Roberto Mancini was left
admitting Manchester City need to win all 10 remaining Premier League
matches if they are to snatch the title away from bitter city rivals
Manchester United.



The City manager, who was speaking after his
side had snatched a 1-0 win over struggling Aston Villa on Monday, added
United, who hold a 12 point lead over them, would also have to lose
several matches if they were to retain the title they won in thrilling
fashion on the final day of last season.
"It is difficult. We have
30 more points to play for and we need to try to win. We will see what
happens at the end. Anything can happen in football," said Mancini.
"We need to win all the matches and they lose four or five."
Mancini, whose best hope of silverware probably lies in the FA Cup which he won two years ago, revealed Jack Rodwell is set to face a month on the sidelines after hobbling off during the game.
It
was yet another blow for the talented Rodwell, which came just 25
minutes into the contest in what was only his second start since
September.
"We are very sorry for Jack, he is a good guy and player. He is unlucky. It is his hamstring," said 48-year-old Mancini.
"I
think it is impossible to resolve this problem in six or seven months
when he has had it for five or six years. It will need more time.
"I
think he will be out until after the international break, it will be
three or four weeks. He is young, he played very well against Chelsea
and here."
Manchester City manager Roberto Mancini
Villa,
meanwhile, remain in 18th and were once again left to rue a costly
lapse of concentration from one of their players at a key moment.
As
the clock ticked down in added first-half time, Villa appeared to have
survived the onslaught - but then came Ciaran Clarke's moment to forget.
The
defender, Villa's last man, received a throw-in but loitered in
possession. With Edin Dzeko now upon him, he elected for a drag-back in a
desperate attempt to get himself out of trouble only to slip.
Dzeko
charged through before squaring to Carlos Tevez who, in typically
clinical fashion, sold Guzan with a dummy before slotting past the
beleaguered Clarke, by now desperately attempting to make amends on the
line.
It was a feat of finishing at its most ruthless and,
although harsh on Villa, they only had themselves to blame - Clarke's
furious protests were waved away - and correctly so - by referee Mike
Dean.
More woes for Villa
Manager Paul Lambert admitted it was a mistake by Clark - but refused to condemn the defender.
Manager Paul Lambert admitted it was a mistake by Clark - but refused to condemn the defender.
Their
forthcoming matches against fellow strugglers Reading and QPR now take
on even further importance, but Lambert insists they can take heart from
Monday's display.
"I thought we were well in the game. But that's football. You pick yourself up and go again," said Lambert.
"The next two games are massive for us. If we play like that, we will give teams a fright thats for sure."
No comments:
Post a Comment