of success hunting with poodles.

So, with the old men Ryan Giggs and Paul Scholes scampering like still eager boys. United laid siege to the City goal.

However, the problem for a United pursuing their 13th Premier League title was that when City woke up they did so with such dazzling accomplishment that Diego Maradona, Sergio Aguero's father-in-law, was inspired to leap from his seat. It was the start of a tide of aggression in which Yaya Touré was simply immense.

Near half-time he injected himself into a flowing move which also involved Pablo Zabaleta, Carlos Tevez and Aguero and when United scrambled a corner there was an inevitable conclusion along with the intake of breath.

This said that however hard United laboured to obscure the reality, City had the potential to move on to another level.

Instead, for the moment at least, they merely drilled in a set-piece goal which saw City skipper Vincent Kompany not so much beating Chris Smalling to David Silva's corner as delivering a brief but unforgettable seminar on losing a marker and making him pay.

At this pivotal moment you couldn't be sure of the cost to United. What you could say, though, was that Roberto Mancini's faith in the full range of his attacking strength had met with some entirely just reward. Whatever Ferguson said at half-time he could not begin to dispute the fact that for so much of the first half only one team had looked convincing in the mantle of champions.

What could he say? It was surely the old mantra that surrender has no place in the make-up of his team. It's a fine and noble theory and it has played a huge part in United's unprecedented success in English football, but sometimes of course you need more.

Sir Alex Ferguson and Mancini made their own not inconsiderable contribution to the tension after De Nigel Jong brought down Welbeck. Their touchline debate was explosive but no more laden with edge than events on the field.

Ferguson retreated quickly enough because he knew in his bones that this was a night when the most important argument was almost certainly lost.

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