Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola gave a scathing assessment of his side’s performance after they exited the League Cup in a dismal 2-0 defeat to Southampton on Wednesday.
The competition has long been a domain dominated by City, who have won the Cup on six occasions since 2014, but for the second time in as many seasons, they were knocked out before the semi-finals.
For only the third time in Pep Guardiola’s tenure as City boss, and the first time since 2018, his side did not even manage a shot on target. “That’s the reason why we were not good,” he said when asked about that statistic.
Southampton struck twice before the half-hour mark and defended well to limit City’s opportunities going forward despite only having 28 per cent of the possession.
Guardiola was forthright in his analysis of his side’s performance, telling BBC Radio 5 Live: “The better team won. We didn’t play good, we didn’t play well in the beginning. There are many games you can start not good and overcome and we didn’t do it.
“When you are not prepared to play this game you arrive one inch late and don’t score a goal. When you are prepared you score the goal.
“Today (Wednesday) was a bad night, the opponent was better so we have to congratulate them. To win games you have to deserve it and tonight we didn’t deserve it.” Guardiola had named a strong side with Joao Cancelo, Jack Grealish, Ilkay Gundogan and Kalvin Phillips among the starters, yet apart from an early shot dragged wide by midfielder Gundogan they made little impression on the game.
Guardiola’s sentiments were echoed by Gundogan, who was disappointed with his side’s performance.
“It’s definitely not what we wanted,” the German told Sky Sports. “We had hopes of going through but with that (performance) there was no chance. It was not enough from us.
“With the ball we made a lot of mistakes, gave them the ball too easily and that resulted in the two goals.
“We were not good enough to create chances, not good enough to score a goal.”
Guardiola said City won’t stand a chance of winning Saturday’s Manchester Derby in the Premier League if they replicate Wednesday’s performance.
A resurgent Manchester United have won 15 of their 18 games since a 6-3 humbling by City in October, and are on an eight-match winning run in all competitions. “It’s a different competition, of course, but if we perform in this way we don’t have a chance,” he said. “I know the momentum they (United) have.”
Forest prevail
Nottingham Forest beat Wolverhampton Wanderers 4-3 on penalties in their last-eight game to reach a Cup semi-final for the first time in over two decades. Forest keeper Dean Henderson made the decisive save from Joe Hodge’s spot kick in the shootout, after the game had finished 1-1 after 90 minutes.