Pep Guardiola urges Manchester City to concentrate on performance levels rather than Arsenal’s position in the Premier League title race, as victory over Fulham on Wednesday would trim the gap to three points before Arsenal host Brentford on Thursday at the Gtech Community Stadium.
Manchester City enter the Fulham match lifted by a dramatic 2-1 comeback win at Anfield on Sunday, when Bernardo Silva and Erling Haaland struck after Dominik Szoboszlai’s late free-kick appeared to damage their Premier League title hopes.
The Opta supercomputer still places Arsenal as strong favourites in the Premier League title race, giving Mikel Arteta’s side a 90.5% chance of finishing top, while Manchester City’s prospects increased to 8.2% following the win on Merseyside,
reflecting the impact of that turnaround on the wider title picture.
That Anfield contest swung sharply in the closing stages, as Szoboszlai’s free-kick gave Liverpool a 1-0 lead before Manchester City responded, and the midfielder was later sent off for denying a clear goalscoring opportunity, which also led to Rayan Cherki’s long-range effort from inside his own half, which would have made it 3-1, being disallowed.
Guardiola, however, dismisses discussions about points gaps in the Premier League title race and stresses preparation for Fulham instead, wary that any drop in standards could prove costly not only on Wednesday but also in future fixtures against Newcastle and Leeds if similar issues reappear.
"I understand how niceis it nine points or three pointsthis kind of stuff is. That's okay, but that does not equal winning titles or arriving in the latter stages to fight to win titles. Every time in the last month and last few weeks, when I go before the games for a flash interview, always if you lose, you are losing everything, and you are going to disappear from planet Earth and this kind of stuff. What I'm saying is what we have to do to beat Fulham, what we have to do to be better and to be closer to repeating the first half from Anfield, and not the second. What is the reason why, in the second half, we are still dropping our performance level? Not three, four, five or six [points], because if we don't do that we will not win, maybe against Fulham, or maybe it'll be against Newcastle or maybe in the next game at Leeds. "
Manchester City’s recent record against Fulham offers confidence in the Premier League title race, with 16 straight league victories representing the longest winning streak one team has achieved against another in English league history, while the overall run across all competitions stands at 19 successive wins, also an English football record between two clubs.
| Team | Competition | Stat | Figure |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arsenal | Premier League | Title probability | 90.5% |
| Manchester City | Premier League | Title probability | 8.2% |
| Manchester City vs Fulham | Premier League | Consecutive wins | 16 |
| Manchester City vs Fulham | All competitions | Consecutive wins | 19 |
Guardiola’s focus on performance details rather than the Premier League title race narrative leaves Manchester City needing another disciplined display against Fulham, as any repeat of their second-half drop at Anfield could damage their pursuit of Arsenal despite the positive momentum and historic dominance in this specific fixture.
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