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Manchester City surrendered another lead as they had to settle for a 1-1 draw away to RB Leipzig in their Champions League round-of-16 first leg.
Riyad Mahrez’s first-half goal had seemingly set Pep Guardiola’s side on their way to the quarter-finals as they dominated the early proceedings in Germany, but Leipzig bounced back and found a deserved equaliser through the head of Josko Gvardiol.
Neither side could find a winner on the night and the tie remains in the balance ahead of the second leg next month. The concern for City is that as against Nottingham Forest on Saturday, they could not capitalise when well placed to finish the contest.
How the game unfolded in Leipzig
Leipzig’s reputation as a pressing team had most expecting the Bundesliga outfit to produce a high-energy performance in front of an excitable home crowd but City dominated from the outset. Possession of 74 per cent in the first half told the tale.
The opening goal of the game came when Jack Grealish nicked back possession and his forward pass was dummied by Ilkay Gundogan, allowing Mahrez to fire the ball low into the corner of the net. It was a deserved lead and put City in total control of the tie.
Marco Rose’s side were much brighter in the second half, Benjamin Henrichs going close twice soon after his half-time introduction, and when Christopher Nkunku came on Leipzig really started to believe. The passivity of the first 45 minutes was forgotten.
Andre Silva and Dominik Szoboszlai forced smart saves from Ederson but the goalkeeper had no answer when Gvardiol leaped above Ruben Dias and nodded into the net. It was a deserved equaliser given the way that Leipzig responded once behind.
City did reassert control in the final stages and could well have been given a penalty in stoppage time for a handball by Henrichs. But they still have work to do in the second leg if they are to progress and justify their status as Champions League favourites.
Haaland left frustrated
Failing to find Erling Haaland as often as the striker would like has been a feature of Manchester City’s season despite the Norwegian’s prolific scoring record. In the absence of Kevin De Bruyne through illness, the struggle to get the ball to Haaland was even clearer.
He cut an exasperated figure for much of the contest, regularly making runs that invited the pass only to find the ball did not arrive. Ilkay Gundogan and Bernardo Silva both have the quality to play it but not the inclination as they prefer to retain possession instead.
Haaland had 22 touches of the ball. Every other outfield team-mate had at least 60. Even Ederson had 37. Striker is the glory position but in this Manchester City team, it requires plenty of patience too. The debate about his role in the side will continue.
What’s next?
RB Leipzig return to Bundesliga action on Saturday against top-four rivals Frankfurt; kick-off 2.30pm. Marco Rose’s side then face another huge game on Friday March 3 with a trip to Borussia Dortmund; kick-off 7.30pm.
Manchester City’s focus now switches to the Premier League as they travel to Bournemouth on Saturday, live on Sky Sports; kick-off 5.30pm. Pep Guardiola’s side then go to Bristol City in the FA Cup on Tuesday; kick-off 8pm.
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