Guardiola needs Hull of a boost
Manchester City's season has hit
a bump at a bad time, and a victory at home to Hull City on Saturday
will help bolster their bid to play Champions League football.
City’s 2-1 defeat at leaders Chelsea on Wednesday means they have now gone more than a month without a Premier League victory.
Successive league draws against
Stoke, Liverpool and Arsenal, followed by the result at Stamford Bridge,
have seen City manager Pep Guardiola’s team slip to fourth place in the
standings.
They were also eliminated from
the Champions League by Monaco during that period, meaning that the City
manager’s only realistic hope of ending his first season in England
with a trophy lies with the FA Cup.
It has been a less successful
campaign than many predicted when Guardiola arrived from Bayern Munich
in July with a record of 21 trophies from seven seasons in management.
In the Spaniard's defence, the
squad he has taken on at City does not have the spread of world-class
talent that he worked with at Barcelona and in Munich, but there have
been many signs that the competitive nature of the Premier League has
taken him by surprise.
Amid the disappointment of
defeat at Stamford Bridge, one significant bonus for Guardiola was the
return to action of Vincent Kompany.
The club captain has been struck
down by a series of injury setbacks over the last three years, and had
not played for more than two months before making his comeback on
Wednesday and completing the full 90 minutes.
KOMPANY LESSON
Kompany has had to work hard to
convince Guardiola that he is fit enough for a chance, and believes his
return should serve as a message to the club’s young players that effort
on the training pitch will get you a chance at City.
"It wasn’t the easiest game to
get back into but what I would say in terms of advice to younger players
is: I could have stood back and moaned and complained that I wasn’t
playing but I never did," Kompany said.
"I worked very hard for that one
opportunity and within the conditions that were available to me. I was
helpful to the team. That’s what I wanted to do."
Midfielder Fabian Delph was
another surprise starter for City, having been in and out of the
team this season, suggesting Guardiola is looking at different options
as he seeks a strong finish to the league season.
Perhaps his most surprising move in that respect has been the experimenting with winger Jesus Navas as a right-back.
However, that move has shown little sign of working so far, and it seems Guardiola is unlikely to persist with the decision.
Hull climbed out of the bottom
three for the first time since October with a 4-2 midweek victory over
relegation rivals Middlesbrough.
The Tigers are unbeaten at home
since Marco Silva took over as head coach in January, with seven wins
out of eight leaving them two points clear of danger to boost their
hopes of avoiding an immediate return to the second-tier Championship.
Hull have struggled on their travels, however, with their only away win in the league arriving at Swansea back in August.
"We need to start translating
our home form to when we go away because in front of our own fans we are
playing well and with a lot of confident," said Silva.
"We have come a long way since I
arrived, but I keep stressing to the players that we have achieved
nothing yet in our battle to be out of the bottom three at the end of
the season."
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