Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola on Saturday said his side lost 3-1 to Olympique Lyonnais to exit the UEFA Champions League because they lacked the perfection needed in Europe’s top competition.
Manchester City fell behind to Maxwel Cornet’s strike in a sloppy first half of the quarter-final match.
Read Also: Human Trafficking Kingpin Arrested In Katsina
They then looked like their usual selves after the break and levelled through Kevin de Bruyne.
However, they were downed by two strikes from Moussa Dembele, sandwiched between an unbelievable open-goal miss from Raheem Sterling.
“It is what it is and hopefully one day we’ll bridge this gap,” Guardiola said after a fourth successive failure in the UEFA Champions League with Manchester City.
“We struggled in the first 25 minutes, but in the second half we felt free. We were there and I had the feeling we were better than them. But you have to be perfect in this competition and we were not.”
Guardiola did not complain about Lyon’s second goal, which survived a VAR review after a potential foul by Dembele on Manchester City defender Aymeric Laporte.
“I don’t know, I don’t want to talk about those circumstances because sometimes it seems like I’m complaining or looking for excuses.
“We are out, I had the feeling we were incredible already, but we made mistakes in the boxes in the key moments.”
Guardiola also rued Sterling’s astonishing miss which would have made it 2-2 and they were promptly punished by Dembele’s second goal which was the killer blow.
“That moment sums up this competition, we had to equalise and after we conceded the third goal. That’s this competition, you have to be perfect.
“We created more chances, had more shots, we did everything, but unfortunately we are out again.”
Former President Goodluck Jonathan has urged Nigerians to eschew ethnic sentiments, stressing that such divisions…
Vice President Kashim Shettima, Wednesday morning, departed Abuja for Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire. A statement by…
The Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, has assured banks of a steady cash supply to…