Mancini: City must stay strong

Mancini: City must stay strong

Published Dec. 13, 2011 1:16 p.m. ET

After enjoying such a sensational start to the campaign, City are finally experiencing a significant wobble. Dumped out of the Champions League by Napoli, the Blues were on the wrong end of a comeback win by Chelsea at Stamford Bridge on Monday night despite getting off to the perfect start thanks to Mario Balotelli. Strange as it may have appeared a couple of weeks ago, City might have been knocked off top spot by Manchester United when they walk out to face in-form Arsenal at the Etihad Stadium on Sunday. That in itself would bring added pressure to Mancini and his men, who remain odds-on favourites to clinch their first championship since 1968. However, the Italian is not giving off any sense of self-doubt, and he expects his players to adopt the same attitude. "At this moment, we should be very strong," he said. "It is at these moments that you become stronger, as players and a team. For this reason, the result is a lesson for us." Given their previous performances last term, and how they played for 25 minutes on Monday night when they could easily have swept Chelsea away, it is hard to be too critical of City. However, there were echoes of the Champions League defeat to Bayern Munich in September, when City were also the better side, only to crumble when the going got tough. On this occasion, the Blues can justifiably point to the failure of referee Mark Clattenburg to spot a clear trip on David Silva when they were ahead and on top, plus the dismissal of Gael Clichy, as the major turning points. "If the Silva penalty had been awarded, probably the game was finished," said Mancini. "After the sending off it was a different match." The immediate impact of Clichy's dismissal is to deprive the full-back of a meeting with his former club at the weekend. It also triggers yet another personnel switch in an area of the field where City have struggled for continuity this term. In addition, it extends an unhappy run of red cards to three in six games. As City have only lost once and remain at the head of affairs, there is no reason for major recriminations. However, should the downturn continue this weekend, the heat will be on, even if the message from the Blues camp is one of confidence and unity. "We are disappointed but now it is in the past," said midfielder James Milner. "The positive side is that we have another game coming up. "We will be back in tomorrow, working as hard as we can. If it was possible to give even more then we would. "The hunger is still there. If anything, there is even more incentive to bounce back with an even bigger performance at the weekend."

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