Everton undone at the death once more as City roar back in Bramley-Moore Dock thriller
Everton 3–3 Manchester City
A manic night on the waterfront saw Everton in the improbable position of being two goals up on title-chasing Manchester City, only to let Pep Guardiola's men back in, with the equaliser coming from almost the last kick of the game
With 82 minutes on the clock, Everton had somehow found themselves in the driving seat against Manchester City — the title hopefuls, the quintessential team for May who had come into this fixture in ominous form and, at half-time, looked set to leave it with another three points under their belts.
From looking hopelessly inferior in so many respects and the latest fodder to be fed into Pep Guardiola’s meat grinder in the first period, the Blues were 3-1 up with just eight minutes and stoppage time to go. Behind the relentless energy and running of Merlin Röhl and an improbable double from Thierno Barry, David Moyes stood on the precipice of his first ever victory over Pep Guardiola.
The Spaniard was caught by cameras with a thousand-yard stare of disbelief. A number of City fans had begun filing out of Hill Dickinson Stadium. All it needed was for Moyes’s players to maintain their focus, their poise, their composure and the defensive defiance that had, to that point, underpinned a performance full of desire and obstinance to not only secure the win for him but also vault Everton right back into the reckoning for a place in the top six.
What followed will haunt the manager’s dreams and stick in the craw of Evertonians who have now seen their side concede devastating injury-time goals in three successive matches, lapses that could well scupper their European dreams.
The midfield and defence parted like the Red Sea for Erling Haaland to gallop through and do what he does best to make it 3-2 straight from the restart. And then, with the clock well past the minimum six minutes signalled by the fourth official for time added on, Jeremy Doku was left unchallenged to sweep home a mirror image of the curling effort with which he had opened the scoring late in the first half.
That Everton were in a position to win this game at all was somewhat mind-blowing. For most of the 45 minutes of this contest it felt as though it was just a matter of time before the visitors would score and, if they did, that would pretty much be that. After all, the Toffees haven't won this fixture since January 2017.
Moyes’s team was so deep at times that some of them could have been back in town as City dominated the ball and set about trying to chisel away at Everton’s barricades. They eventually made the breakthrough a couple of minutes shy of half-time but, prior to that, they had found clear-cut chances hard to come by.
Jordan Pickford beat away a drive from Rayan Cherki in the 18th minute while Antoine Semenyo dragged a shot across goal having collected the loose ball and he then volleyed Doku’s cross over a few minutes later.
Everton, featuring changes in midfield as a result of an injury to Idrissa Gueye that saw Tim Iroegbunam come in and Röhl deployed wide on the right, didn’t have their first meaningful foray forward until 25 minutes had elapsed, Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall’s early shot being blocked behind by Abdukodir Khusanov.
And yet they could well have scored first seven minutes after that when Röhl scampered down the right flank leaving his Marc Guéhi in his wake, saw his attempted square ball for Beto diverted behind his target by Gianluigi Donnarumma’s glove and the striker fire an eventual shot off Khusanov and behind rather than lay it back for a more routine chance for Iliman Ndiaye.
Back at the other end, Cherki had skied another Doku cross into the South Stand before the Belgian winger took matters into his own hands at the end of a counterattack by City. Everton’s rearguard had shut down two separate shooting opportunities before the ball fell to Doku on the edge of the box where he engineered just enough space to bend an unstoppable shot into the top corner.
The mountain before the Toffees felt insurmountable heading into the second period as, straight from kick-off, Nico O’Reilly had a shot blocked behind for a corner. And yet, within a minute came the first hint at the mayhem to come when Beto was played in by Dewsbury-Hall and it took a last-ditch tackle from Guéhi to charge down the Guinea-Bissau international’s shot.
With an hour gone and Everton growing in belief, Ndiaye burst through the opposition defence and looked odds-on to score but shot straight at Donnarumma rather than wide or over the stranded goalkeeper.
Five minutes later, after Barry had come on as a surprising replacement for Beto, the Senegalese was in again for a carbon-copy chance but again he put it straight down Donnarumma’s throat.
That opportunity had come from Khusanov mis-judging a deep ball forward by Pickford and it was his defensive partner who was at fault as Everton were gifted an equaliser in the 68th minute.
Röhl tried a speculative ball forward into the City penalty area banking on Barry having made a run behind the defence but it was read by Guehi who calmly sent it back towards his keeper. The England man under-cooked the pass, however, allowing Barry to nip in and slot it home, with Guehi’s touch rendering the striker onside.
Bramley-Moore Dock was energised, the volume surging, and Ndiaye responded with another battling run and it took another saving challenge from Guehi to shut him out in the 72nd minute. James Garner swung in the resulting corner, though, and it was met by the head of Jake O’Brien before the net bulged and the home crowd erupted again as the Blues took the lead.
Ndiaye could have made it 3-1 just a couple of minutes after that when, for a third time, he found himself bearing down on goal but despite Barry being better placed to his right and begging to have it slipped into his path, the winger went for glory once more and was foiled again by the keeper.
But, after Cherki had whipped a direct free-kick into the side-netting at the other end, Barry did double Everton’s advantage as the match entered its closing stages, thanks to another impressive run by the revelatory Röhl. The German latched onto O’Brien’s throw-in, drove past substitute Mateo Kovačić towards the box and lined up a shot of his own but miscued it across the box where Barry was on hand to nonchalantly knock it into the empty net.
It was a potentially seismic moment in the title race, with City trailing Arsenal by six points but with this and one further game in hand, and for Everton’s prospects of qualifying for Europe… if the Blues could just hold out.
Infuriatingly, unforgivably, they were pegged back immediately in what was, in reality, the moment Everton surrendered two points. No one in Royal Blue, least of all James Tarkowski and Michael Keane, had truly got themselves set for the kick-off from which Kovačić despatched a slicing pass straight though the heart of Everton’s defence. Haaland sprinted through the yawning gap and out-paced both centre-halves before clipping the ball over Pickford to make it 3-2.
Hill Dickinson Stadium was briefly hushed before the roar went up demanding that the team see out the final minutes and was matched by the one calling for a penalty as Röhl was clearly wrestled to the ground in the box by Bernardo Silva with no action taken by the officials.
Meanwhile, City went in search of an equaliser. Kovačić smashed a shot well over. Phil Foden belted an effort of his own off target. Moyes replaced Dewsbury-Hall and Röhl with Charly Alcaraz and Nathan Patterson and was then forced to throw Harrison Armstrong on as the clock ticked past the allotted stoppage time because of cramp to Iroegbunam.
Either side of that change, Donnarumma came up for two corners for City and when the second was touched on by Guehi to Doku in space 20 yards out, the winger was invited to size up another curling shot, this this time with his right foot as the Blue shirts in front him stood rooted to the spot and he found the far corner again beyond Pickford’s despairing dive.
Neutrals could no doubt applaud Doku's brilliance but, coming in the wake of conceding injury-time winners to Liverpool and West Ham, it was another agonising gut punch for Everton at the death; the difference between finishing the match week sitting joint-eighth, two points off sixth and having to settle for 10th place and a four-point gap to Bournemouth in the Europa League slot.
There were, of course, many positives to take. Röhl put in the kind of display that makes Moyes’s decision to leave him on the bench for the past three months utterly bewildering; Iroegbunam exhibited raw tenacity in the middle and Barry could well have begun a remarkable arc of redemption after hitting his nadir as an Everton player after his pathetic showing in the derby.
Overall, however, It was a night of what might have been for Moyes and Everton who could have secured a memorable victory had they just made better decisions and been able to hold their nerve to the end.
Reader Responses
Selected thoughts from readers05/05/2026 05:59:30
I 100% agree with everything above.
I Would just like to add, that on a previous thread, I slated Barry.
Last night he proved me wrong, so, I will deservedly eat my Humble Pie… preferably with a dollop of Dijon Mustard and washed down with a glass of of white.
An outstanding second half display, cruelly undone after the allotted six minutes, by absolutely sublime finishing from a Beast of a player in Doku.
05/05/2026 06:31:08
I am feeling deflated, but encouraged after last nights rollercoaster of a game.
A victory would have seemed like more than 3 points.
Nearly a brilliant night.
Looking forward to less drama, and hopefully some routine wins in the remaining games.
05/05/2026 06:39:10
‘Infuriatingly, unforgivably, they were pegged back immediately in what was, in reality, the moment Everton surrendered two points. That is Lyndons defining sentence that completely mirrors, I imagine, most of our thoughts.
To be frustrated by only a point where none was expected before the game indicates a much higher improved performance from Everton. But it really should have been all three.
I thought Röhl was fantastic and Moyes complimentary comments about him pre-match were justified.
Ndiaye showed some great skill at times but really should have scored on at least one occasion.
I never wanted to see Barry in an Everton shirt on again after his previous sulks, on field performances and outbursts, but he did ok in being in the right place for his goals. But I still dont like him! I havent seen anything yet at this stage showing he is going to be a consistently good Premiership player. Not as though Beto has either, but his big heart somehow covers a multitude of deficiencies.
I guess if it had been us who had equalised in that final minute, we would all be buzzing instead of feeling flat against a hugely talented Man City team. Footballs emotions are so weird.
05/05/2026 06:57:24
I'm doing my usual flip flopping as a fan. While sickened by another last gasp goal, and more dropped points in the race for Europe, I'm delighted at what was an excellent display against City. That, on top of a very good display against Liverpool, shows that there is a very decent team in us somewhere.
I would start Barry against Palace on Sunday. If he has appeared disinterested and disheartened in previous games, then give him a chance following what must have been a real confidence booster for him last night. A couple of more goals, and some good performances, will set him up for the summer break.
I would also start Rohl on Sunday. If he can bring that much energy onto the pitch then play him. Right now, we need something different if we are to get anywhere near Europe.
05/05/2026 07:34:57
It's just Everton. If we knew we would get a point against City before the game had started we would be over the moon. Instead they do an 'Everton' - raise our hopes and then concede at the last - see Liverpool match, West Ham, etc. At least it didn't finish 4-3 to City!
05/05/2026 07:45:22
I seem to have spent this season between agony and ecstasy on a weekly basis.
Conceding those three late goals have done for us at the worst time and you can also throw in losing very late on at Arsenal when an excellent point looked on the cards.
However gutted I feel at the moment, it doesnt feel as bad as the derby loss given that at half time last night I was thinking we hadnt got near them, apart from one chance, and fully expected to concede another couple.
But as others have said Rohl had an excellent game and it does beggar belief that hes been on the sidelines for so long.
Can we still snatch a European place? Two of our main rivals, Brentford and Chelsea, have tough fixtures ahead whereas ours are now behind us. So lets carry the good stuff from last night on to Palace who are surely there for the taking, and see where that leaves us.
05/05/2026 08:31:11
Chase, hassle, shut down, force mistakes. Get in their face, shut down from the front. It's the only way to counter quality teams and players and in the second half, we did all of that and it was so close..
But the thing we lack they had in abundance. Individual brilliance, they converted their few chance brilliantly while we squandered ours.
They got lucky with the grappling that was an undeniable penalty, that a referee added time over and above expected Morally we beat them, fair and square, but David Moyes was justifiably angry both at our own inability to close a game out and the injustice of perceived bias by officials.
It was a great second half until injury time, it was an embarrassing first half chasing shadows.
Herein lies the problem, a manager too intent on defence and a team too short of quality but capable of mixing it with the best. As improved as we might be, we really do need to improve both our tactics and player quality. David Moyes deserves credit for getting the best out of most of the players but the cold reality depends on who will be the manager to bring in the quality to eliminate the lapses and enable team selection based on right player in the right position. (Big Jake scored a great goal but was done like a turkey all night by Doku)
A great game, at least the second half was, it deserved three points but in the end a couple of world class strike and dubious officials denied us. Left with so many if only's, and a little smile..well in blues.
Oh and that's the loudest I have heard the crowd wow..
05/05/2026 08:33:25
This was a thriller of a game which left both sides feeling incredibly frustrated. Citys second half implosion was quite remarkable but brought about by our teams greater determination to make an impact. Over the game as a whole our players created the better chances and arguably ought to have been out of sight before Citys fightback.
The second City goal, almost straight from the restart, was a really poor one to concede. Collectively the team switched off starting with the failure to close down in the centre circle. With Tarkowski already on a yellow card he was unable to risk another by launching a tackle at Haaland. It was the only moment in the match when the Norwegian was allowed the space to run at goal. He rarely misses those sort of chances.
From that point onwards it always felt like we would struggle to keep the one goal lead. I rarely criticise our manager but I thought he was wrong to make a double substitution in the third minute of added time. Why do managers, all of them, do that when their team has such a narrow lead against opponents pushing forward and running out of time? It almost compels the official to extend stoppage time, thus increasing the risk of a late goal.
A major positive from the night was the performance of Röhl. He looks much stronger physically since we last saw him in mid-winter. His pace and craft coupled with his work rate made a huge difference on the right flank.
For the first time this season we have played four consecutive league games without a victory. It is now imperative we win at Selhurst on Sunday to keep our European hopes alive.
05/05/2026 08:46:53
Hopelessly outclassed for the majority of the game, but that team refused to raise the white flag.
Raw courage when they could have thrown in the towel long before the crazy last 15 minutes.
I'm incredibly proud, but immensely frustrated at throwing the game away. Having been chasing shadows for the best part of 80 minutes, the remaining Everton players were absolutely spent.
I'm looking at the positives from last night, have we found a jewel in Rohl, a young player with real pace and talent, prepared to take on the established talent of the City back four, without any fear.
A pity one of our best players this season Ndiaye missed three sitters he would normally bury.
I wonder if Moyes will call time on our captain James Tarkowski next season.
He was running through treacle trying to catch Haaland for the second City goal.
Let's stay positive
05/05/2026 08:54:21
Frustrating as it was, it was a very entertaining game. We havent had many of them at home this season.
05/05/2026 08:59:15
Harry (1) I omitted to add that the club is already committed to signing Röhl on a permanent deal. Only relegation would have prevented that happening.
05/05/2026 09:25:25
I said after the West Ham defeat that "knowing Everton, we'll go and give City a game". We should have got 3 points and the fact that we didn't rests on Ndiaye. I love that he tries to play football and runs with the ball but he has to learn to get his head up and square the ball to better-placed players. After missing the one on one against Donnarumma he seemed to want to atone for the poor finish by beating the City back line on his own. He wasted at least two great opportunities to put the game to bed.
How Everton can concede so soon after making it 3-1 is criminal. I reckon I could pick 10 mates to defend against City for more than 10 seconds from kick off. If Branthwaite plays then Haaland doesn't get through on goal. The fact that Tarkowski and Keane had been booked meant they couldn't challenge him. Haaland showed what a class finisher does though, given a chance and that's what City's endless millions buy you. Grealish would have been useful in the last 3 games for holding the ball and drawing defenders. We are where we are though.
A strange game. I'd have snatched your hand off for 3-3 beforehand and I definitely would at half time but this felt like another defeat.
Positives were Garner and Röhl, who after a shaky start was magnificent.
05/05/2026 10:00:54
After the first 10 mins of watching Doku sail past OBrien I thought wed be lucky to keep it down to 3 goals for them. It was looking grim.
But as much as we switched on in the 2nd half, they switched off. Ive never seen Guardiola look so shocked and resigned to be beaten, they looked shot. If Haaland hadnt done his thing so quickly, wedve ground them down to hold out.
Röhl on the right flank I didnt see coming but he was superb. Cant think of the last time I saw an Everton player flying down the right. That should be his for the remaining games.
After such a bad run, the timing of last nights performance should give them a badly needed confidence shot to go out and win the next three games.
05/05/2026 10:09:28
John 9. Thanks for flagging up your thoughts about late late subs. It makes absolutely no sense. It extends the game unnecessarily and it distupts the team ( unless injury dictates the change).What also angers and mystifies me, is the fact that refs will rarely end a game with the ball in an attacking situation or if a corner/ free kick is to be taken. If it's 90 +6 then surely it's whistle time whatever the state of play at 96 minutes ( unless unnecessary subs made or genuine additional injury time to be added). Those oldies amongst us remember the World Cup goal disallowed by, I think, Jack Taylor who blew his whistle as the ball hurtled towards the net ( or was it the knobhead Clive Thomas?).
Moving forward, let's hope we can do the same to Spurs without a ridiculously late injury time gaffe.
05/05/2026 13:01:27
One of the more underrated qualities of a top footballer, particularly defensively, is concentration under pressure.
All three recent injury-time goals, and their second last night, against us stemmed from a lack of concentration.
That's neither 'choking', nor 'a curse'. It's the quality of the players.
Great second half performance,where we ultimately showed why we're a midtable team, demonstrated how far we've come and what we need to make that next step.
05/05/2026 13:17:46
Everton do have the players, what they need is a Manager that can win.Suckered from a corner in the last secs again.Everton have been weak all season defending corners
05/05/2026 15:42:48
Jerome - a manager that can win! We've had a few that have won trophies or promotions at other clubs but not here. Moyes may have his faults as we all do but he's polished a big one so far - and has been instrumental at getting some better players in, and all the while suffering financial constraints. I'm not saying he's the long term answer to us winning a trophy (but why not?) but he deserves credit for last night's performance surely.
05/05/2026 16:09:59
What a game and what a contrast between two very different teams and two very different halves of a match, plus six shared goals. It was totally unexpected and probably the best game we have seen this season. Sadly as is becoming the norm we left disappointed again. But almost 24 hours on, with time to reflect we can all say just how well the players performed against a very good side, on top form and battling to win the League.
Many people have already said how well young Rohl performed, which once again asks the question, why haven't we seen more of him ? I wonder what his best position is ? Could it be right back ? Whatever, his endeavour, speed and all round commitment was a joy to watch.
But in a game when everyone did their bit for me there was one player who stood out, as I thought Iroegbunam was magnificent and perhaps did more than anyone to shake up the City players.
So what next for the remaining games, I don't think we will make Europe, so Mr Moyes please let's see what some of the youngsters can do, and with more performances like last night we can all look forward to next season.
05/05/2026 22:43:26
Benjamin#18
All that is fine, but Everton will finish around about the same position in the table as last year, having spent £120-150 million.Great to have seen a game like that and how the players can play though.
05/05/2026 02:17:52
Damn, that boy Rohl is quick! Excited to see more of that!
And for fucks sake, when are the officials going to start taking action at set pieces against players who are more interested in the player theyre marking (and wrestling him to the ground) than the ball?! Its a fucking joke and is making a (further) mockery of VAR. And Id be saying exactly the same if it was one of our players who was the guilty party.
06/05/2026 15:04:52
I was pleased for Barry that he managed to get himself in the right place twice, and showed some composure for the first goal. But, I still think he is way off the pace. Several times in the frantic finale, he had the opportunity to hold the ball and take some sting out of the game. No chance, each time he lost it and back City came. He has no concept of 'defending from the front', which is a vital part of a striker's game.
06/05/2026 23:04:43
Jerome (20) That sort of sum would buy a Declan Rice or an Alexander Isak. Our club was not in a position to recruit such players. The squad needed to be filled out with a spread of players across the age bands, some for the here and now and others with the potential to develop.
I would add that after 35 games last season we were on 39 points. This season after 35 games we are on 48 points. Im still hoping we can add a few more points from our remaining fixtures. I also think there has been an improvement in the quality of our attacking play, in no small part owing to the impact of Dewsbury-Hall as well as the uplift in James Garners form.
07/05/2026 07:06:36
John#23
I agree with all that, but Moyes still struggles to win a game against the Top 6.He needs to be pulling off wins to process into the top six or win any competitions.
Everton though financial stable or still not Financially self sustaining. It is essential that they progress beyond mid table. Moyes was slow this season to develop the players that where brought in and provide the spread of development you mentioned.He does have the players available.But he also has to have the tactics right to see out game and have the players defending corners properly coached.Losing matches in the dying seconds does not help the players.The points totals you mention show that others teams are progressing.
07/05/2026 16:43:13
We can argue about managers till the cows come home, but expecting an inferior team ability wise to beat a superior one is the main reason we are not winning anything.
Unless we can get a squad together that matches the very best sides we will be stuck among the also rans.
A sad fact and very difficult to do but I think its the true reason why we have this glass ceiling.
07/05/2026 19:49:06
Raymond, logically your comments would mean that money is the only deciding factor in determining success. But in reality it isn't. Used wisely with the right purchases a club will enhance its chances but not guarantee success. (Chelsea are the perfect example)
Generally speaking Man City have utilized their money, power and influence to attract and secure the highest quality of player and manager but remain under the expectation of 115+ charges for breaking rules and enabling them to win so much for so long. One can speculate the levels of any claim of corruption by both club or EPL, but the facts remain true. They used vast power and influence to win, thereby questioning the integrity og the league, the club and league structure.
A long winded way of saying it's not just an acceptance that money guarantees success but rather how it's used.
From a football purists perspective money alone does not mean your are the best, Chelsea, Man utd, and Arsenal have each spent over a €1 billion assembling their current teams but don't come anywhere near the success of Man City who appointed Pep to manage consistently.
It is that combination of talent, money and off field expertise that wins you trophies consistently, that blend is the elusive Holy Grail for so many aspiring or expecting success.
Other clubs without the balance of those three things can win selectively through having a better manager, tactics or squad but lack the consistency to balance the wobble board for any length of time.
The problem with the Premier League is that it's rigged. The rules have eroded competition, success for clubs is selective with the ability to challenge impeded by caps on expenditure ensuring the lions share of the cake will only ever be divided by a few. The restrictive rules of squad cost ratios, PSR etc have little or no impact on clubs with high revenues historically.. hence the accusations of elitism, corruption and undue power and influence. It's rigged to ensure only the selected few get the most, new money of new owners is not the sole benchmark otherwise Newcastle, Everton and several other clubs would invest in the best short term at high cost but the can't no matter how wealthy they are.
How then do clubs compete on the pitch?
We didn't win last Monday because City got out of jail with two superb individual strikes and mistakes by Everton players. In that instance money or the lack of it, determined the outcome. But the attributes of both sets of players and how they are used to counterv or exploit other teams weaknesses are paramount. We are not all PSG. So tactics play a large part in countering the elite, quality is not the only measure of success. Effort, aggression and tactics are tools used to counter and improve whilst building along the way. It's David Moyes to a tee, it will work brilliantly against the very good teams but not so well against other clubs who can mix it as well, we end up with a scatter of results and frustrations. It's also why tactics have to evolve to not just frustrate the better teams but overcome teams who have similar squads or managers. It's why Moyes is only ever going to get us so far because he excels in the middle group of clubs and that's all well and good if that's your measure of success, just being a Premier league club, but Everton are not similar to the rest in thar respect. We expect to challenge for honors but we fell so far it's a long road back.
If we are, ever, to challenge consistently once more, we have to evolve and tactically improve players, management and tactics ruthlessly along the way.
Behind all this lies the drive and ambition of the owners who have given us a sound base but have not laid out their vision of success in any set period of time. It feels a little like a ship without a captain or destination, where are we going and how are we going to get there? We are passengers on the Queen Mary 2, have left Port but nobody is in the chart room.
Apologize for the length of this but it's a subject I keep coming back to and a reason why change is as important as stability and why balancing the two is an ongoing struggle.
08/05/2026 18:48:47
Christine#26
I largely agree with your wider point.
The ownership under TFG has brought much-needed structure. They backed the appointment of David Moyes, involved him in recruitment discussions, introduced reporting structures, and made changes behind the scenes. All of that has helped stabilise the club after years of drift.
But stability alone is not progression.
My concern is that while the infrastructure is improving, the football side still reflects many of the same cultural habits that held Everton back before—risk aversion, reactive game management, and too little emphasis on tactical development.
Against a side like Burnley F.C., that becomes obvious. Everton didnt need a revolution—just more ambition within Moyes own framework: a higher line, quicker progression through midfield, more support around the striker, and earlier game-state adjustments.
Thats why I dont think this is about “Stage Two” yet. Stage One should be establishing a clear football identity that not only makes Everton harder to beat, but harder to play against.
Until that happens, we may be stabilised—but were not really evolving.
08/05/2026 23:13:52
Paul Hughes # 22
you nailed it.
Barry found himself in the right place, at the right time.
Hes not capable of marauding.
He very rarely makes chances for himself, but he will probably start the next game based on what he did.
Thats the problem with a lot of our average players, McNeil, Alcaraz, Beto, Barry and Co.
They have the odd good performance, to give us false hope, then its back to disappointment and the Conundrum of who will be chosen to start the next game.
I cant wait for us to shed this skin of uncertainty/inconsistancy,
we have been living in it, for what seems like an eternity !
09/05/2026 11:42:15
Christine, I agree it is a combined application of club, supporters, manager and players to bring long term success.
I do think though its undeniable that the better the quality the squad is the better chance we will have of success. Its the most important factor if we are going to get among the winning clubs again.
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05/05/2026 01:03:02
I knew keep it tight and nick one wasnt going to work just a shame we didnt realise until the second half as we didnt lay a glove on them in the first.
Second half was a totally different game, we was much more aggressive and showed more belief, showed them too much respect in the first half. Ndiaye was a liability tonight, missing a golden chance then not passing on a break to try and make amends was even worse than the miss. We could have had 5 or 6 with better finishing and decision making as City was totally out of it and crumbling.
All things said and done it was a great performance from the boys and credit to them, Röhl is a star in the making, bags of energy, an old school box to box midfielder with no fear whos still learning his trade in the toughest league in the world, its even more mystifying how he got dropped for so long after the Villa game surely hell be signed permanently from Freiburg.
Even more surprising was Barry doing so well when he came on, not just the goals but how he occupied the City defence and gave them something different to what Beto was offering, its clear Barry has been hitting the weight room and has beefed up, looks like hell be here next season, cant believe Im saying the that!