Man City look for long-awaited breakthrough against Kiev

Holding a 3-1 lead from the first leg of their round-of-16 tie against Dynamo Kiev, they should make the long-awaited breakthrough into the elite last-eight comfortably enough on Wednesday against a team that has never won a competitive game in England.

Man City look for long-awaited breakthrough against Kiev

(Reuters)





The only problem is that this is Manchester City we are talking about, a team that has dealt in maddening inconsistency for much of the season.

So the Etihad Stadium faithful, who have had to watch them bow out to Barcelona at this stage in the last two seasons, will take nothing for granted, especially after seeing their Premier League title hopes fade so tamely at the weekend.

The insipid performance in a 0-0 draw at Norwich City seemed to identify a side with only the Champions League on their mind and manager Manuel Pellegrini was left playing up the importance of this crucial week for City.

"The only way forward is to think of the Champions League game on Tuesday and after that we play against Manchester United at home (next weekend)," Pellegrini told reporters.

"The first leg lead was a very important result but nothing is finished. The worst thing for us is to think we've already done everything after a 3-1 away win.

"It's important to understand that we face a big team in Dynamo Kiev."

A big team, yes, but one with a seeming inferiority complex whenever it comes to playing top-flight opposition in England. Extraordinarily, the Ukrainian club's record in European competition on English soil reads played 13, drawn 2, lost 11.

It is a sequence that does not bode well for their manager Sergei Rebrov who, having made his own mark in the English game as a striker at Tottenham Hotspur and West Ham United, now has the job of making his players believe.

"City are one of the best teams in the world and we saw their huge potential, especially in terms of an attack that is very hard to stop," Rebrov said after goals from Sergio Agüero, David Silva and Yaya Toure had consigned them to a comprehensive first-leg loss.

"Now we are going to analyse our mistakes and prepare better for the second leg."

They will have to. Rebrov had refused to make excuses about Kiev being rusty after a long winter break but they did look out-of-sorts and have since found a little more rhythm, winning their two subsequent Ukrainian Premier League matches to sit atop the table.

Most crucially, they need a major contribution from their key striker Andriy Yarmolenko who, following an ankle injury, has hit decent form with goals in all three of Kiev's matches in March.

Still, though, it appears the longest of shots that the Ukrainian champions can make the quarter-finals for the first time since 1999, when a certain Sergei Rebrov was leading their attack.





(Reporting by Ian Chadband, editing by Ed Osmond)


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Source: Reuters



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