Pep Guardiola blames the ball after Manchester City need penalties to scrape past Championship Wolves
Guardiola is understandably pleased to have progressed - but the fact they have to play with the English Football League's Mitre match ball grates

Pep Guardiola labelled the English Football League's match ball "unacceptable" after Manchester City edged past Wolves and into the Carabao Cup quarter-finals.
The clash between the sides top of the Premier League and Championship was an entertaining - if scoreless - affair, with Claudio Bravo required to be at his best to deny Nuno Espirito Santos' side from snatching a shock win.
The oft-maligned Chile goalkeeper again came to the rescue in the penalty shootout at the Etihad Stadium, denying Alfred N'Diaye and Conor Coady as City won 4-1 on penalties after a scoreless 120 minutes.
Guardiola is understandably pleased to have progressed - but the fact they have to play with the English Football League's Mitre match ball grates.
"The ball is not acceptable to play with... at that level," the City boss said. "We play with a different ball. It's not Nike, Adidas I don't know, it's a different brand. It's unacceptable to play with the ball. That ball is not a serious ball for a professional game.
"I say that because we won, eh? If I don't win, I don't say that because after that it's excuses. As I won, I can tell you: it is not acceptable to play. If it's for the marketing, for the money, for many reasons, it's okay but it's not acceptable to play with that ball.
"No weight, nothing. (We get the balls for) one day or two days, but the ball is bad two days, one month, one year, two years. It's bad, it's bad. The ball is unacceptable for the high of level of the competition.

"All the players complain. I assure you all of them say 'what is that?' Really. I am sorry Carabao Cup."
Guardiola says the Mitre Delta ball made it "almost impossible" for Sergio Aguero to break City's long-standing scoring record on Tuesday, with Guardiola saying it would have been a "miracle" for him to score with it.
"Relax, guys, he's going to break the record," the City boss said of the player level on 177 goals with Eric Brook. "If not the next game, it's another one. If not, another one. If not, another one.
"He has to be focused, play football and the situation is going to happen. It is not a record he has to break by scoring 50 more goals. It's one more goal."
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