Watford 1-2 Manchester City: Serg of energy

Matt Stead

Manchester City scored two goals in the final 10 minutes to come from behind and seal a dramatic 2-1 win over Watford.

An Aleksandar Kolarov own goal had put City behind at Vicarage Road just before the hour mark, with City heading for a third defeat in six league games.

Yaya Toure started the City comeback with a sweet volley from a Kolarov corner on 82 minutes, with Sergio Aguero’s excellent header three minutes later completing the recovery.

City stay third, but they close the gap on the Premier League summit as a result, with Leicester just one point ahead, and leaders Arsenal a further two in front. Watford stay ninth.

Much of the pre-game build-up surrounded the battle between in-form Watford strikers Odion Ighalo and Troy Deeney. The two have emerged as one of the league’s most potent partnerships, and would come up against City’s central defenders Nicolas Otamendi and Eliaquim Mangala, both of whom had struggled this season.

As early as the second minute Deeney showed his confidence with a run that led to Almen Abdi sending a promising 25-yard shot both high and wide, and shortly after Ighalo first encountered the £32million Otamendi.

In this instance the Argentinean defender impressed when, with Ighalo in space in the area following Abdi’s through-ball, he read the striker’s shot to lunge and deflect it out for a corner.

Ighalo swiftly threatened, again having been played in by Abdi – but when he produced a nice turn to beat Otamendi, City goalkeeper Joe Hart reacted to rush out, dive, and smother his shot clear.

City’s response came through strikes from Kevin de Bruyne and Fernandinho, both of which Watford’s Heurelho Gomes comfortably saved, but beyond Aguero’s runs and a 25-yard, swerving shot from Kolarov which went just high and wide of the left angle, they rarely looked like scoring throughout the first half.

Watford similarly began the second half with greater promise.

There would have been a time when, particularly while comparing their resources with City’s, 0-0 would have been an encouraging scoreline but manager Quique Sanchez Flores has quickly organised them into a strong team that has little reason to be intimidated.

A powerful header just over the crossbar from Fernandinho served as a reminder of the quality City possess and how quickly they are capable of changing a game, but almost immediately after – in a demonstration of why that quality alone cannot always be relied upon – Watford took the lead.

Taking an inswinging corner from the left, Ben Watson’s accurate delivery troubled City’s defence, evading everyone except for Kolarov, whose header served to help it into the back of the net. It was recorded as an own goal, even if it was already going in, and again highlighted the damage caused by the absence of City’s authoritative captain, Vincent Kompany.

Toure, so often decisive, soon struck beyond the crossbar from the edge of the area, and Kevin De Bruyne forced a routine save from Gomes – but Watford’s discipline meant only a moment of quality looked likely to rescue them, and so it ultimately proved.

The midfielder has this season occasionally looked in decline, but when Kolarov sent in an 82nd-minute corner from the left, Toure casually and classily volleyed into the top left corner to equalise.

Their winning goal came just two minutes later. From space on the right wing, Bacary Sagna curled a superb cross towards Aguero, and under little pressure the forward headed beyond Gomes and into the back of the net, improving City’s title prospects in the process.