Norwich City produced a magnificent all-round display to inflict Manchester City’s first Premier League defeat since January at an ecstatic Carrow Road.
The Canaries were missing eight players but made light of those injuries and took full advantage of a performance from the reigning champions that was careless in the extreme and characterised by chaotic defending.
Norwich were 2-0 ahead within 30 minutes after Kenny McLean rose unmarked to meet Emiliano Buendia’s corner and then Todd Cantwell finished a flowing move involving Marco Stiepermann and Teemu Pukki.
Sergio Aguero’s header just before the break hinted at a Manchester City comeback but a misunderstanding between John Stones and Nicolas Otamendi saw Buendia rob the Argentina centre-back and set up Pukki to score.
Rodri scored his first goal for Manchester City with two minutes left before referee Kevin Friend’s final whistle was the cue for wild celebrations for the home side.
The rare defeat, meanwhile, leaves Pep Guardiola’s side five points behind Liverpool.
Man City flounder in Laporte’s absence
It was inevitable City would miss the class and composure of Aymeric Laporte – set to be out for six months with a knee injury – but this display suggests the gap he leaves is even bigger than Manchester City may have feared.
Guardiola has lost quality and influence with Laporte’s injury, as well as Vincent Kompany’s departure, and his nightmare scenario unfolded at Carrow Road.
Stones and Otamendi had a harrowing time and City’s manager will know he must now rely on the pair at least until January.
Guardiola himself should not escape criticism for the defeat though after he left Kevin de Bruyne out of his starting team then delayed his arrival until after Norwich had re-established their two-goal lead.
They were mystifying decisions and a heavy price was paid.
Guardiola will also be concerned by the manner of Norwich’s goals, which ranged from poor marking at set pieces – a recurring theme – to catastrophic attempts to play out from the back.
Stones and Otamendi were nervous throughout and their lack of understanding reflected the fact they had only played together at centre-back four times in the last 20 months.
It would be ludicrous to start writing off the title hopes of a team so rich in quality but that five-point gap to Liverpool looks large when you consider Jurgen Klopp’s team only lost once in the league last season, to City, and have won their opening five games this term.
Norwich defy the odds
Norwich City’s resources were so thin that manager Farke made up the numbers by naming two goalkeepers on the bench as eight players were removed from his squad by injury.
He said he could not “park the bus” because he did not have enough defenders and instead the German relied on his customary intense approach – and what an occasion it gave the Canaries fans inside a bouncing Carrow Road.
Norwich were fiercely disciplined in defence but also ambitious and confident when they had the ball, not afraid to play out from the back.
They had 11 high-class performers but special mention should go to Ibrahim Amadou at the back and the creative brilliance of Buendia, who pressed City into submission as he proved with the third goal.
At the head of it all was Pukki, on the mark once more with a poacher’s strike but also unselfish when he passed across the face of goal for Cantwell.
When City’s inevitable charge came, Norwich were almost out on their feet but hurled their bodies around the penalty area to block shots while goalkeeper Tim Krul performed heroics when called upon.
This was a complete performance that will send self-belief surging through Farke’s side and indeed the supporters who kept up relentless noise throughout an occasion they will remember for a very long time.
Man of the match – Ibrahim Amadou (Norwich City)
Source: BBC