Man City boss Pep Guardiola on his side's win at Newcastle: "That was really good. It was incredible from the team, the way we played with a huge personality. They showed me they want to be there, to fight until the end that they want to retain the title"
Sunday 14 January 2024 12:38, UK
Pep Guardiola declared his players had shown him their title-winning desire as they dug deep to complete a last-minute turnaround and win 3-2 at Newcastle.
The Premier League champions, who won only one out of six matches in the Premier League before their Club World Cup victory in December, have now picked up maximum points in each of their three league games since their return from Saudi Arabia.
Saturday's win at St James' Park was easily their most testing, trailing 2-1 with 16 minutes to go before the returning Kevin De Bruyne proved vital for their comeback victory with a goal and an assist to lift them two points off leaders Liverpool.
City's hopes of a fifth Premier League crown from six seasons had looked in real jeopardy in mid-December, when a 2-2 draw against Crystal Palace gave Arsenal and Liverpool the opportunity to move respectively five and six points ahead of them.
But not for the first time in recent years, City have bounced back from being written off to put themselves firmly back in the title race, with Guardiola paying tribute to his players' mentality after their latest victory.
"That was really good, sometimes it is better winning that way for the team, for everything," he told BBC Sport. "It was incredible from the team, the way we played with a huge personality.
"They showed me they want to be there, to fight until the end that they want to retain the title."
In his press conference, he added: "I had the feeling we would do it, with the way we played against Huddersfield I felt the team was alive.
"We won five of the last six, why not? Of course, it's important because Liverpool are flying - and we have to still go to Anfield so it's better to be close to them."
Guardiola is relieved to have "special player" De Bruyne back in his ranks after the Belgium midfielder's cameo inspired Manchester City to victory at Newcastle on his return to Premier League action.
The 32-year-old, who had not made a league appearance since August because of injury, endured a disappointing start to his evening on Tyneside when he drilled a free-kick harmlessly into the defensive wall with his first touch.
But he drew City level within five minutes of his introduction and then set up fellow substitute Oscar Bobb to snatch a 3-2 victory in stoppage time.
Asked about his contribution, Guardiola said with a smile: "I am so disappointed in him and upset and grumpy because the free-kick, he didn't score a goal.
"Apart from that, I had the feeling he was not ready for 90 minutes after five months. We cannot forget - people say, 'OK he's ready, he can play after five months 90 minutes'.
"It's not the case, so that is why he was in that situation. But we had control of the game and his impact in the last 35 minutes, the goal, the assist and how many times he arrived at the byline for the crosses...
"He is a special player. He is a legend, he is beloved by our people and he is fresh in his mind because five months is a lot of time. Hopefully, in the second part of the season, he can help us be there until the end."
De Bruyne felt sheer willpower was the decisive factor after his game-changing substitution at Newcastle.
De Bruyne said: "I've missed this. I had a big injury and I needed the time off but I worked hard.
"To come here, to this stadium, in this environment - I think it was more willpower than sharpness.
"I know I'm not able to do that for 90 minutes at the moment but I can put in a shift for 20-25 at full pace. I can feel it in my lungs with the cold, but it can't be any better than this can it?"
With City trailing 2-1 at half-time, it took the introduction of De Bruyne in the 69th minute to turn the game in
City's favour.
Asked if he had expected to get back up to speed so quickly after injury, De Bruyne said: "No, not at all.
"Honestly, I didn't know what to expect. I've never experienced this in 14 years that I've been playing football. But I worked really hard. I tried to change a couple of things because I had the time. When you are playing all the time it is difficult to do different things. Hopefully, I can maintain that."
For Magpies boss Eddie Howe, there was pride in a fine display, but one which ended in disappointment to join a series of near misses this season against teams including Liverpool and Paris St-Germain.
"There was so much promise and so many good things, so to be sat here with nothing is very, very painful," Howe said.
"The lads have given so much physically in that game. The first half was everything that we want to be. We wanted to be aggressive and front foot. When you do that, you take risks, but those risks were worth it.
"You could see that it paid off at the other end. We still wanted to do that in the second half, we still wanted to play the same way, but we just couldn't deliver that in the second half."
On De Bruyne's contribution, Howe added: "You just hope he's rusty and not up to full speed yet, but then he comes on and delivers that and you think, 'Well, there's no rustiness there'."
"He crosses the ball so well, for the majority of the time he was on we dealt with those situations well, but for his goal, we didn't defend well enough, and for the assist at the end, that was hugely frustrating with just three minutes to see out, you thought we were almost there.
"It was a really good first-half performance from us. End-to-end, brave football. We probably ran out of gas in the second half.
"It looked like we had done enough for the point, with the way we defended you'd have backed us to see it out but we couldn't do it in the end."
Newcastle will benefit from a two-week break before their next engagement, which is a trip to face Fulham at Craven Cottage in the fourth round of the FA Cup on January 27.
They return to Premier League duty on January 30 when travelling to Aston Villa; kick-off 8.15pm.
Manchester City also have FA Cup commitments on January 26, facing Spurs at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, before a return to Premier League action sees Vincent Kompany's Burnley travel to the Etihad on January 31; kick-off 7.30m.