Manchester City
striker Kelechi Iheanacho made a successful start to his spell as Sergio
Aguero's stand-in by earning his team a 1-1 Champions League draw with Celtic
on Tuesday.
Aguero's
four-game domestic ban for getting sent off in Saturday's 3-1 loss to Chelsea
means Iheanacho can look forward to a run of games in manager Pep Guardiola's
first XI.
The 20-year-old
Nigeria striker took his chance at the Etihad Stadium with an eighth-minute
goal that cancelled out Celtic's opener, ironically scored by 19-year-old City
loanee Patrick Roberts.
"There is no pressure on Kelechi Iheanacho. He just has to do his job," said Guardiola.
"I am so
happy for the young players. We played well."
City had already
secured a place in the last 16 and were guaranteed to finish below Group C
winners Barcelona, while fourth-place Celtic already knew they had missed out
on a Europa League berth.
"We were
absolutely brilliant tonight in everything we did," said Celtic manager
Brendan Rodgers, whose side held City to a 3-3 draw in September.
"We have
grown in belief the more we have worked together. We are disappointed not to
have won at least one of the games against City."
Roberts's goal
means City have recorded just one clean sheet in their last 16 matches, but
after the trauma of the loss to Chelsea, in which Fernandinho also saw red,
this was a welcome return to normality.
With nothing
riding on the game, Guardiola gave some playing time to young defenders Pablo
Maffeo and Tosin Adarabioyo, but it was another City youngster who was the
first to show.
Roberts, loaned
to Celtic by City in February, embarrassed his parent club's defence, slipping
past Gael Clichy from the right and sticking a left-foot shot past goalkeeper
Willy Caballero.
- Guardiola rues
penalty call -
Celtic had conceded the lead three times in September's draw at Celtic Park and history was to repeat itself here as City levelled within four minutes.
Celtic had conceded the lead three times in September's draw at Celtic Park and history was to repeat itself here as City levelled within four minutes.
Nolito slid a
pass down the inside-left channel for Iheanacho and he showed composure to
guide a firm shot past Craig Gordon.
The sense that
Guardiola was treating the game as an experiment was emphasised by his casual
dress -- skinny jeans and sneakers -- as well as by City's novel 3-5-2 shape.
The system
featured Pablo Zabaleta in midfield and he almost created a second goal with a
sweeping pass that Iheanacho put wide.
Gordon was also
required to palm away an improvised back-heel from Iheanacho, with Nolito's
follow-up blocked.
But City looked
patchy at the back and Moussa Dembele, scorer of a brace at Celtic Park, twice
got in behind in the early stages.
Freed in turn by
a sloppy Fernando back-pass and a neat James Forrest through ball, he was
thwarted both times by Caballero, blazing wastefully wide of an open goal on
the second occasion.
Despite losing
Forrest to injury, Celtic made a bright start to the second half, with his
replacement, Gary Mackay-Steven, curling a shot into Caballero's gloves.
Celtic
threatened twice as the game approached its latter stages, Leigh Griffiths
shooting wide and Caballero thwarting Mackay-Steven.
Leroy Sane
curled a free-kick narrowly wide at the other end and might have won City a
late penalty with a cross that struck Jozo Simunovic's hand, but Slovenian
referee Slavko Vincic shook his head.
City were denied
three penalties against Chelsea and Guardiola said: "Maybe one day we will
get a penalty. Ask the referee. Every game it is like this." - The Guardian
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