HAALAND FRUSTRATED?

City boss Guardiola ‘not the man’ to tell Haaland how to score

Seven of Haaland’s efforts were headers, including the one he sent soaring over the bar from Julian Alvarez’s cross in the opening minutes

In Summary

•The Premier League’s top scorer had nine shots without scoring, his most in a single game without getting a goal in any of his 79 appearances for Manchester City.

•They were good chances too, especially the cross that Kevin de Bruyne put on a plate for the Norwegian with the hosts trailing 1-0 late on.

Manchester City's Erling Haaland (C) celebrates with teammates after scoring ina past match
Manchester City's Erling Haaland (C) celebrates with teammates after scoring ina past match
Image: FILE

Erling Haaland had an xG of 1.71, his highest expected goals total without scoring in any game for Manchester City

Even the very best strikers occasionally have a day to forget, as Erling Haaland found in his side’s draw against Chelsea on Saturday.

The Premier League’s top scorer had nine shots without scoring, his most in a single game without getting a goal in any of his 79 appearances for Manchester City.

They were good chances too, especially the cross that Kevin de Bruyne put on a plate for the Norwegian with the hosts trailing 1-0 late on. Haaland was right in front of the goal when he met it, but the ball flew wide.

At that stage, it appeared City’s long unbeaten run at Etihad Stadium — going back to November 2022— was about to end, but Rodri had other ideas, with his 83rd-minute strike finally breaking Chelsea’s resistance.

City could not find a winner and have lost ground to Liverpool and Arsenal in the title race, but their manager Pep Guardiola blamed the draw on a poor first-half performance rather than the inability of his star striker to find the net.

‘The next game he will score’

Seven of Haaland’s efforts were headers, including the one he sent soaring over the bar from Julian Alvarez’s cross in the opening minutes.

His xG, or expected goals, was 1.71—again his highest without a goal in any game for City—but only two of his attempts tested Chelsea keeper Djordje Petrovic.

Haaland was off target with his feet too— with another golden chance from a Phil Foden cross going begging when he sliced his volley wide.

Guardiola refused to blame his 23-year-old striker for the dropped points, however, and pointed at his scoring record as a reason why he is not going to start telling the Norwegian how to find the net. “It’s good he had nine shots - the next game he is going to score,” Guardiola said afterward.

“Listen, I was a football player. I played 11 years and scored 11 goals. What a stat, hey?

“One goal a season, those are my stats. So, I am not the proper man to advise the strikers, and what they have to do. We created the chances, he had the chances, and next game he was going to score.

“I don’t blame [him for] that… it is football, it is human beings. It is just as a team, as a group, in the first half we did not perform at our level.”

‘We deserved to win’

Guardiola felt his side responded well after falling behind to a strike from former City forward Raheem Sterling and insisted they should still have won the game despite coming so close to defeat.

“The way we played, we deserved to win,” he added. “I do not doubt that, with the chances we had, that we deserved it.

“The first half was tight, they had their chances with the transition. Our dynamic was not proper, but we had two or three clear [chances] too.

“But we started to play after we scored a goal. We reacted after Raheem [Sterling] scored and the second half was good with the way we played and the way we did everything.”

Rodri bemoans poor defending

Rodri’s goal maintained his long unbeaten streak — he has gone more than a year since being on the losing side, a run of 55 games.

But the Spanish midfielder felt City did not deserve more after what he saw as a poor defensive display before the break - and also felt some big decisions went against his side.

“It’s a point, a draw, of course, we want to win and the way we performed [in the] second half we deserved a bit more, but when you defend like we did you can’t get more,” he said.

“It was in our hands and we have to do better individual actions and you can’t let the game go this way. I’m not blaming anyone but we have to take responsibility if we want to win the league.

“We had chances to win and I felt the momentum, but sometimes it’s a bit frustrating and the ball doesn’t go in.

“I don’t want to talk about the referee, but I don’t remember a game with so many VAR checks and none for us, come on man. You always see the face of the referee and it’s now ‘move on, move on’.”

The result sees City drop to third in the table, four points behind leaders Liverpool but with a game in hand. They can close the gap, and leapfrog second-placed Arsenal if they beat Brentford at home on Tuesday.

“There’s still a long way until the end of the season,” added Rodri. “We have to win against Brentford.

“We were on a very good run and we know none of us three (City, Liverpool, and Arsenal) will win every game until the end. We have to have a strong mentality and move on to the next one.”