Football Wiki
Football Wiki
Manchester City v Leicester City (2020-21)
Premier League new logo
HT:1–1
Report
EventPremier League 2020-21
DateSunday 27 September 2020
VenueEtihad Stadium, Manchester
Player of the MatchJamie Vardy
RefereeMichael Oliver
Attendance0
Weather15 °C (59 °F)
Man City - Wolves
Leicester City - Burnley
Man City - Burnley
Leicester City - West Ham

Manchester City v Leicester City was a match which took place at the Etihad Stadium on Sunday 27 September 2020.

Jamie Vardy scored a hat-trick as Leicester City inflicted a remarkable defeat on Manchester City to go top of the Premier League.

Despite going behind to a superb fourth-minute strike by former Foxes midfielder Riyad Mahrez, the visitors responded in stunning fashion.

Vardy levelled with a penalty before the break after he had been fouled by Kyle Walker, and he then sealed his second treble against Pep Guardiola's side from the spot, after he had cleverly turned home Timothy Castagne's cross to make it 2-1.

James Maddison scored for the first time since 1 January when he curled home a stunning fourth for Leicester.

And although Nathan Ake pulled one back with his first goal since a £40m summer move from Bournemouth, a third Leicester penalty - this time converted by Youri Tielemans because Vardy had already gone off - completed a memorable afternoon for Brendan Rodgers' Foxes, who have started a top-flight season with three successive wins for the first time.

In contrast, Guardiola was suffering his worst home defeat as City boss, with his team now in the bottom half of the table.

For most of the opening period, the possibility of Leicester returning to the top of the table appeared remote.

But with Vardy they always have a chance. Even at the age of 33, the striker remains frighteningly fast.

Walker is no slouch but the England right-back was panicked into making a rash challenge when the Leicester forward got ahead of him inside the box. Vardy's powerful spot-kick gave Ederson no chance of keeping it out.

His second penalty was equally emphatic after another City defender, Eric Garcia, had got himself into the wrong position as he tried to challenge Vardy.

In between, Vardy tucked home a poacher's effort Leicester's most celebrated old boy, Gary Lineker, would have been proud of. The supplier was Castagne, who is turning into a very astute purchase, given how willing the Belgian is to push forward from his right-back role as manager Rodgers demands.

Maddison's return adds the dimension the Foxes lacked so badly as their 2019-20 season petered out into a relatively disappointing fifth-place finish.

The only sour note for the visitors were injuries to midfielder Dennis Praet and defender Jonny Evans.

The latter in particular may prompt some hard thinking among the Leicester hierarchy, given they had a £30m bid for Burnley centre-back James Tarkowski turned down on Friday.

It is now just a matter of time before Benfica defender Ruben Dias completes his move to the Eithad. And on this evidence, the Portugal international cannot come soon enough. The fee will be about £65m, with centre-back Nicolas Otamendi going the other way for about £13.7m in a separate deal.

Guardiola has made the purchase of a right-sided central defender a priority before the transfer window closes on 5 October. He does not trust either Otamendi or England international John Stones in that role - and he knows if the situation is not addressed, the chances of City overhauling Liverpool are almost non-existent.

Against Leicester, Eric Garcia, wearing a headguard to protect the 16 stitches he sustained during a training ground incident that kept him out of the season opener at Wolves, started in the position earmarked for 23-year-old Dias.

In defence, it was an orthodox role in a four-man backline. But as soon as the hosts were in possession - which was fairly often - Garcia became the central component of a back three, which skipper Fernandinho was part of, allowing Walker and Benjamin Mendy to turn into wing-backs.

Garcia's future is unclear. The 19-year-old Spaniard has a year left on his contract, has refused to sign another and wants to go back to Barcelona.

Match[]

Details[]

27 September 2020
16:30 GMT
Manchester City Manchester City FC 2–5 Leicester City FC Leicester City Etihad Stadium, Manchester
Attendance: 0
Referee: Michael Oliver
Mahrez Goal 4'
Aké Goal 84'
HT:1–1
Report
Vardy Goal 37' (Pen)54'58' (Pen)
Maddison Goal 77'
Tielemans Goal 88' (Pen)
Manchester City
Leicester City
31 Ederson
02 Kyle Walker
50 Eric García
06 Nathan Aké Booked
22 Benjamin Mendy
25 Fernandinho Substituted off in the 51st minute 51'
16 Rodrigo
47 Phil Foden Substituted off in the 64th minute 64'
17 Kevin De Bruyne
07 Raheem Sterling
26 Riyad Mahrez
Substitutes:
11 Oleksandr Zinchenko
13 Zack Steffen
14 Aymeric Laporte
21 Ferran Torres Substituted on in the 64th minute 64'
48 Liam Delap Substituted on in the 51st minute 51'
69 Tommy Doyle
80 Cole Palmer
Manager:
Flag of Spain Pep Guardiola
01 Kasper Schmeichel
27 Timothy Castagne
06 Jonny Evans Substituted off in the 80th minute 80'
04 Çağlar Söyüncü Booked
02 James Justin
24 Nampalys Mendy
18 Daniel Amartey Booked
08 Youri Tielemans Booked
26 Dennis Praet Substituted off in the 69th minute 69'
15 Harvey Barnes
09 Jamie Vardy Substituted off in the 85th minute 85'
Substitutes:
10 James Maddison Substituted on in the 69th minute 69'
11 Marc Albrighton
12 Danny Ward
14 Kelechi Iheanacho Substituted on in the 85th minute 85'
17 Ayoze Pérez
20 Hamza Choudhury
28 Christian Fuchs Substituted on in the 80th minute 80'
Manager:
Flag of Northern Ireland Brendan Rodgers

Man of the Match: Jamie Vardy

Assistant referees:
Stuart Burt
Simon Bennett
Fourth official:
Craig Pawson

Match rules

  • 90 minutes, no extra time or penalties.
  • Three points awarded to winner, none to loser.
  • One point awarded to each in the event of a draw.
  • Seven named substitutes
  • Maximum of three substitutions

Match Stats[]

Overall Manchester City Leicester City
Goals scored 2 5
Total shots 16 7
Shots on target 5 7
Ball possession 72% 28%
Corner kicks 3 4
Fouls committed 13 8

See also[]

External links[]

Premier League 2020–21

Arsenal FC Arsenal · Aston Villa FC Aston Villa · Brighton & Hove Albion Brighton & Hove Albion · Burnley FC Burnley · Chelsea FC Chelsea · Crystal Palace FC Crystal Palace · Everton FC Everton · Fulham FC Fulham · Leeds United FC Leeds United · Leicester City FC Leicester City · Liverpool FC Liverpool · Manchester City FC Manchester City · Manchester United FC Manchester United · Newcastle United FC Newcastle United · Sheffield United Sheffield United · Southampton FC Southampton · Tottenham Hotspur Tottenham Hotspur · West Bromwich Albion FC West Bromwich Albion · West Ham United FC West Ham United · Wolverhampton Wanderers Wolverhampton Wanderers

Premier League match days 2020-21

Match day 01 | Match day 02 | Match day 03 | Match day 04 | Match day 05 | Match day 06 | Match day 07 | Match day 08 | Match day 09 | Match day 10 | Match day 11 | Match day 12 | Match day 13 | Match day 14 | Match day 15 | Match day 16 | Match day 17 | Match day 18 | Match day 19 | Match day 20 | Match day 21 | Match day 22 | Match day 23 | Match day 24 | Match day 25 | Match day 26 | Match day 27 | Match day 28 | Match day 29 | Match day 30 | Match day 31 | Match day 32 | Match day 33 | Match day 34 | Match day 35 | Match day 36 | Match day 37 | Match day 38 

Manchester City F.C. matches - 2020-21
2020-21 Premier League

Wolverhampton Wanderers (a) · Leicester City (h) · Leeds United (a) · Arsenal (h) · Brighton & Hove Albion (h) · Liverpool (a) · Arsenal (a) · Chelsea (h) · Everton (h)

2020-21 FA Cup
Birmingham City (h) · Cheltenham Town (a) · Swansea City (a) · Everton (a) · Chelsea (n)
2020-21 EFL Cup
Bournemouth (h) · Burnley (a) · Arsenal (a) · Manchester United (a) · Tottenham Hotspur (n) ·
2020-21 Champions League
Porto (h) · Marseille (a) · Olympiacos (h) · Olympiacos (a) · Porto (a) · Marseille (h) · Borussia Mönchengladbach (a) · Borussia Mönchengladbach (h) · Borussia Dortmund (h) · Borussia Dortmund (a) · Chelsea (n)
Leicester City F.C. matches - 2020-21
2020-21 Premier League

Manchester City (a) · Arsenal (a) · Southampton (h) · Arsenal (h) · Manchester United (a) · Chelsea (a) · Tottenham Hotspur (h)

2020-21 FA Cup
Stoke City (a) · Brentford (a) · Brighton & Hove Albion (h) · Manchester United (h) · Southampton (n) · Chelsea (n)
2020-21 EFL Cup
Arsenal (h)
2020–21 UEFA Europa League
Zorya Luhansk (h) · AEK Athens (a) · Braga (h) · Braga (a) · Zorya Luhansk (a) · AEK Athens (h) · Slavia Prague (a) · Slavia Prague (h)