Erling Haaland undid his ponytail and released his flowing blond locks moments before finishing off Arsenal in a purported Premier League title decider that turned into a procession for Manchester City.
The defending champions certainly let their hair down at
Etihad Stadium with a swaggering performance that left little doubt about who
the top team in England is.
Not that there has ever really been a debate.
Backed by the riches of Abu Dhabi and led by arguably the
world’s best coach in Pep Guardiola, City has established an era of domination
in the Premier League that is starting to mirror that of France (with Paris
Saint-Germain) and Germany (with Bayern Munich).
Complete the job — and City is the big favorite after
Wednesday’s 4-1 victory that trimmed the gap on Arsenal to two points with two
games in hand — and the team will have won three straight titles and five of
the last six in supposedly the world’s most competitive league.
OK, there are question marks surrounding the foundations of
this remarkable trophy run, with City facing more than 100 charges of alleged
wrongdoing and failures to co-operate with a Premier League investigation into
the club’s finances.
For the moment, though, that’s with the lawyers.
On the field, City continues to swat away all-comers with a
thrilling style of play that has become more varied since the arrival of
Haaland, who rivals PSG forward Kylian Mbappe as the best striker in the world.
No wonder Arsenal’s young players have stumbled with City —
propelled by Haaland’s goals and Guardiola’s strategy — chasing them down with
a now-familiar winning run.
The league title looks to be heading to the Etihad once
again. And the treble — Premier League, Champions League and FA Cup — appears
to be well within City’s grasp.
“They were exceptional, and it’s extremely difficult to
reach that level,” Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta said.
It’s a level that might even allow City to break new ground
in the Champions League, a trophy the club has never won. A two-legged
semifinal meeting with Real Madrid awaits next month when City might yet meet
its match, given the Spanish team’s aura and history in the competition.
But City looks a more rounded and dangerous team than the
one that fell just short against Madrid in the semifinals last season.
Much of that is down to Haaland, who now has 33 goals in the
Premier League — a record in a 38-game campaign — and 49 in all competitions
after netting the fourth against Arsenal. City has been transformed by the
presence of the Norway striker, who showed against Arsenal that there is much
more to his game than simply scoring goals.
He also had two assists for Kevin De Bruyne, the star of the
show and a player who has made a habit of coming good in the final months of
the season.
As if opposition defenses don’t have enough to worry about
with Haaland alone, De Bruyne — English soccer’s player of the year in two of
the last three seasons — has burst into life with three goals and five assists
in his last four league games. His link-up play with Haaland is getting better
by the week and he was unstoppable against Arsenal in his roving midfield role.
Whether De Bruyne gets that much space against opponents who
will sit back against City, like Fulham and West Ham in the team’s next two
games, is another matter. In that case, he will rely on his delivery into
Haaland from deeper areas to make the difference.
That’s the thing with City: Every base is covered. The sight
of Phil Foden and Riyad Mahrez coming off the bench against tired legs
highlighted the strength in depth, with currently only Nathan Ake unavailable
because of injury.
City can finally take the lead off Arsenal by winning at
Fulham on Saturday — Arsenal doesn’t play again until Tuesday, at home against
Chelsea — and the big hope for Arteta’s team is that City gets sidetracked by
those games against Madrid on May 9 and 17. A trip to Everton comes in between
them, while away matches against Brighton and Brentford to finish the league
season could prove difficult.
Then again, Arsenal has the toughest game left for either of
the title challengers — at Newcastle on May 7 — so City could yet get further
respite.
“We have been through tough moments and tough situations at
this stage in the season in the past, so we know what to do in certain
scenarios,” City defender John Stones said. “It’s just experience, and everyone
still has that hunger.”
Wealth, outrageous talent, a winning mentality. No wonder
teams are finding it virtually impossible to stop City, as Arsenal has just
discovered. -AP