Manchester City hit seven in thumping of sorry Leeds

Defending champions rampant in victory as Kevin De Bruyne nets twice

Kevin De Bruyne of Manchester City scores his side’s fifth goal past Illan Meslier of Leeds United. Photo: Alex Livesey/Getty Images
Kevin De Bruyne of Manchester City scores his side’s fifth goal past Illan Meslier of Leeds United. Photo: Alex Livesey/Getty Images

Manchester City 7 Leeds United 0

Manchester City are taking flight precisely when required. This seventh consecutive Premier League victory stretched their lead to four points – Liverpool have played a game fewer – and took Pep Guardiola past the 500 goal mark: 502 to be exact in a record time of 207 games.

If City were rampant, Leeds were humiliated, and it is a puzzle that their lauded manager, Marcelo Bielsa, can oversee such an easy-to-pick off unit. There are ways to avoid defeat and none were present tonight. Southampton and Crystal Palace left here this term with a draw and win, respectively, by stymieing City and launching clever raids yet Bielsa learned nothing from them.

What, though, will please Guardiola most are the two goals from a resurgent Kevin De Bruyne, plus the sparkling performances of Jack Grealish, Rodri and Riyad Mahrez, in particular and, of course, a supreme team display.

READ MORE

Leeds were without six injured players in Kalvin Phillips, Liam Cooper, Patrick Bamford, Pascal Struijk, Robin Koch and Rodrigo Moreno.

Guardiola had only Ferran Torres on the treatment room-list and could name De Bruyne in his Premier League XI for the first time in five weeks as the champions sought to add another win to their sequence.

Guardiola positioned, again, Phil Foden as the false nine with Grealish in a familiar left-sided berth, the £100m man still to consistently light his new team up. The former Aston Villa midfielder’s opening gambit of a fierce shot saw Illan Meslier save low down. It was to prove a good augury, though, for City.

Bernardo Silva has been flying recently so when Foden fed De Bruyne, who relayed the ball to the Portuguese, the sight of him missing a gaping goal was odd. But normal sense was soon restored. In front of a loud crowd under the stadium lights Foden tapped to Rodri. He barrelled past Tyler Roberts then Luke Ayling and, on pulling the trigger, saw his effort rebound off Meslier. Lurking behind was Foden, who had raced in from halfway, and his finish opened the scoring, Jamie Shackleton’s hapless miskick helping it in.

The very last thing required at this venue is to concede early. Eight minutes had gone and by 13 it was 2-0 and, possibly, contest over. City were a blue swarm, claiming a corner on the right that was delivered by Mahrez. Eventually the ball went back to the Algerian whose cross had Grealish leaping and powering a header – his second in the Premier League – beyond Meslier.

Illan Meslier stands dejected. Photo: Peter Powell/EPA
Illan Meslier stands dejected. Photo: Peter Powell/EPA

Bielsa, on his bespoke pitchside ‘bucket-upside-down’ seat, was as stunned as his team. City, relentless and ruthless, wanted more. Grealish ran across the area and unloaded. Mahrez darted to the byline, fired the ball in and De Bruyne went close.

On display was a side in perfect concert, its 10 outfield players knowing exactly where to pass and move. Mahrez was rivalling Grealish as City’s marquee performer, a devilish 180-spin bewildering Junior Firpo, who dragged him back and was booked.

Grealish next danced 60 yards along the left and found Foden – a corner ensued, and Leeds escaped. As they did, too, when the excellent Rodri again burst lungs to reach a Grealish pass, the Spaniard running out of road near Meslier’s goal.

Even better was Rodri’s sublime pass that created City’s third. This released De Bruyne in the left channel and a swish of the Belgian’s left foot and Meslier was beaten. When they trotted off for the break Leeds required the mother and father of all comebacks to avoid the same fate.

The visitors were criminally open, Bielsa, for all his reputation as a supposed tactical guru, apparently unable to have Leeds operate from a solid structure. When Jack Harrison was allowed to skate into City’s area the No 22’s lack of poise – he passed the ball to Ederson – summed up the poor team Bielsa had fielded.

Things got worse for Leeds when Mahrez blazed from long range and in went the fourth via Firpo. At this juncture a chorus of “Sergio, Sergio” rang out in tribute to Sergio Agüero, City’s record scorer who is to officially retire on Wednesday.

This was the kind of evening City enjoyed due to their razor-sharp intent and Leeds’ soporific, powder-puff resistance. Stuart Dallas, to his credit, clipped Ederson’s right post but the question remained how many more City might plunder.

When De Bruyne shirked a tackle a furious Guardiola threw up his hands in disgust as Dallas went close. Complacency – and a lot of it – seemed Leeds’ last hope. But this was before De Bruyne redeemed himself with a 20-yard barnburner for 5-0. John Stones and Nathan Aké completed the rout. City’s delighted fans had sung: “We want seven”. They got their wish. – Guardian