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Manchester City vs CSKA Moscow match report: Nine-man City sunk by Seydou Doumbia double

Manchester City 1 CSKA Moscow 2

Ian Herbert
Wednesday 05 November 2014 22:40 GMT
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The likes of Manchester City will surely improve
The likes of Manchester City will surely improve (Getty Images)

The way it finished - Fernandinho and Yaya Toure being dismissed within 13 minutes of each other as the Manchester mist thickened and the fans sang of the Champions League being ‘bent’ - encapsulated everything about this Manchester City team in this competition.

Their defeat, on a night when they produced defending of comical proportions and looked less likely to trouble the CSKA Moscow goal as the game went on, left them with a Champions League home record of two wins in nine. There will be talk of the referee’s robbery; an injustice compounded by Sergio Aguero being denied a penalty at the death, which left the City players surrounded the Greek official. You feel that the chants of ‘you can stick Uefa up your arse’ were just the start.

But there was no penalty. Aguero was not infringed. City were not cheated. They have lacked the structure, imagination and dependability to cope with the 90-minute examination which Champions League football brings.

Their campaign is not mathematically extinguished. They need to beat Bayern Munich and then take their hopes into the last game in Rome. If they draw against Bayern and there is a winner between CSKA Moscow and Roma they will be out. That is a lot of many big ‘ifs’ for a side so clearly adrift of the best in Europe. City have conceded two or more in six of their last seven games in Europe. There is no reason why the story against Pep Guardiola’s side should be any different.

There were poor individual performances last night but an answer to the question of how this can keep happening lay in the manager’s tone. Somewhere amid the wreckage, you looked for a sense of fury; the impression that there would be repercussions and that the players might have flinched when they walked back into the dressing room. There was none. Toure, with his lack of discipline, had let the side down badly. But Pellegrini was willing to explain the sending off as evidence that “maybe that reflects the nervous moments that the players have at this moment in this team.” The club needed harmony after the Roberto Mancini years of strife but this is beginning to feel like easy street.

Seydou Doumbia opens the scoring with a free header (Getty Images)

Pellegrini looks puzzled and characterises these occasions as a freak event, defying logic; a “bad moment” as some managers like to say and as he said again last night. But City, a side who have spent £150m on players since the Chilean arrived, have lost three games in five and look a shadow of the team which beat the same opposition here 5-2, exactly a year ago last night. The UEFA stats post-match stats sheets told the story of a side and a manager bereft of ideas as they tried to recover the game. City had two shots on goal in the second half.

The credit due to the manager was for his refusal to fall back on blaming officials. But this was a City caught between ambition and defensive inadequacy. They showed greater ambition than of late, flooding the opposition half early on. But they were stranded there as the kind of fast, strong, talented side that Europe has a habit of throwing up thumped them on the counter attack. It didn’t take rocket science to beat them. “We hoped for counter attack and our plan worked,” manager Leonid Slutski observed.

They only member of the visiting contingent they saw off was their Serbian midfielder Zoran Tosic – refused access to the stadium after his tourist visa was ruled inadequate and, by CSKA accounts, his passport was seized.

Pockets of CSKA fans were more fortunate. Those who had breached UEFA’s discredited ‘behind closed doors’ punishment quickly revealed themselves – roaring with delight at the sight of their team carving up the City defence after only 96 seconds.

Yaya Toure equalised with a lovely free-kick (Getty Images)

There was a little misfortune about the circumstances. Gael Clichy was two yards from Ahmed Musa when the Nigerian hit the ball at him on the right hand fringe of the City area to win a free kick. But there could be no argument about the desperate quality of the side’s defending when Bebra Natcho swung it in. Seydo Doumia was left free and easy to head home’s free kick, with Yaya Toure the errant marker. The boos which rang out were at the sight of the Russians but some must have felt the same sentiment for the team.

The goal seemed to instil a little life and steel into City. Stevan Jovetic was clipped on the edge of the visiors’ area by Vasili Berezutski. Toure – who was impressive before his exit - placed the ensuing free kick in the top left hand corner. But Pellegrini, waving his players forward, watched the defence and the shield in front of it prove unable to deal with the counter attack. Roman Eremenko provided a hint of the danger which lurked, when he bent a pass inside Martin Demichelis with his right outstep, allowing Musa to race onto it and shoot wide. Doumbia made no such mistake. A crass surrender of possession by Clichy, a ball fed into him and he buried it.

There were frustrations everywhere. Referee Tasos Sidiropolous did CSKA a favour by booking Sergei Ignashevich when the card should have gone to Wernbloom, who would then have been sent off. Then, the final indignity: Toure dismissed for a reckless challenge on Eremenko. Nasri could have walked for the same reason. “It’s not a death match,” Pellegrini said before this game. Well, it certainly felt like one.

Manchester City: Hart, Zabaleta, Clichy, Demichelis, Kompany, Fernando, Yaya Toure, Navas, Milner, Jovetic, Aguero.

Substitutions: Nasri (Navas, 45), Fernandinho (Jovetic, 45), Dzeko (Fernando, 65);

CSKA Moscow: Akinfeev, Mario Fernandes, Ignashevich, V. Berezutski, Schennikov, Wernbloom, Dzagoev, R. Eremenko, Natcho, Musa, Doumbia.

Substitutions: Milanov (Doumbia, 67), Efremov (Dzagoev, 86).

Booked: Man City Touré, Fernandinho, Agüero CSKA Wernbloom, Ignashevitch, Eremenko

Sent off: City Fernandinho (70), Touré (81).

Man of match Doumbia

Match rating 7/10.

Possession City 63% CSKA Moscow 37%.

Referee T Sidiropoulos (Greece)

Attendance 42,000.

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