Everton 4 Manchester City 0 - Johnny On The Spot | Vital Football

Everton 4 Manchester City 0 - Johnny On The Spot

Johnny Baguette

Alert Team
Pep Guardiola and Manchester City's season has taken a not altogether entirely unexpected terrible turn for the worst. The Groundhog Day manner of a humiliating defeat at Everton has generated great anger across Planet Blue with absolute justification.

Eight full days have elapsed since City basked in the afterglow of a terrific FA Cup performance against an albeit obliging West Ham.
Many of us were heartened by the solidity City showed, particularly in defence. However, doubts amongst the faithful remained based upon what we have seen so far in a difficult and tremendously disappointing Premier League campaign that the type of footballing suicide The Blues committed at Leicester was only one direct, decisive attack at our goal away and then for a game
to rapidly unravel once more.

And so it came to pass. Shorn of the fleeting but proven shot stopping presence and communication of Willy Caballero, City's defence were back to their nervous, anxious and insufferable 'best.' Willy is not the greatest keeper in the world but you know he's there behind you. whatever his limitations. Guardiola's stubborn persistence in deploying the confidence shot, unprotected, uncommunicative and overrun Claudio Bravo is now a clear and present ongoing disaster. It is not the Chilean legend's fault that he has been propelled into a situation whereby it has been proven across 32 competitive fixtures that ALL the defenders in front of him are hopelessly unable to play in the system their manager wants. Unless City's attacking midfielders and forwards fail to hit the back of the net or defend from the front, the side will ride their luck. Today, Bravo was utterly humiliated by two teenagers. Worse still, all of Everton's shots on goal went in.

Thus far, once the shock and awe of Pep's arrival in England was overcome by our opponents, only 9 wins from our last 21 fixtures tells its own story. City's abject failure to turn yet more ludicrous possession and passing statistics into goals today was the clearest example yet of a now urgent need for Pep to change the record.

Furthermore, approach a game like City did at Everton with the type of tinkering that saw one of the Premier League's greatest strikers reduced to apparent disinterest having swapped roles with one of our wingers and there will never, ever be the consistency instilled that is required to win the English top flight title the way we did in 2012 and 2014. Last season I bemoaned in these cyber pages how the tools are there at City to progress, but I am not so sure now. Today confirmed for me that this City side is not the sum of its parts.

It is tempting when the stakes are so high at the top as they are in 2017 to hark back to how previous City managers addressed their squad's capabilities. Nobody can deny that our most successful sides were all built around a solid, settled spine built upon the type of defence that can combat the likes of the combative Romelu Lukaku who trampled all over City's beleaguered backline today. Guardiola's side patently do not have that backbone and his tactics have been likened to the we'll score more than you years of Kevin Keegan's reign. I think that is unfair as even Mad Kev deployed the type of big, no nonsense imposing keepers and centre halves that grounds like Goodison Park call for in the deep midwinter.

To sum up a brutal, brutal day at the office whereby some pundits are now mischieviously referring to Jurgen Klopp as City's one that got away, what concerned me most about us on Merseyside was the lack of passion and bite that the players showed alongside what now appears to be growing discomfort with what is being asked of them from front to back.

It was never in the script nor expected to see a Guardiola side so short of intensity, especially with the mid season benefit of no European football, but that is where we are at. In one passage of play City indulged in 17 passes inside the Toffees penalty area with no end product. Pep's stubborn refusal to go direct and long when the situation demands it as his arch enemy Jose Mourinho did yet again against Liverpool today will be our undoing unless there is a radical change of plan. Don't hold your breath. I don't think Pep is for turning.

Today's hammering has been coming for a side who 6 weeks ago were 10 points ahead of The Stretfords who are now only 2 in behind and have momentum.

Right now it would be a brave punter indeed who would wager that The Blues will seal the top four finish that our league aspirations have now been reduced to.

Read more: http://www.manchestercity.vitalfootball.co.uk/article.asp?a=576702#ixzz4Vr25JL4p
 
A worryingly accurate assessment of our predicament. A solid defensive unit with a strong spine are key components of any successful side. The defensive situation is now acting as a corrosive element undermining the whole team and this has to be addressed.

The role of Bravo has been pivotal. He is not blameless & the point about poor communication is well made but similarly neither is he wholely at fault for the goals the team have conceded. There is a dysfunctional look to the whole team at the moment which has not been aided by the disruption caused by multiple enforced absences through suspension and the loss of a key player in Gundogan.

What concerns me most is that Pep's renowned belief in his principles can start to have the look of a season long vanity project unless he accepts that a certain pragmatism may be required especially in this first year. I am pretty sure that failing to qualify for the Champions League is not part of the wholistic business plan given the importance that it plays in attracting the right signings and commercially. Unless things are turned around soon, that may be a prospect that we may have to face.

Sadly, I can see little hope that it will happen.

Spurs will be licking their licks at the thought of playing us next weekend. I am not sure I will be able to watch. :013:
 
I haven't seen it as I haven't worked up the courage to watch the game but he has previous for that. Can't abide it :013:

Performance wise this speaks volumes - we have now conceded from the first shot we have faced in four of the last seven games.
 
Skoorb your words "season-long vanity project" perfectly sums up what I have been feeling we are going to be made to endure.

 
For pushing him. Otamendi went down like he was shot. Not for the first time.

However, in his er, defence, there's refereeing inconsistency right there. Clattenburg must have seen Fabregas goad Fernandinho into pushing him....
 
Good points about the spine of the team.

Need someone to organise the back 4/3/whatever. Kompany crocked, Bravo no confidence, Stones too young, Kolarov too...Kolarov, Managala too far away and Otamendi probably needs his wife to pack his spongebag for away games so Zonal marking to him would probably be like getting a ferret to interpret hieroglyphics.

The irony of course is that we'll probably beat the spuds in a mash and grab raid.

 
Can't see it Ken, but I admire your optimism. Answers on a postcard for our last 4-0 league or cup drubbing discounting the Chelsea cup 5-1.
 
The blank canvas upon which Pep has been provided to paint his latest masterpiece (working title "Possession Without Purpose") is currently resembling something that Jackson Pollock would be proud of - a confused, jumbled mess.

The first goal illustrated it perfectly. A poor pass forward is intercepted. Stones is out of position having been given licence to roam; Yaya is 'covering' the hole he has created but does a poor job allowing Miralles to get beyond him; Otamendi is left isolated and too far from Lukaku to stop him.

An utter defensive mess created by the desire Guardiola has to encourage players to interchange positions but which fails if everyone isn't on the same page, uber-competent and comfortable in playing different roles and hyper-aware of the dangers this creates. Put simply I don't think many of the current squad are up to delivering what Pep is after and we are finding out the hard way.
 
Have to say Skoorb, I saw that differently, Mirallas does get half a yard on Yaya but tbf to Yaya he does react well and has caught Mirallas by the time he's crossing it, had Otamendi read that situation better then he doesn't leave Lukaku for an easy chance right in front of goal.
 
Fair enough - from what I have seen so far our problems seem to be created by the fluidity of movement Pep encourages in players. This inevitably destabilises the team shape and creates gaps and holes which opponents are exploiting ruthlessly.

Can't get my head around whether Pep issued instructions to the players which were different from those last week at WHU.

Have to feel for Stones. Having been berated for trying to play out from virtually every situation and encouraged by all the pundits to 'put it into row Z' occasionally......when he tried to do so today, it I said blocked and rebounds to favour his opponent :017:
 
Was it Souness? Prior to the game there was an hour long Merseyside v Manchester programme where he specifically said that Stones needed to learn when to to "kick the ball into row Z"
 
Can't recall who, it was on in the room but wasn't really watching. Whoever it was said that the way he kicked it was wrong as he tried to gain extra yards with the clearance instead of just putting it out. Can see what they're saying but yet again it's an over critical response to a moment of extreme misfortune.