Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,150,312 members, 7,808,051 topics. Date: Thursday, 25 April 2024 at 06:04 AM

Are Manchester City Turning English Football Into A Farmer's League? - Sports - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Entertainment / Sports / Are Manchester City Turning English Football Into A Farmer's League? (739 Views)

Are Manchester City Turning English Football Into A Farmer's League?- / EPL: Mikel Obi Set For Return To English Football / Nigerians Bring Football Into Rochas Okorochas's Tweet Disclaimer (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply) (Go Down)

Are Manchester City Turning English Football Into A Farmer's League? by Great100000: 5:25am On Jan 20, 2022
With Pep Guardiola's side 11 points clear at the top of the table, there are growing concerns that the Premier League is no longer competitive.

With Pep Guardiola's side 11 points clear at the top of the table, there are growing concerns that the Premier League is no longer competitive

For example, anyone who has tipped Bayern Munich, Paris Saint-Germain or Juventus to win their respective leagues over the past nine years would have been correct 90 per cent of the time.

The Premier League, by contrast, has had five different winners during that time.

However, with Manchester City presently 11 points clear at the top of the table midway through January, there is an increasing concern that English football could be going in the same direction.

Pep Guardiola's side are heading towards what would be a fourth title in five years, with their domination and control of games seeing the possibility of a three-horse title race slipping away.

City extended their winning streak to 12 matches on Saturday with a 1-0 victory over second-placed Chelsea, who could only manufacture a single shot on target.

Thomas Tuchel had complained that the European champions were finding it difficult to stay in the title race and now it seems that only Liverpool – 11 points behind with a game in hand – have any hope of overhauling the runaway leaders.

So, is the Premier League becoming a procession? Is it, in reality, no more competitive than the Bundesliga or Ligue 1?

Before attempting to answer those questions, it's worth pointing out that football fans in Germany, France and Italy might take issue with the jibe, believing teams have had to fight harder for title glory than English fans believe.

Bayern have won the last nine Bundesliga titles but the 2019 season was only settled on the final day, while neither PSG nor Juve are currently the reigning champions of France or Italy, respectively.

It's also worth remembering that dominance is cyclical and hardly a new phenomenon, even in England.

Aston Villa in the 1890s, Arsenal in the 1930s, Liverpool in the late-70s and early-80s, and Manchester United on three occasions between 1992 and 2011, all won four titles in the space of five years.

City have been superb since Guardiola's difficult first season in Manchester but they are hardly so far ahead of their rivals that the title race was considered a foregone conclusion in August.

Champions League winners Chelsea were expected to mount a serious challenge after adding £98 million ($136m) striker Romelu Lukaku to a squad that beat City three times at the end of the last campaign. Liverpool were expected to challenge again with Virgil van Dijk back from long-term injury to take charge of the defence, while even Manchester United were considered challengers after adding Cristiano Ronaldo, Jadon Sancho and Raphael Varane to a side that had finished second.

While United imploded spectacularly and rapidly, Chelsea and Liverpool looked well-placed to sustain title challengers. Indeed, on December 11, just two points separated the Blues, the Reds and City.

However, Chelsea have won just four of their last 13 Premier League matches, while Sunday's win over Brentford was Liverpool's first in four outings.

Liverpool are currently on course for a total of 81 points, which would only be enough to guarantee two titles this decade, Chelsea's projected total of 74 points would not be enough to win any Premier League in its history.

But the title race is far from over.

Liverpool have a game in hand and a trip to the Etihad Stadium that, if won, would reduce the gap to just five points and Jurgen Klopp's side are more than capable of putting together a winning streak to put City under pressure.

The champions' form may be intimidating but they are certainly not unbeatable.

Just ask Crystal Palace, who deservedly won at the Etihad Stadium, or Southampton or Wolves, who can point to controversial refereeing decisions for failing to do the same.

And what about Arsenal, who were the better side in a self-inflicted 2-1 defeat on New Year's Day, or Leicester, Tottenham and West Ham, who have all beaten City in different competitions this season?

Of course, Guardiola's side have started to push the bar in terms of what's required at the very top.

Should they reach a projected 97 points, it would only be for the fifth time in Premier League history. But all five instances occurred in the last five years (City twice and Liverpool twice).

Guardiola will get plenty of credit from his club's fans for their brutal and relentless dominance, but there will always be detractors ready to snipe at City's achievements.

When it comes to their success, sooner or later the subject of money will come up. The wealthiest clubs have generally always been the most decorated.

City are certainly no different, having spent more than anyone else since Sheikh Mansour took over the club in 2008, with huge amounts lavished on star players to give Guardiola the quality to mould his side into a machine.

Against Chelsea, other than academy graduate Phil Foden, every player cost more than £35m ($47m).

However, Tuchel's squad was hardly compiled on a shoestring and while he complained that City had coped better with Covid-19 and injuries, eight of his nine substitute options were full internationals, while four of Guardiola's bench had played three minutes in the Premier League between them.

So, as strong as City's squad undeniably is, there are plenty of holes.

After all, they are going through an entire season without a natural striker or an orthodox left-back, even if Joao Cancelo has been exceptional since being thrust into the role.

City wanted Harry Kane in the summer but when it became clear that he wouldn't leave Tottenham, a decision was made to continue with what they had rather than buying a misfit in the hope they might be a success.

Ronaldo's desire to quit Juve saw him saw him emerge as an option but City's interest ended when United were spooked into a panic buy. City decided to regroup, to wait until summer 2022 before making a far more sensible purchase.

United are an example of a club that have made several costly errors in the transfer market in recent years, not least paying crazy fees or massive wages for players such as Alexis Sanchez, Harry Maguire and Fred – all of whom were wanted by City but dropped when the numbers involved in the proposed deals sky-rocketed.

Sitting seventh in the Premier League, with an interim manager and players wanting to leave, United are the counter-argument to the old adage that money buys success. They are proof that financial power is only a factor if you're capable of spending shrewdly.

City are certainly in the middle of a golden period but history suggests that they are highly unlikely to stay there forever, particularly given the quality of rivals such as Liverpool and Chelsea, who have won two of the last three Champions League between them.

Guardiola had incredible success with Barcelona and Bayern Munich but is under no illusions what it takes to keep his squad motivated to keep them at the top.

"To win and win, in this country, in this league, this is my best title I have and the best I will have when I leave,” was his conclusion after beating Chelsea on Saturday.

As far as Guardiola is concerned, the Premier League is certainly no Farmer's League. City are merely a cut above some top-quality rivals right now.

https://www.goal.com/en/news/are-manchester-city-turning-english-football-into-a-farmers/blt41064a4a78a97643

Re: Are Manchester City Turning English Football Into A Farmer's League? by Olayoo: 6:26am On Jan 20, 2022
Later they'll be saying he's fraud because of how much he spent. Tuchel and klopp are fantastic managers. But guardiola is right there with the best in history to have changed the game. And he isn't just changing it, he's winning trophies along side. Like a lot.
Tuchel was at PSG with star studded players worth a lot but delivered champions league with Chelsea instead. Guardiola is at man city with almost the same worth of players. He has won it with low budget barca at that time.(2x for that matter)
Re: Are Manchester City Turning English Football Into A Farmer's League? by KingOfTheDamned: 6:41am On Jan 20, 2022
Here's the thing dormination in the 80s and 90s in the EPL was strictly by talent and brilliant coaching.

Now ots all money. Arab oil money turned Mancity into a Galactico. JUST LIKE PSG ,juve any coach who coaches Mancity will win the league until all these players age and there is no more money to buy players.

Look at the former Tottenham coach who could never win anything suddenly he is winning the league with PSG.

Arab money, once you jabe the money ,you can buy the best tin every position you need have an average coach and distill win the league

1 Like

Re: Are Manchester City Turning English Football Into A Farmer's League? by KingOfTheDamned: 6:43am On Jan 20, 2022
[s]
Olayoo:
Later they'll be saying he's fraud because of how much he spent. Tuchel and klopp are fantastic managers. But guardiola is right there with the best in history to have changed the game. And he isn't just changing it, he's winning trophies along side. Like a lot.
Tuchel was at PSG with star studded players worth a lot but delivered champions league with Chelsea instead. Guardiola is at man city with almost the same worth of players. He has won it with low budget barca at that time.(2x for that matter)
[/s]
Re: Are Manchester City Turning English Football Into A Farmer's League? by Great100000: 7:07pm On Jan 20, 2022
grin
Re: Are Manchester City Turning English Football Into A Farmer's League? by uthlaw: 4:30am On Jan 21, 2022
KingOfTheDamned:
Here's the thing dormination in the 80s and 90s in the EPL was strictly by talent and brilliant coaching.

Now ots all money. Arab oil money turned Mancity into a Galactico. JUST LIKE PSG ,juve any coach who coaches Mancity will win the league until all these players age and there is no more money to buy players.

Look at the former Tottenham coach who could never win anything suddenly he is winning the league with PSG.

Arab money, once you jabe the money ,you can buy the best tin every position you need have an average coach and distill win the league
but Manchester united spend more money than them,lampard bought 11good players,no world class player in man city team,he only makes them monsters!

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Are Manchester City Turning English Football Into A Farmer's League? by fattprince(m): 7:39am On Jan 21, 2022
uthlaw:
but Manchester united spend more money than them,lampard bought 11good players,no world class player in man city team,he only makes them monsters!
Are you serious?
Sterling is world class, Ederson, Mahrez, De bruyne, Bernardo, these are the current crop now let's talk about the ones that has once played for them. Yaya, Aguero, Silva, Kompany.
Re: Are Manchester City Turning English Football Into A Farmer's League? by uthlaw: 8:02am On Jan 21, 2022
fattprince:

Are you serious?
Sterling is world class, Ederson, Mahrez, De bruyne, Bernardo, these are the current crop now let's talk about the ones that has once played for them. Yaya, Aguero, Silva, Kompany.
who make those players became world class. Yaya,aguero,Silva and kompany are no longer in the team...stop bringing excuses on spending,every club spend big,when a coach is good,is good!
Re: Are Manchester City Turning English Football Into A Farmer's League? by fattprince(m): 8:11am On Jan 21, 2022
uthlaw:
who make those players became world class. Yaya,aguero,Silva and kompany are no longer in the team...stop bringing excuses on spending,every club spend big,when a coach is good,is good!
I know but those ones I mentioned are world class. At least De bruyne and Sterling are. And I'm not saying guardiola isn't good. Guardiola is very good I'm just talking only about world class players. If you don't think that google Man City world class players, I'm sure De bruyne and Sterling will pop up.
Re: Are Manchester City Turning English Football Into A Farmer's League? by uthlaw: 8:12am On Jan 21, 2022
fattprince:

I know but those ones I mentioned are world class. At least De bruyne and Sterling are. And I'm not saying guardiola isn't good. Guardiola is very good I'm just talking only about world class players. If you don't think that google Man City world class players, I'm sure De bruyne and Sterling will pop up.
Chelsea sold kelvin and sterling was floop in Liverpool... I also understand you!
Re: Are Manchester City Turning English Football Into A Farmer's League? by paulolee(m): 8:17am On Jan 21, 2022
thats d pep factor, he is running monopoly in EPL, same league dt critics said he cnt dominate wen he was doing nunbers in spain n Germany n now dey av eaten dier words..
Re: Are Manchester City Turning English Football Into A Farmer's League? by paulolee(m): 8:20am On Jan 21, 2022
KingOfTheDamned:
Here's the thing dormination in the 80s and 90s in the EPL was strictly by talent and brilliant coaching.

Now ots all money. Arab oil money turned Mancity into a Galactico. JUST LIKE PSG ,juve any coach who coaches Mancity will win the league until all these players age and there is no more money to buy players.

Look at the former Tottenham coach who could never win anything suddenly he is winning the league with PSG.

Arab money, once you jabe the money ,you can buy the best tin every position you need have an average coach and distill win the league
guy abeg no start, na this Arab moni get or spend moni pass the glazers of united? united gat the highest paying players in their squad, d likes of bissaka n maguire was once record breaking signings paid for defenders n u are here saying pep is winning bcox of moni..
incase u dnt know, united av spent more than city in d last 4 years with nothing to show for it, d difference is dt city boy dey deliver nt united own de flop
seems u don forget d amount united paid for Maguire DTS now a flop...jus Gv pep d credits n move on bcox no b all coaches can do wat he is doing with dt squad..
Re: Are Manchester City Turning English Football Into A Farmer's League? by fattprince(m): 8:29am On Jan 21, 2022
uthlaw:
Chelsea sold kelvin and sterling was floop in Liverpool... I also understand you!
Bro. Sterling wasn't a flop at Liverpool oh. It was when he wanted to leave and Liverpool didn't want to sell him that he started playing rubbish, just as Coutinho and how Kane was doing beginning of season. World class is when a player performs at top level consistently for a period of 6 or more years. Once a world class always a world class because age will surely make them drop form at a point in time.

1 Like

Re: Are Manchester City Turning English Football Into A Farmer's League? by uthlaw: 8:31am On Jan 21, 2022
fattprince:

Bro. Sterling wasn't a flop at Liverpool oh. It was when he wanted to leave and Liverpool didn't want to sell him that he started playing rubbish, just as Coutinho and how Kane was doing beginning of season. World class is when a player performs at top level consistently for a period of 6 or more years. Once a world class always a world class because age will surely make them drop form at a point in time.
okay boss!

(1) (Reply)

Champions League Draw LIVE: Find Out The Quarter-final Ties In The UCL / Get FREE 3 Odds Daily On Telegram With Our Experts / CROATIA OR MOROCCO WOULD WIN THIS CUP

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 49
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.