MANCHESTER CITY PULL IT OUT OF THE BAG TO BEAT BURNLEY AT TURF MOOR
Burnley 1
Manchester City 2
Sergio Aguero scored twice as a
much-changed Manchester City side came from behind to beat Burnley 2-1 at Turf
Moor.
Pep Guardiola left out John Stones
and Ilkay Gundogan altogether and named Kevin De Bruyne and David Silva on the
bench as City returned to action 63 hours after drawing with Borussia
Monchengladbach in the Champions League.
Aguero was fit after picking up a minor
foot problem and, although his goals will not win any awards, they were enough
to take City back to the top of the Premier League table for a couple of hours
at least.
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The first goalscorer was far less
predictable, Dean Marney scoring for the first time in the Premier League for
seven years and in some style, but Aguero equalised eight minutes before the
break and then netted the winner on the hour mark.

A calf injury picked up by Tom
Heaton in training on Friday meant the end of his run of 142 consecutive
appearances dating back to his debut in goal for Burnley in 2013.
The beneficiary was 37-year-old Paul
Robinson, more than two years after his last senior match and four and a half
years after his most recent Premier League appearance for Blackburn in May
2012.
Burnley were abject in their 4-0
defeat by West Brom on Monday but they are a different team at Turf Moor, with
13 of their 14 points coming at home.
The hosts made the brighter start
and appealed for an early penalty when Jeff Hendrick went down under a
challenge from Nicolas Otamendi, but referee Andre Marriner was unmoved.
City broke and Robinson was involved
for the first time, getting a strong hand to Aguero's 25-yard shot.
Of all Burnley's potential sources
of goals, a 25-yard volley from Marney would have been a long way down the
list, but the midfielder met Otamendi's header perfectly and guided the ball
into the bottom corner for his first goal since March 2014.

City had been outfought by Burnley
but they gradually began to improve and, after Nolito's shot had been clasped
gratefully by Robinson, Yaya Toure fired against the outside of a post.
It was then City's turn to appeal
for a penalty when Matthew Lowton dived in to block Nolito's shot from Raheem
Sterling's cut-back, but Marriner gave a corner.
And it was from the corner that the
equaliser came. Burnley failed to clear the ball and it found its way to Aguero
at the back post, who squeezed his shot past Robinson.
The striker almost grabbed a second
a couple of minutes later but his curling effort from outside the box was
expertly tipped round the post by Robinson, who looked anything but rusty.
Burnley's afternoon took another
turn for the worse when they were forced into two substitutions before the
break.
Marney, who had earlier received
treatment for a knock, could not continue and was replaced by Scott Arfield,
and moments later Johann Gudmundsson pulled up with a hamstring problem and
James Tarkowski came on.
The Clarets could have gone in
ahead, though, but Sam Vokes headed Lowton's cross straight at Claudio Bravo
when unmarked.
It was City who had to make a change
in the 57th minute after a robust but fair tackle from Ben Mee left Raheem
Sterling hobbling gingerly off the pitch to be replaced by Leroy Sane.
Three minutes later City were ahead,
Aguero again in the right place to profit from some poor Burnley defending.
The Clarets looked like they had
done the hard work when they stopped Toure getting his shot away but Mee and
Stephen Ward tackled each other and Fernandinho's cut-back went in off Aguero's
shin.
Burnley threw balls and bodies into
the box as often as they could during the final half an hour but could not
force the ball in, with Ashley Barnes denied twice in injury time.
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