Champions Manchester City galvanized their pursuit of English Premier League leaders Chelsea on Sunday with an emphatic 3-0 victory over a Southampton side who have surprisingly come between the leading title protagonists.
With table-topping Chelsea held to a 0-0 draw against Sunderland on Saturday, victory for City at fortress St Mary’s took them above Southampton into second place, six points behind Jose Mourinho’s pacesetters.
Tottenham Hotspur came from a goal down to beat Everton 2-1 with goals from Christian Eriksen and Roberto Soldado moving Spurs up to seventh.
Photo: Reuters
After a less than convincing start to the defense of their title, City’s display against Southampton saw them back to their free-flowing best as goals from Yaya Toure, Frank Lampard and Gael Clichy condemned Ronald Koeman’s high-flying side to a first home defeat of the season.
“We beat a very good team,” City manager Manuel Pellegrini told Sky Sports. “They were second in the table and deserved that position. It was important to have a clean sheet again, they had just one chance in the 90 minutes and that is important for the trust in our team. It was close in the first 45 minutes, and we continued working as a team in defense and attack until we scored.”
City screamed for a penalty for a foul on Sergio Aguero in a goalless first half when Jose Fonte’s hefty challenge wiped out the Argentine in the penalty area.
Photo: Reuters
Incredibly, Aguero, making his 100th Premier League appearance, was booked for diving, but Ivorian midfielder Toure, so often City’s go-to man on their way to the title last season, put his side in front after 51 minutes when his low shot from the edge of the penalty area flicked off Saints defender Toby Alderweireld and past Fraser Forster.
When French defender Eliaquim Mangala received a second yellow for a foul on Shane Long it seemed Southampton had a lifeline, but that was snatched away when Lampard ghosted through into space and buried his shot low into the corner after being picked out by James Milner.
Clichy hammered the final nail into Southampton’s coffin when he fired home in the 88th minute.
“I’m disappointed because in the second half the beginning was a bit better than the start of the game,” Koeman told Sky Sports after his side dropped to third place. “You know that if you do some mistakes, you are punished for that. It was not good enough today and we have to realize that. The difference was the quality.”
Everton’s Kevin Mirallas produced a stunning long-range strike to open the scoring at White Hart Lane in Sunday’s clash between two Europa League representatives.
Tottenham equalized six minutes later when Everton goalkeeper Tim Howard palmed Harry Kane’s shot into the path of Eriksen, who kept his composure to score.
In first-half stoppage-time, Soldado scored his first league goal since March when he raced on to Aaron Lennon’s astute pass and powered a shot past Howard.
Everton applied pressure late on, but Spurs stayed strong to avoid their third consecutive league defeat at home.
“Today, I showed my emotion, I was happy because I know our players suffer a lot and our supporters too,” Spurs manager Mauricio Pochettino told Sky Sports. “We need to keep this mentality and try to show the same in the next game. Always, you need the time to set your philosophy, but today we are very pleased with the three points.”
Defeat for Everton was their first in six league matches.
“The result is really difficult to take,” Toffees manager Roberto Martinez said. “It’s harsh because we performed really well, but after we scored we couldn’t impose ourselves and take ourselves away from Spurs. We gave everything we had to get an equalizer.”
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