If Man City don't focus from now on in their remaining champions league games,they could be in serious trouble sincerely.
They looked set to banish the memory of their last-gasp 1-0 defeat at Bayern
Munich in the Group E opener as Sergio Aguero converted a fourth-minute
penalty but proceeded to be largely outclassed by their technically
gifted opponents in the first half, with Francesco Totti's delicate chip
- which made the veteran forward the oldest goalscorer in European club
football history - the least that the visitors efforts deserved.
One point from two matches leaves City five and three points behind
Bayern and Roma, respectively, meaning that victories in back-to-back
matches against CSKA Moscow look like a must if they are to avoid a
third group-stage exit in four seasons.
"I think that the
point, maybe playing at home, is never good but [you] also have to
consider that we played against a very strong team in a good moment,"
Pellegrini told his post-match press conference.
"When the
other team scores, it's not just one or two players' problems – [Totti]
had too much space in that play. Maybe the movements were not correct
but today we didn't play in the way we normally play to score goals.
"In the last 20 minutes it was more similar to the team we see here
every week. We must keep fighting for the next 12 points and then we
will see who qualifies for the next round.
"It will depend on
how we play the next games whether we qualify. One point from six is
tough but we're just three points behind Roma. I hope next time, in
Russia, we can win then we will see what happens in the other game
between Bayern and CSKA. Today was not our day."
There was a
marked improvement in City's display after both the half-time
introduction of James Milner and Frank Lampard's entrance before the
hour, as Roma no longer outnumbered their opponents in midfield.
Nevertheless, Pellegrini refused to blame his selection of two strikers
in Aguero and Edin Dzeko, claiming that City's poor ball-retention was
more of a problem than his chosen formation.
"We didn't play
well in the first half – we started well in the first 25 minutes but
then we lost the ball too easily," he said. "In the way we played last
game [Saturday's 4-2 win at Hull City], we played very well with two
strikers.
"It was not an easy decision to change from the
beginning. We play a lot of games against a lot of strong teams this way
and we do very well. Maybe today we started losing balls and didn't
have enough midfielders to recover it but I don’t think having two
strikers on the pitch was the reason we didn’t win.
"The biggest problem was that we missed many easy passes."
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