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Manchester City’s Argentinian striker Sergio Aguero celebrates after scoring their second goal during the English Premier League football match between Manchester City and Manchester United at the Etihad Stadium in Manchester, north west England - AFP
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Manchester City’s German midfielder Ilkay Gundogan celebrates after scoring their third goal during the English Premier League football match between Manchester City and Manchester United at the Etihad Stadium in Manchester, north west England - AFP
LONDON (Reuters): Premier League champions Manchester City stayed two points clear at the top on Sunday with a dominant 3-1 win in the derby against Manchester United.
Liverpool, having beaten bottom club Fulham 2-0 at Anfield, will go into the international break in second place after receiving a favour from neighbours Everton, who held Chelsea to a goalless draw at Stamford Bridge.
Meanwhile Arsenal had to come from behind to extend their unbeaten run to 16 games in all competitions with a 1-1 draw at home to promoted Wolverhampton Wanderers.
Man City moved on to 32 points from 12 games, while Liverpool have 30 and Chelsea 28, with all three teams retaining their season’s unbeaten record in the league.
City were on top from the start against a United team missing the injured Paul Pogba.
David Silva scored the first goal after 12 minutes and Sergio Aguero added a second soon after halftime.
Jose Mourinho’s side barely threatened until substitute RomeluLukaku came on to win a penalty that Anthony Martial converted just before the hour mark.
But despite City largely controlling the game, it took a late third goal by their substitute IlkayGundogan to ensure there could be no repeat of United’s dramatic comeback to win 3-2 in the same fixture last season.
United remain eighth, 12 points behind the leaders, and manager Mourinho refused to talk about his team still having any sort of title chances.
“We are outside the top four, how can we speak about the title? Let’s fight to close the gap to jump into the top four,” said Mourinho.
Pep Guardiola, City’s manager, was quick to point out that Liverpool and Chelsea had also made strong starts to the campaign and said it was too early to be discussing where the title may be heading.
“It is November so we haven’t even finished the first round. A lot can happen in football,” he said.
There was controversy at Anfield after Liverpool took the lead against struggling Fulham just before halftime.
The London side felt that their Serbian striker AleksandarMitrovic should not have been given offside as he headed home and that goalkeeper Alisson took the subsequent free kick when the ball was moving.
Less than 15 seconds later from a lightning Liverpool break, it was in the net at the other end, put there by Mo Salah.
XherdanShaqiri scored a fine second goal, after which the heart seemed to go out of a Fulham team who remain bottom of the table with only one win from their 12 games.
“In this country, normally you cannot show disrespect to the referee and this is a problem because it’s shown disrespect to my team, myself and Fulham supporters,” said their manager SlavisaJokanovic.
Chelsea’s manager Maurizio Sarri set a record in the Premier League era by completing his first dozen games without a defeat, but he would have expected more than a goalless draw from the home game with Everton.
His team failed to score for only the second time in the league this season against a well-organised Everton, who stayed ninth in the table.
“Of course, I prefer the three points today than the record,” he said.
In Sunday’s other game Arsenal fell behind to Wolves with a first half goal by Portuguese international Ivan Cavaleiro and did not equalise until four minutes from time through HenrikhMkhitaryan.
The draw left Arsenal, fifth on 24 points, three points behind fourth-placed neighbours Tottenham Hotspur, who beat Crystal Palace on Saturday.