Skip to content
Full Time After Extra Time This is a live match. Extra Time Half Time

Manchester City vs Aston Villa. Premier League.

Etihad StadiumAttendance40,137.

City extend Villa's wobble

24th minute: Elano converts from the spot after Wright-Phillips is brought down in the area.
Image: Elano: Opened the scoring

Man City ensured Aston Villa continue to sweat with a 2-0 win at Eastlands on Wednesday.

Elano and Wright-Phillips make Champions League hopefuls sweat

Manchester City ensured Aston Villa continue to wobble in the battle for a place in next season's UEFA Champions League with a 2-0 win at Eastlands on Wednesday night. Villa began the campaign with sights firmly set on breaking the stranglehold of Manchester United, Chelsea, Liverpool and Arsenal in the Premier League and, for the majority, Martin O'Neill's men have looked ready to disrupt the 'Big Four'. However, a penalty from Elano and a late strike from Shaun Wright-Phillips, on the back of Sunday's home surrender of a two-goal lead against relegation-fighting Stoke, stretched Villa's winless run to six games in all competitions and further nudged the door open for fifth-placed Arsenal and chasing Everton. The gap between Villa and the Gunners is now only three points, and the former - who had arrived at City hoping to notch a club-record eighth successive away win in the league - never truly looked like extending their narrow advantage. So fragile on their travels, yet contrastingly creative and assured in the east of Manchester, City, who racked up their ninth home win, dominated the first half and were rewarded in the 24th minute when Elano converted from the penalty spot after James Milner had felled Wright-Phillips. Villa came to life after the interval, but City delivered a hammer blow with 60 seconds left on the clock as Wright-Phillips slotted past Brad Friedel following an excellent give-and-go with Stephen Ireland. Ever since his ill-advised TV interview earlier in the season in which he questioned why Mark Hughes kept leaving him out, Elano has maintained an uneasy public truce with his manager. There are plenty who suggest the Brazilian remains a disruptive influence behind the scenes and there have certainly been times when he has appeared something short of a consummate team man.

Consistent

Yet, should Hughes somehow find the formula for getting consistent performances from the former Shakhtar Donetsk player, City could really start a surge up the table. After all, Elano was one of the main reasons why the Blues found themselves in the Champions League slots last December, an honour that now belongs to their latest opponents. With Robinho and Craig Bellamy both missing through injury, Hughes was able to offer Elano the kind of free role behind a lone frontman - in this case the ineffective Felipe Caicedo - that he craves. The response, if not exactly energetic, was certainly enthusiastic and it was his pass to Wright-Phillips that brought the hosts their penalty in the first place. Wright-Phillips had found himself in a similar position moments earlier, when Ireland was the provider. Amazingly, with just Friedel to beat, the England international slipped his shot wide. Wright-Phillips did not get that far on the second occasion. Having been caught the wrong side of his man, Milner attempted the tackle and succeeded only in tripping his opponent. Friedel almost made amends with a flying dive to his right. Unfortunately for Villa, Elano's spot-kick was just too good. Hughes was convinced City should have had a second spot-kick when Caicedo went down under Carlos Cuellar's challenge but referee Chris Foy did not quite see it the same way.
Commitment
Unlike Elano, Wright-Phillips' commitment has never been questioned and the England international kept the Villa defence on their toes with a succession of mazy runs on his return from a three-match ban. Yet it also had to be said it was a pale imitation of the Villa side who have impressed so many this season. Their poor run of form seemed to have drained O'Neill's men of confidence. The response to a tepid first-half performance was for O'Neill to introduce John Carew for Curtis Davies, a substitution that triggered a number of positional changes, including Gabriel Agbonlahor taking up a wider position. It suggested an aerial bombardment, but instead it brought more width, which Ashley Young relished. After seizing the initiative without managing to put Shay Given under any pressure, Agbonlahor finally created a chance for Villa with a superb pass to Gareth Barry, whose first-time volley would have crept in if Given had not got down by his post to bundle it away. The visitors' offensive forced City - expertly marshalled at the back by the outstanding Richard Dunne - to play on the counter-attack. Crucially though, it gave them space to exploit. Substitute Ched Evans' magnificent first touch was a chested lay-off, which Elano struck sweetly, only for Friedel to make a superb save. On this evidence, it was perfectly simple to work out why Sven Goran Eriksson paid £8million for Elano - and why Hughes felt he needed to splash out slightly less to get Given from Newcastle. The Republic of Ireland international produced another blinding stop to deny Young. It was the last chance Villa created. And to rub salt into their wounds, Wright-Phillips capitalised on Ireland's pass at the end to seal the win for City.
Manchester City Team Statistics Aston Villa
2 Goals 0
1 1st Half Goals 0
4 Shots on Target 3
8 Shots off Target 3
4 Blocked Shots 4
6 Corners 5
9 Fouls 11
2 Offsides 3
1 Yellow Cards 2
0 Red Cards 0
69.3 Passing Success 67.4
27 Tackles 28
66.7 Tackles Success 67.9
47.8 Possession 52.2
49.2 Territorial Advantage 50.8

Around Sky