How Man City dwarfed Real Madrid in Champions League

.Brazilian touch makes difference in 4-2 aggregate grinds Madrid to dust

Back when Pep Guardiola was in his playing pomp and Zinedine Zidane was plotting his path towards the summit of the European game, elite clubs loved to look towards Brazilian brilliance to supply a vital measure of Champions League pizzazz.

Guardiola could delight in picking out the lethal Romario from midfield. Where he trod for Barcelona, Ronaldo, Rivaldo and Ronaldinho duly followed.

“Pep has a special feeling for Brazilian players,” Guardiola’s former assistant and newly appointed Flamengo boss Domenec Torrent told Globoesporte earlier this year.

“In fact, he has a preference for Brazilians because they are very versatile and can adapt to any type of football.”

It was little surprise to see Brazil internationals at the heart of Guardiola’s plans for Friday’s Champions League showdown with Real Madrid, with a 2-1 win and 4-2 aggregate victory their reward.

But Jogo Bonito, this was not.

Fernandinho’s steadying hand

Eric Garcia’s decision to reject a new contract at City has the teenage centre-back heading for the exit door – a situation sure to have caused his manager anguish on the eve of Madrid’s arrival in Manchester.

Guardiola has placed great faith in a 19-year-old he declares “does not make mistakes”.

 Negotiating your way out of a potentially triumphant Champions League campaign might count as one.

Garcia had established himself as Aymeric Laporte’s first-choice partner in central defence over recent weeks.

His apparently pending return to boyhood club Barcelona meant a defensive recall for a man 16 years his senior.

In their first season since Vincent Kompany’s departure, City have wanted for leadership and presence on the big occasions.

Liverpool, Chelsea, Manchester United, Arsenal and Tottenham all have victories over them.

The sight of Fernandinho, striding out as captain felt like a grown-up heading into a situation where one was required.

Converted from a central midfielder this season, he made a perfectly judged tackle when the in-form Karim Benzema lurked on the edge of the City area in the fifth minute.

Tireless Jesus gives Varane no rest

At the other end of the field, Fernandinho’s international team-mate, Gabriel Jesus, resumed the hard yards he carried out in City’s 2-1 first-leg win.

Guardiola doesn’t often have a need for left-wing donkey work.

 When he does, Jesus dutifully trots over from centre-forward and gets to work. Romario would never have entertained such a thing.

Jesus lined up in an ever-alert and harassing front three alongside Phil Foden and Raheem Sterling.

He seized upon Raphael Varane’s first error of a personal ordeal to selflessly give Sterling his 100th goal in City colours.

The Brazilian in the City line-up possessing the most flair was arguably their goalkeeper. Ederson’s passing was once again bafflingly good in its range an execution, but he had the basics of his craft in immaculate order as he denied Benzema sharply and snaffled any other shot that came his way.

He had little chance when Madrid’s number nine powered in a header to equalise on the night. After that wobble, Jesus bought a free-kick then won a header from a long ball pumped to his flank.

Little flecks of dirty work to draw the sting from a difficult moment. And all while a Yorkshireman at right-back was gallivanting about like gloriously renegade Cafu. Kyle Walker gained possession nine times – more than any other City player – and won all seven of his duels.

Madrid’s aura ebbs away

As has been the case over the course of City’s season, chances were created and spurned by vibrant but profligate attackers.

If they lose in Lisbon, it will probably be in circumstances where they feel they shouldn’t have.

It felt dicey to have left the door ajar to such greats of the competition. But during an increasingly torrid second period for Madrid – in line with Juventus’s woes in Turin – the layers of an aura fell away and time ticked loudly on some great careers.

Kevin De Bruyne was romping around and tearing holes in a manner reminiscent of the man in the away dugout and errors from a ragged Madrid defence were piling up.

Dani Carvajal, who could have done without Sterling’s company when Guardiola shuffled his front three at half-time, coughed up possession 15 times. Ferland Mendy and Varane were also into double figures in that regard, with the latter culpable when the tie was put to bed.

Lurking with maximum nuisance value was Jesus, producing a one-touch finish to make Romario and his other great countrymen purr. A moment of triumph etched from a thousand beads of sweat rolling down Guardiola’s robust Brazilian spine.

.Omnisport

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