MANCHESTER, England - Manchester City's 21-match winning streak was ended by rivals Manchester United as Ole Gunnar Solskjær's side enjoyed a 2-0 Premier League derby victory at the Etihad Stadium on Sunday.
United won thanks to an early penalty from Bruno Fernandes and a second-half strike from Luke Shaw with the result narrowing City's lead at the top of the table to 11 points over United with 10 games remaining. It was City's first defeat in all competitions since Nov. 21.
Pep Guardiola's side may prove to be uncatchable in the title race but United will take real belief for next season from a deserved victory. Solskjær is starting to become something of a nemesis for Guardiola — this was the Norwegian's fourth derby victory since he took over at Old Trafford in December, 2018.
City were stunned after just 34 seconds when referee Anthony Taylor pointed to the penalty spot after Gabriel Jesus brought down Anthony Martial just inside the box. Fernandes took the penalty with Ederson getting his right hand to the shot which squeezed in the corner to give the visitors the lead.
Shaw had a great chance to double their advantage shortly after the opener but the fullback shot straight at Ederson from a good position in the box. City had an appeal for a penalty turned down when Raheem Sterling tangled with Fred in the area and Riyad Mahrez went close just before the break.
After the interval, Rodri went closest to a leveler with a side-footed shot from the edge of the box which struck the top of the post. Yet it was some smart thinking from United's goalkeeper Dean Henderson, deputizing again for David De Gea, that undid City for the second goal.
Henderson threw a clever and fast ball out to Shaw on the left, who burst past two City defenders and after a swift exchange with Marcus Rashford, drove into the bottom far-corner.
LUKE SHAW!
United are two goals to the good! #MCIMUN pic.twitter.com/n5k1PGJ9SM— NBC Sports Soccer (@NBCSportsSoccer) March 7, 2021
Martial should have made it 3-0 when he found himself clear on goal after good work from Scott McTominay but shot straight at Ederson. City had some moments in the final stages — substitute Phil Foden's shot on the turn flashed wide and Sterling miskicked from close range, but they never found the strutting dominance of their recent wins.
United were solid at the back and crucially closed down the space behind the front line, where City tend to dominate, with McTominay and Fred taking charge of that zone. Yet Solskjær's side, especially in the second half, also attacked with intensity and purpose with Martial delivering one of his most productive all-round performances.
"They are difficult on the ball and tough to play against. Today we did almost everything perfect," said Fernandes. "Scoring in the first minute was perfect, we had more space to counter. We remained focused until the end of the game. When we defend well we know we'll have chances to score.”
As for the title race, Fernandes clearly has not given up hope just yet.
"The league is not a sprint. It's is a marathon. We have to do our best and not think about others," he said.
(Reporting by Simon Evans Editing by Toby Davis)