Manchester City reach the midway stage of their Premier League campaign today with manager Roberto Mancini predicting the title race will go right down to the wire.
City started the weekend level on points with Manchester United, but remain at the top of the table because of a superior goal difference.
It is so tight that Mancini believes the title race will not be decided until the last day of the season on May 13.
And City’s Italian manager says he has not set a points target for his side to win the league as the blistering starts from City, United and Tottenham Hotspur, currently third in the table, make it difficult to predict how many points will be needed to be crowned champions.
“It is difficult [to predict],” Mancini said. “In this moment City, United and Tottenham have a lot of points compared to other years. If you said how many points you need to win the league, it is very difficult. I think you need to wait another six or eight games.”
City have seen a five-point cushion at the top disappear since the start of last month after suffering their first loss of the season at Chelsea and dropping two more points against West Bromwich Albion on Monday.
However, Mancini laughed off suggestions his players are feeling the pressure.
“We knew before West Brom it would be impossible to stay on the top [all the time] or to win the title in January,” he added.
“When you play against United, Tottenham or Chelsea, this is impossible. We have taken 45 points and scored a lot of goals. We should fight until the end and I think this championship will be decided in the last three or four games,” he said.
City have no fresh injury worries, although the fragile Owen Hargreaves remains sidelined with a knee problem.
Matt Kilgallon is set to answer Martin O’Neill’s emergency call — 19 months after his last game for Sunderland.
O’Neill is ready to bring the forgotten Black Cats center-back in from the cold in an attempt to help shackle big-spending City.
The Sunderland manager is wrestling with an injury crisis, with Titus Bramble, Michael Turner and Phil Bardsley all sidelined.
The Northern Irishman is set to turn to Kilgallon, who was frozen out by previous manager Steve Bruce soon after sealing a £1.75 million (US$2.7 million) move from Sheffield United two years ago.
Kilgallon — who established a good reputation when he started out at Leeds United — has been farmed out on loan for Middlesbrough and Doncaster, with the last of just six Sunderland starts coming in May 2010.
The 27-year-old has yet to play any first team soccer this season, but with stand-in left-back Kieran Richardson also a doubt through illness, O’Neill admits he’s short on defensive options.
“The absences are a major blow because we haven’t got the largest squad to choose from, so it’s a major concern,” O’Neill said. “Matt Kilgallon and a number of other players who haven’t played might find themselves playing. I’m hoping he [Kilgallon] might get a chance. If he does, hopefully he’ll play well. He’ll be up for the challenge like the rest of them.”
Despite earning seven points from his four games in charge, O’Neill insists Sunderland still aren’t out of danger in their bid to climb away from the relegation zone.
“My aim is to get us out of bother. We’re still in a spot of bother, it’s a real dogfight,” he said.
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