Tottenham have not really done first halves over the past few months. In 14 previous games in all competitions, they had scored only once before the interval. But what was this? Antonio Conte’s team were 2-0 up when the half-time whistle sounded, the Etihad Stadium in a state of uproar, Manchester City’s players departing to jeers, Pep Guardiola looking as if he might combust.

City had needed a response to their derby defeat at Manchester United, to a sequence of two wins in five Premier League matches that had allowed Arsenal to lengthen their stride at the top of the table. Now they really needed one.

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

It seems the Conservatives failed to fix the country while the gas was flowing | Marina Hyde

Britain faces an energy crisis. Will the lights go out just as…

‘We faced so many cyclones’: how people in Bangladesh are rebuilding after climate catastrophe

This year’s Guardian and Observer campaign supports charities fighting global climate injustice.…

Thailand election day arrives with hope of unseating junta generals from power

Young voters demand change but military-appointed senate poses hurdle to a non-establishment…

NHS pilots pregnancy screening that may cut racial disparities in baby deaths

Tool addresses inequalities in UK, where stillbirth and perinatal death rates are…