Manchester City knocked out of Club World Cup as Al-Hilal strike twice in extra-time

TruthLens AI Suggested Headline:

"Manchester City eliminated from Club World Cup by Al-Hilal in extra-time thriller"

View Raw Article Source (External Link)
Raw Article Publish Date:
AI Analysis Average Score: 7.7
These scores (0-10 scale) are generated by Truthlens AI's analysis, assessing the article's objectivity, accuracy, and transparency. Higher scores indicate better alignment with journalistic standards. Hover over chart points for metric details.

TruthLens AI Summary

In a dramatic clash during the last-16 round of the Club World Cup, Manchester City faced an unexpected defeat against Al-Hilal, culminating in a thrilling extra-time showdown that saw both teams exchange goals. The match began with City taking an early lead when Bernardo Silva scored from a controversial play that involved a potential handball. Despite dominating possession with 71.3%, City struggled to convert their chances, leaving the door open for Al-Hilal to capitalize on defensive lapses. The turning point came in the second half when Al-Hilal leveled the score through Marcos Leonardo, who found the net after a swift counterattack. This goal marked the beginning of a rollercoaster extra-time period that would ultimately seal City’s fate. Despite Phil Foden's brilliant equalizer, scoring his 100th goal for the club, Al-Hilal surged back and took control, scoring twice more, with Leonardo netting his second, leading to a 5-3 victory for the Saudi club.

The match was marked by a series of missed opportunities for City, who saw their early lead slip away as Al-Hilal capitalized on defensive errors. City manager Pep Guardiola faced criticism for his tactical decisions, particularly regarding his substitutions and the late introduction of Foden, who had been sidelined due to injury concerns. The defeat not only eliminated City from the tournament but also denied them a chance to secure a lucrative quarter-final spot worth £9.6 million, a significant financial blow. As Al-Hilal celebrated their remarkable victory, City was left to reflect on their missed chances and defensive vulnerabilities that ultimately led to their downfall. The match was a testament to Al-Hilal's resilience under new manager Simone Inzaghi, who managed to instill a fighting spirit in his team despite missing key players. This upset will be a memorable moment in the Club World Cup, showcasing the unpredictability of football at the highest level.

TruthLens AI Analysis

You need to be a member to generate the AI analysis for this article.

Log In to Generate Analysis

Not a member yet? Register for free.

Unanalyzed Article Content

What a last-16 tie, what a triumph for Al-Hilal, what crushing disappointment forManchester Citywho, as the contest aged, gradually lost shape and tempo and crumpled in this shock of the Club World Cup.

The killer blow of a breathless extra-time featuring three goals was administered by Marcos Leonardo in the 112th minute. Along the left, Renan Lodi curved a cross in, Sergej Milinković-Savić rose and headed, Ederson palmed out, and the Brazilian struck his second of the contest. Leonardo headed for a corner flag to begin theAl-Hilalparty and the camera panned to Phil Foden who eight minutes before seemed to have saved City.

This was via a magical moment that stated the 25-year-old would not allow City to be knocked out by Kalidou Koulibaly’s earlier extra-time strike. Rayan Cherki looked up and spun a lob over Al-Hilal’s defence for Foden. Running on, the No 47 eyed the ball all the way and sculpted a volley across keeper Yassine Bounou to finish from the tightest of angles and make it 3-3 for a sublime equaliser and his 100th City goal in his 319th appearance.

On a sweltering Orlando night, City had previously conceded four minutes into the added 30 when Ruben Neves’s corner had Koulibaly leaping and beating Ederson. At this juncture City’s disarray was shown by Ruben Dias and Nathan Ake allowing Koulibaly the freedom to steer home. Then, moments later, Rodri, a 53rd-minute substitute, being replaced himself by Pep Guardiola, for Foden: the manager later said the Ballon d’Or winner had suffered an injury setback.

At stake for City had been a quarter-final place and £9.6m for the win to take their tournament winnings to £47.4m. But this is now no more asthey jet homewith Guardiola surely rueing not introducing Foden earlier or even naming him in the starting line-up.

Nine minutes were gone when City opened the scoring with a controversial strike. Rayan Ait-Nouri motored along the left, crossed, the ball bounced about Al-Hilal’s area, hit Ilkay Gundogan, and Bernardo Silva scrambled in off a shin. Now, uproar from Simone Inzaghi’s players whose vociferous claims to referee Jesús Valenzuela were for handball in the build-up.

Replays suggested two – off Ait-Nouri and Gundogan – but the on-field referee and VAR maintained the finish was fine. Protests continued by the centre circle, Al-Hilal pointed to the Camping World Stadium screen, where the move was again shown, as proof, but Valenzuela took to his PA-powered mike to declare the goal “legal”.

The bottom line: a City lead and Saudi Arabia’s leviathan club seeming to face a Sisyphean task, Guardiola’s men 71.3% possession hog underlining this. While still 1-0 hope remained. And City piled up the spurned chances to keep Al-Hilal optimistic. The culprits were Savinho – a flailing Yassine Bounou hand saved at his feet – Gundogan when running through, Josko Gvardiol, with his head, and Jeremy Doku, whose radar was also awry.

Inzaghi took over four days after Inter’s 5-0 Champions League thrashing by Paris Saint-Germain. He left an Italian giant for a Saudi one but ahead of taking on Real Madrid in the group opener had only two weeks to implement his ideas, a central plank of which is the favoured five-man backline he fielded tonight.

A 1-1 draw against the European aristocrats in his first game in charge was an eye-catching calling card but tonight Inzaghi was without his captain, Salem Al-Dawsari, or No 9, Aleksandar Mitrović.

Sign up toFootball Daily

Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football

after newsletter promotion

Yet when Mohamed Kanno pinged in a ball from the right, Al-Dawsari’s stand-in created a golden opening for Leonardo, but the Brazilian’s header sailed high over Ederson’s bar.

Guardiola’s XI showed no Rodri, Foden or Cherki, but in Dias, Gundogan, Erling Haaland, Gvardiol and Silva a core of frontline acts were still fielded. All were wise enough to see a half-time shot count of nine to Al-Hilal’s three and know their advantage should not be slender.

This profligacy came home to roost 44 seconds into the second half. City had entered with a 13-2 aggregate in shots that belied how the goals against column could have been more due to the old issue of their high-line being exposed. So it was that Joao Cancelo got in behind and drove in a cross, Ederson beat out, Malcolm’s shot was blocked, and Leonardo finished.

Al-Hilal were jubilant, City stunned. Inzaghi’s unit was not finished: at a City corner Al-Hilal again broke, Ait-Nouri failed to react, so Malcolm sprinted through and struck home, rolling the ball past Ederson and inside the right post. City’s response was near-instant. From the left, Silva dropped in a corner, Haaland rose, the ball pinged off Koulibaly, then Ake, and Haaland steered home.

Guardiola had introduced Ake, Manuel Akanji and Rodri but as 75 minutes passed Foden remained watcher only. When Doku launched a breakaway he was scythed down, City wanted a free-kick, but Valenzuela blew for full-time and what ensued was Foden at last being thrown on but victory was Al-Hilal’s – one they will always savour – and a defeat City may not be allowed to forget.

Back to Home
Source: The Guardian