Sergio Aguero scored a hat-trick as
Manchester City outclassed Borussia Moenchengladbach 4-0 in their
rearranged Champions League opener at the Etihad Stadium on Wednesday.
Nigerian international sealed the victory at the death with a simple tap-in.
The game had been carried over from
Tuesday due to a thunderstorm and Aguero made up for lost time with his
second treble of the campaign after his hat-trick against Steaua
Bucharest in the play-off round.
Aguero, currently serving a domestic
ban, struck twice in the first half and once in the second before giving
way to Kelechi Iheanacho, who netted City’s fourth.
It gave Pep Guardiola a handsome victory in his first group-phase game as City manager.
With his former club Barcelona, as well
as Celtic, lying in wait in Group C, Guardiola had warned his players
that a strong start in the competition was imperative.
City reached the semi-finals for the
first time last season, while Guardiola, who has won all seven of his
games at the helm to date, is bidding to win the tournament for a third
time.
It was a third successive defeat against
City for Andre Schubert’s Gladbach, who lost twice to the English side
in last season’s group stage.
After Tuesday’s postponement, Gladbach
left tongue-in-cheek letters of apology to the bosses of the fans who
stayed on in Manchester for an extra day on the seats in the away
section.
The only change to the two teams
announced for Tuesday’s game was City’s inclusion of Ilkay Gundogan in
place of David Silva, who was rested “as a precautionary measure”.
Having been sidelined by a knee injury
since signing from Borussia Dortmund for 20 million pounds ($26.5
million, 23.5 million euros), it was Gundogan’s first outing in a City
shirt.
City attacked the game in a manner akin
to their slick first-half display in Saturday’s 2-1 win at Manchester
United and it took them less than nine minutes to go in front.
– Gundogan wins penalty –
Aleksandar Kolarov fizzed a cross into
the box from the left and Aguero darted in front of Andreas Christensen
to stab home and end a five-game Champions League scoring drought.
Visiting goalkeeper Yann Sommer saved
sharply from Gundogan after an incisive move involving Fernandinho,
Kevin De Bruyne and Aguero, while Fernandinho shot narrowly wide.
Gundogan won the penalty that brought
City’s second goal when he was caught on the back of the leg by
Christoph Kramer, although contact may have occurred just outside the
box.
Aguero sent Sommer the wrong way, taking his tally for the campaign to eight goals in all competitions.
Sommer also had to beat away a shot from
Gundogan, but Gladbach improved after Schubert sacrificed Kramer for
Julian Korb and switched from a back three to a back four.
A spectator up to that point, City
goalkeeper Claudio Bravo got down smartly just before half-time to parry
a crisp Lars Stindl effort.
City initially had to work a bit harder for their chances in the second half.
But the hosts raised their level with 15
minutes remaining and after Sommer had pulled off sharp saves to thwart
Raheem Sterling and Aguero, the pair combined for City’s third in the
77th minute.
Sterling’s pass down the inside-left
channel took Korb out of the game and Aguero rounded Sommer before
rolling in his hat-trick goal.
Leroy Sane came on for his home debut and made a quick impression by teeing up Iheanacho to smash home in stoppage time.
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