Bayern Munich to face PSG, Real Madrid vs Liverpool in Champions League last eight | Football News – Times of India

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Holders Bayern Munich will face the team they beat in last year’s Champions League final in this season’s quarter-finals after being paired with Paris St Germain in Friday’s draw.
In the other standout tie of the last eight 13-time champions Real Madrid face six-time winners Liverpool in a repeat of the 2018 final won by the Spanish club.
Runaway Premier League leaders Manchester City, seeking their first Champions League title, will play Borussia Dortmund with the winners to face Bayern or PSG in the semi-finals.
There is also the prospect of an all English semi-final after Chelsea were drawn to play Porto with the prize for the winners a clash with Real Madrid or Liverpool.
The Qatari owners of PSG have invested fortunes into trying to conquer the Champions League and came tantalisingly close last season when they reached the final only for Bayern’s Kingsley Coman to break their hearts with the only goal in Lisbon.
Since then manager Thomas Tuchel has gone and been replaced by Mauricio Pochettino who took Tottenham Hotspur to the 2019 Champions League final where they lost to Liverpool.
Pochettino now faces a daunting task if he is to deliver the prize the Parisian club desire so badly.
Bundesliga leaders Bayern reached the quarter-final for a record 19th time by cruising past Lazio 6-2 on aggregate and will provide a formidable barrier.
Liverpool’s Premier League title defence crumbled long ago but if anything can rouse the Anfield club it is a clash with Real Madrid in the Champions League.
Juergen Klopp’s side are languishing in sixth place in the Premier League, 25 points behind Manchester City, and with no guarantee of a top-four finish they might need to win a seventh European crown just to get back in the competition.
Chelsea, unbeaten in 13 games since Tuchel replaced Frank Lampard, may feel they have got the easier option in Porto who they have beaten in five of their eight previous meetings.
Yet while Chelsea’s clinical defeat of Atletico Madrid in the last 16 was impressive, so was the way Porto knocked out Juventus in a thriller and the Portuguese side will take that belief into their clash with the London club.
Should Chelsea and Liverpool both progress it would be the fourth time they have met in the Champions League semis.
Manchester City’s Abu Dhabi owners have made winning the Champions League the priority in their masterplan and will feel this could be their year.
After a sluggish start to the season Pep Guardiola’s side have dominated the Premier League and with that title virtually in the bag will be able to focus on Europe.
They sealed a fourth successive quarter-final berth with a 4-0 aggregate win over Borussia Moenchengladbach and have not conceded a goal in the competition for 11 hours 35 minutes.

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Guardiola admits pressure to win Champions League at Manchester City | Football News – Times of India

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LONDON: Pep Guardiola admits he has felt under pressure to win the Champions League since becoming Manchester City manager after they qualified for the quarter-finals for a fourth successive year.
The Premier League leaders sealed a 4-0 aggregate win against Borussia Moenchengladbach in Budapest on Tuesday after a 2-0 victory in the second leg, courtesy of goals from Kevin De Bruyne and Ilkay Gundogan.
The Champions League is the one major prize that has eluded Guardiola since he arrived at the Etihad in 2016.
“Since the first year I arrived they told me that you have to win the Champions League,” said the City boss, who won Europe’s elite club competition twice as Barcelona manager.
“It is always on our shoulders but I’m not concerned about that. If you deserve it in football, you go through. If you don’t, you don’t.”
City, who have never been crowned European champions, are chasing an unprecedented quadruple in the current campaign.
They look almost certain to win a third Premier League title in four seasons, face Everton in the FA Cup quarter-finals on Saturday and play Tottenham in the final of the League Cup in April.
“I’m more than incredibly impressed and delighted for our players in this tough year for everyone in society,” said Guardiola.
“Being 14 points clear in the Premier League, in the final of the League Cup, quarter-final of the Champions League and going to play to get to the semi-finals of the FA Cup.
“This is more than winning one quarter-final or one last-16 game. It means that in nine to 10 months, every three days, you are there — and this is the best title you can get.
“Of course for the prestige for all of us, because we are here to win like all other clubs, we have to try in the end to lift some titles,” added the 50-year-old Catalan.
City already had one foot in the last eight before they returned to the Hungarian capital to complete the job they started against Moenchengladbach at the same venue three weeks ago.
Early strikes from De Bruyne and Gundogan put the match beyond the reach of the Bundesliga club.
The matches were moved to Budapest because of coronavirus travel restrictions.

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Inter Milan, a storied Italian soccer club is threatened by shifting prospects in China | Football News – Times of India

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HONG KONG: The new, high-rolling Chinese owner was supposed to return Inter Milan to its glory days. It spent heavily on prolific scorers such as Romelu Lukaku and Christian Eriksen. After five years of investment, the storied Milan soccer club is within striking distance of its first Italian league title in a decade.
Now the bill has come due – and Inter Milan’s future is suddenly in doubt.
Suning, an electronics retailer that is the club’s majority owner is strapped for cash and trying to sell its stake. The club is bleeding money. Some of its players have agreed to defer payment, according to one person close to the club who requested anonymity because the information isn’t public.
Inter Milan has held talks with at least one potential investor, but the parties couldn’t agree on a price, according to others with knowledge of the negotiations.
Suning’s soccer aspirations are crumbling at home, too. The company abruptly shut down its domestic team four months after the club won China’s national championship. Some stars, many of whom chose to play there instead of in Chelsea or Liverpool, have said they have gone unpaid.
China has failed in its dream of becoming a global player in the world’s most popular sport. Spurred in part by the ambitions of Xi Jinping, China’s top leader and an ardent soccer fan, a new breed of Chinese tycoons plowed billions of dollars into marquee clubs and star players, transforming the economics of the game. Chinese investors spent $1.8 billion acquiring stakes in more than a dozen European teams between 2015 and 2017, and China’s cash-soaked domestic league paid the largest salaries ever bestowed on overseas recruits.
But the splurge exposed international soccer to the peculiarities of the Chinese business world. Deep involvement by the Communist Party make companies vulnerable to sharp shifts in the political winds. The free-spending tycoons often lacked international experience or sophistication.
Now, talks of defaults, fire sales and hasty exits dominate discussions around boardroom tables. A mining magnate lost control of AC Milan amid questions about his business empire. The owner of a soapmaker and food-additive company gave up his stake in Aston Villa. An energy conglomerate shed its stake in Slavia Prague after its founder disappeared.
Suning’s plight reflects “the whole rise and fall of this era of Chinese football,” said Zhe Ji, director of Red Lantern, a sports-marketing company that works in China for top European soccer teams. “When people were talking about Chinese football and all the attention it got in 2016, it came very fast, but it’s gone very fast, too.”
Suning paid $306 million in 2016 for a major stake in Inter Milan. Suning is a household name in China, with stores stocked with computers, iPads and rice cookers for the country’s growing middle class. While it has been hurt by China’s e-commerce revolution, it counts Alibaba, an online shopping titan, as a major investor.
On a brightly lit stage to announce the Inter Milan deal, Zhang Jindong, Suning’s billionaire founder and chairman, raised a champagne glass and talked about how the famous Italian team – which has won 18 championships since 1910 but none since 2010 – would help his brand internationally and contribute to China’s sports industry.
Boasting about Suning’s “abundant resources,” Zhang promised the club would “return to its glory days and become a stronger property able to attract top stars from across the globe.”
Under the leadership of Zhang’s son, Steven, now 29, the club spent more than $300 million on stars such as Lukaku, Eriksen and Lautaro Martínez, an Argentine forward nicknamed The Bull for his relentless pursuit of goals.
Suning also agreed to pay $700 million to England’s Premier League for the rights to broadcast games in China beginning in 2019, stunning the industry.
Suning lavished money on a domestic club that it bought in 2015.
It spent $32 million to acquire Ramires, a Brazilian midfielder, from Chelsea, and 50 million euros for Alex Teixeira, a young Brazilian attacker, who chose the Chinese team over Liverpool, one of soccer’s most popular franchises.
The recruits were put to work selling air conditioners and washing machines. In one advertisement, Teixeira urged viewers to buy a Chinese brand of appliances. “I am Teixeira,” he says in Mandarin, adding, “come to Suning to buy Haier.”
The money, said Mubarak Wakaso, a Ghanaian midfielder, helped make China attractive. “The money that I’m going to make in China is far better than La Liga,” he said in a mix of Twi and English in an interview last year, citing the league in Spain where he once played. “I’m not telling lies.”
Suning’s soccer bets were badly timed. The Chinese government began to worry that big conglomerates were borrowing too heavily, threatening the country’s financial system. One year after the Inter Milan deal, Chinese state media criticized Suning for its “irrational” acquisition.
Then the pandemic hit. Even as Inter Milan won on the field, it lost gate receipts from its San Siro stadium, one of the largest in Europe. Some sponsors walked away because their own financial pressures. The club lost about $120 million last year, one of the biggest losses reported by a European soccer club.
In China, Suning was slammed by e-commerce as well as the coronavirus. Its troubles accelerated in the autumn when it chose not to demand repayment of a $3 billion investment in Evergrande, a property developer and China’s most indebted company.
Suning’s burden is set to get heavier. This year, it must make $1.2 billion in bond payments. The company declined to comment.
Suning began to take drastic steps. Last year, it abandoned its broadcasting deal with the Premier League.
Then, in February, it shut down its domestic team, Jiangsu Suning, nearly four months after the team won China’s Super League title against an Evergrande-controlled team. At least one of the team’s foreign recruits has hired lawyers to help recoup unpaid salary, according to a person involved in the matter.
One former Suning player, Eder, a Brazilian-born star forward, set the soccer world buzzing after media reports quoted him saying Suning had not paid him. On Twitter, Eder said the comments had been taken from a private, online chat without his permission. His agent did not respond to requests for comment.
To save itself, Suning took a step that could complicate Inter Milan’s fortunes. On March 1, it sold $2.3 billion worth of its shares to affiliates of the government of the Chinese city of Shenzhen. The deal gave Chinese authorities a say in Inter Milan’s fate.
Greater financial pressure looms for Inter Milan. It must pay out a $360 million bond next year. A minority investor in Hong Kong, Lion Rock Capital, which acquired a 31% stake in Inter Milan in 2019, could exercise an option that would require Suning to buy its stake for as much as $215 million, according to one of the people close to the club.
Inter Milan officials are looking for financing, a new partner or sale of the team at a valuation of about $1.1 billion, the person said.
The club until recently was in exclusive talks with BC Partners, a British private-equity firm, but they were unable to agree on price, said people with knowledge of the talks.
Without fresh capital, Inter Milan could lose players. If Inter Milan can’t pay salaries or transfer fees for departing players, European soccer rules say it could be banished from top competitions.
“We are concerned, but we are not frightened yet about this situation – we are just waiting for the news,” said Manuel Corti, a member of an Inter Milan supporters club based in London.
“Being Inter fans,” he said, “we are never sure of anything until the last minute.”

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How Inter Milan is threatened by shifting prospects in China – Times of India

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HONG KONG — The new, high-rolling Chinese owner was supposed to return Inter Milan to its glory days. It spent heavily on prolific scorers such as Romelu Lukaku and Christian Eriksen. After five years of investment, the storied Milan soccer club is within striking distance of its first Italian league title in a decade.

Now the bill has come due — and Inter Milan’s future is suddenly in doubt.

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Iheanacho scores hat-trick as Leicester crush Sheffield United 5-0 | Football News – Times of India

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LEICESTER (England): Kelechi Iheanacho scored a superb hat-trick as Leicester City crushed bottom side Sheffield United 5-0 on Sunday to move second in the Premier League table.
Sheffield United manager Chris Wilder left the club late on Saturday and coach Paul Heckingbottom, who will take charge until the end of the season, had no time to fix the team’s defensive frailty and toothless attack.
Leicester went ahead in the 39th minute when Jamie Vardy latched on to a clever pass and his perfect centre left Iheanacho with the simple tap-in.
Ayoze Perez added the second in the 64th minute with a low shot, Vardy again assisted Iheanacho for another simple finish and the Nigerian saved the best for last, firing home a powerful left-foot shot in the 78th minute to complete his first Premier League hat-trick.
A Vardy shot was turned into his own net by Ethan Ampadu to complete the rout as Leicester climbed up to second spot on 56 points after 29 games, two ahead of Manchester United who play West Ham United later on Sunday.
Sheffield United remained bottom on 14 points, 14 behind Newcastle United in 17th place.

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Thomas Tuchel has had a big impact for us, says Chelsea midfielder Kante | Football News – Times of India

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CHENNAI: One of the biggest names in world football right now is N’golo Kante. The Frenchman made all the right choices and the right noises. After winning the Premier League with Leicester, he completed the same feat with Chelsea.
But this season has been a series of ups and downs for the Blues. Losing a manager like Frank Lampard, rebuilding a team under Thomas Tuchel, Chelsea are struggling to finish in the top four. Excerpts from the interview:
How difficult is the season after you’ve become a Premier League champion?
I think it’s difficult to explain because when you’re champion you enjoy the rewards of winning the premier league for one season. But when we go for another season we try to find the same focus and determination but for some reason we cannot explain … (can’t hear this on my recording – sorry). It’s difficult to explain because even after losing the premier league so close the season before and winning the champions league they had this thing – the focus but it’s difficult to explain why this has happened to them but for sure they have good players and a quality squad.
Recently made your 200th appearance for Chelsea – How proud to reach that milestone and what you’ve achieved in your time at Stamford Bridge?
For sure it’s something that I’m proud of – to play 200 games for Chelsea. I still remember when I came here with some expectations but the trust of the club, the old manager Antonio Conte and the sporting director Michael Emanalo. They had trust in me and it’s now been nearly 5 years that I’ve been here and I hope that we can achieve a lot of good things in the future.
You’ve played for a lot of managers. How has Thomas Tuchel had such a big impact so quickly?
For sure he’s had a big impact for us. We are challenging for the top four and we won the first champions league game. We have the work of Frank Lampard from the last year and a half but he’s doing very well – the team adapted well under him and I hope we can keep going because it’s only been one month. I hope we can achieve some good things at the end of the season. We’re in three competitions and if we can win one or two titles then it’ll be very good.
Is there anything the manager does that’s different from everyone else?
He’s really demanding sometimes – he asks us to play in a certain way. There are many ways to do things and managers always insist on little details but I can’t say he does something more than another manager. But he’s really demanding in general.
Have you seen Timo’s confidence and contributions improve in recent weeks?
Obviously he can speak the same language but in general with Timo, no. He trains and plays the same way. He had some … Like to score a goal or something. But we all play with the same desire as before.
How pleased were you for him and everyone when he scored against Newcastle to end his difficult run?
Me especially, I was not looking at it like he hadn’t scored. I still thought he’d played well. Obviously, as a striker or an attacking player it’s important for him to score. We were happy for him but I was not waiting like (checks translation) it was an obligation – he was playing his best for the team and we were happy for him.
How talented is Kai Havertz?
He has good talent he’s good with the ball, he’s calm, he has the ability to make good, last decisions in the opponent’s half and around the box. He’s a reliable player he can turn and use his speed and technique. It’s good to have him. He’s young and was a bit injured recently but it’s good to have him in the squad.
Not had much luck so far. How has he coped mentally with the pressure of his price tag, the injuries he’s picked up and being struck down with Covid?
He always stayed positive and worked with a good mentality and work ethic. Sometimes he’s played and sometimes he hasn’t – obviously this is the decision of the manager. But in general, we are all positive and when we’re on the pitch we try our best. When he’s training, he’s doing his best and is always ready. I’m sure he’ll do well in the future.
How confident are you that the manager can get the very best out of Werner and Havertz?
As a player I see them as team-mates. I’m not especially focused on kai and timo but the manager is really demanding of everyone in every position and I’m sure when they have the time to play they’ll do what the manager asks and do their best.
You’ve spoken in the past about having to overcome a lot of difficulties as a child and then as a young player. If you were approached by a 12, 15 or 17—year old Kante for advice. What would you say?
It’s an important thing. If you’re at Chelsea or another team, you have the ability to play at this level so if things are not going how you want or you think you can do better, work really hard. Work harder. Try your best and listen to the advice of the manager and experienced players and think about what you can do better. That is a way to do better and to give your best and then you don’t have regrets at the end.

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Crystal Palace’s Wilfried Zaha becomes first Premier League player not to take the knee | Football News – Times of India

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LONDON: Crystal Palace forward Wilfried Zaha became the first Premier League player not to take a knee in solidarity with the anti-racism movement before Saturday’s match against West Bromwich Albion.
Ivory Coast international Zaha stood tall while the rest of his Palace team-mates and their opponents kneeled just before kick-off at Selhurst Park.
The 28-year-old revealed last month when speaking at the Financial Times’ Business of Football summit he would no longer perform a gesture which has been followed by Premier League players, officials and staff since June.
“My decision to stand at kick-off has been public knowledge for a couple of weeks now,” Zaha said in a statement released on Saturday.
“There is no right or wrong decision, but for me personally I feel kneeling has just become a part of the pre-match routine and at the moment it doesn’t matter whether we kneel or stand, some of us still continue to receive abuse.
“I know there is a lot of work being done behind the scenes at the Premier League and other authorities to make change, and I fully respect that, and everyone involved. I also fully respect my team-mates and players at other clubs who continue to take the knee.
“As a society, I feel we should be encouraging better education in schools, and social media companies should be taking stronger action against people who abuse others online – not just footballers.
“I now just want to focus on football and enjoy being back playing on the pitch. I will continue to stand tall.”
Zaha joins Championship clubs Millwall, Derby, Bournemouth and Brentford in no longer taking part in kneeling before matches.
The gesture was brought in as a way to promote the anti-racism message after the death in police custody of George Floyd in the United States last May sparked a rise in Black Lives Matter protests.

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Premier League chief hopes fans can return by end of season | Football News – Times of India

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LONDON: The Premier League plans to welcome up to 10,000 fans in stadiums for the final two rounds of matches this season, chief executive Richard Masters said on Friday.
The British government last month set out a four-stage easing of England’s COVID-19 lockdown restrictions.
Under the third stage of the “roadmap”, very large outdoor stadiums will – if all conditions are met – from May 17 be able to have up to 10,000 people or 25% capacity, whichever is lower.
“Hopefully the final two fixtures of our season will have up to 10,000 supporters in them all,” Masters was quoted as saying by the BBC.
“We’ve got to go past those first initial steps in the government’s roadmap to get there, so hopefully that will be a fantastic finale to end the season.”
The current fixture schedule has May 15 and 23 listed as the final two weekends of the Premier League season.
Masters said the suspension of the 2019-20 season and the absence of fans amid the COVID-19 crisis came at a heavy cost.
Stadiums in some parts of England briefly opened up to a limited number of fans in December but the government imposed another lockdown after a new wave of COVID-19 infections.
“Towards the end of this season we’ll get towards 2 billion pounds ($2.78 billion) lost since the start of the pandemic in matchday and broadcast revenue,” said Masters.
“Clubs have continued to invest in competitive match-day squads and the Premier League has continued to make good all of its contributions throughout the pyramid and wider football.
“But the ramifications are that ultimately if there’s less money coming into football, then there’ll be less money going out in the short term.”
Should the vaccination programme in the UK go according to plan, Masters is optimistic football in Britain could be back to normal next season.
“From the beginning of next season, our goal is to have full stadia and the Government’s roadmap offers us that opportunity,” he explained.
Masters also said players will continue to take a knee until the end of the season as the ‘No Room for Racism’ campaign continues to seek positive changes in football and society.
“You will see for the rest of this season more anti-racism messages on player’s shirts and the continuation of taking the knee until the end of the season,” he told Sky Sports.
“We will discuss with the players in the close season what we are going to do to continue to make our feelings clear about anti-discrimination messaging going forward.”

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Business as usual as Manchester City crush Southampton | Football News – Times of India

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MANCHESTER: Leaders Manchester City showed that their weekend derby loss was a blip as Kevin de Bruyne and Riyad Mahrez both scored twice in a 5-2 win over Southampton in the Premier League on Wednesday.
City’s 21-match winning streak in all competitions was rudely interrupted by a 2-0 defeat by Manchester United but normal service was quickly resumed at the Etihad Stadium as they opened up a 14-point gap at the top.
After a slow start City went ahead with their first attack when De Bruyne pounced to convert a rebound in 15th minute, only for James Ward-Prowse to equalise from the penalty spot.
Mahrez restored City’s lead and Ilkay Gundogan made it 3-1 in first-half stoppage time before Mahrez produced another clinical finish 10 minutes after the interval.

Che Adams replied for an adventurous Southampton but De Bruyne grabbed his second of the night shortly afterwards as City looked like scoring every time they attacked.
City have 68 points from 29 games with Manchester United on 54 from one game fewer.

Southampton, who played impressive football at times, have 33 points from 28 games and are only seven points above the relegation zone after a ninth defeat in 11 games.
For a while it looked as though City might still be suffering a hangover from Sunday as Southampton dominated possession in the opening minutes.
But City went ahead when Phil Foden’s shot was parried out by Alex McCarthy to De Bruyne who scored off the crossbar.
Southampton levelled though when Aymeric Laporte fouled Jannik Vestergaard and Ward-Prowse slotted home.
City were fuming, with some justification, when McCarthy appeared to have tripped Foden after a poor touch but somehow got away without conceding a penalty after a VAR check.

“It is just incredible that penalty was not given. One day they are going to explain why. I do not understand it,” City manager Pep Guardiola, otherwise a happy man, said.
City responded to the injustice by going back ahead when Mahrez planted a shot past McCarthy and the Algerian was then denied another goal by the post only for Gundogan to turn in the rebound for his 10th league goal in 2021 and 12th of the campaign.
Mahrez was at the centre of City’s attacking onslaught and cleverly worked space on his left foot to make it 4-1 in the 55th minute. Adams then took advantage of a lapse in City’s defence to grab a goal back.
But no sooner did Southampton think they had a lifeline than De Bruyne showed great footwork to beat McCarthy again.
“I think we played quite well I must say even though we conceded five goals,” Southampton boss Ralph Hasenhuttl said.
“We were very brave with the ball at times. It’s the final quality that is missing.” (Reporting by Martyn Herman, editing by Ed Osmond and Toby Davis)



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EPL: Manchester United end City’s winning streak with derby victory | Football News – Times of India

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MANCHESTER (England): Manchester City‘s 21-match winning streak was ended by rivals Manchester United on Sunday with Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s side enjoying a 2-0 Premier League derby win at the Etihad Stadium.
The result narrows City’s lead over United at the top of the table to 11 points with 10 games remaining and was City’s first defeat in all competitions since November 21.
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.
Bruno Fernandes took the penalty with Ederson getting his right hand to the shot which squeezed in the corner to give the visitors the lead.
Luke 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.
United, tactically and defensively solid throughout, doubled their lead when keeper Dean Henderson threw a clever and fast ball out to Shaw who burst past two City defenders and after a swift exchange with Marcus Rashford, drove into the bottom far-corner.

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