Manchester City 1-1 Everton: Premier League – as it happened

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That’s all for today. Luke McLaughlin is covering the 3pm games and will also direct you to our City v Everton match report when it lands. See you a bit later for Wolves v Man Utd.

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Manuel Akanji’s reaction

[Was a draw a fair result?] I don’t think so, no. We did way more for the game, created lots of chances and conceded a goal out of nothing. But that’s how it is.

We could’ve scored three or four goals but the ball didn’t want to go in. I’ll be honest with you: it can’t happen that we nearly lose the game in the last minute. We’re trying to attack but then we lose the ball and it was like a 6-v-2 situation. Luckily I blocked the shot. Things like this can’t happen.

[Are you still in the title race?] The season is not finished but that’s not our target. We need to focus game by game. Leicester away won’t be easy now with the shape we’re in.

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This is getting weirder and weirder. Manchester City’s run of form in all competitions now reads P13 W1 D3 L9 F15 A28. After first-half goals from Bernardo Silva and Iliman Ndiaye, Jordan Pickford save Erling Haaland’s penalty shortly after half-time. City had chances but Everton could also have nicked it on the break.

For all City’s woes, the result continues a terrific run of results for Everton, who in the last three weeks have avoided defeat against Liverpool, Arsenal, Chelsea and City. This is what it does to the Premier League table.

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90+6 min: What a chance for Everton! Broja again turns superbly and suddenly Everton have a four-on-two break. Four on two! Eventually he gives the ball to Harrison, whose shot is crucially blocked by Akanji. I’d like to see that again but it felt like Broja didn’t have the right angle to put somebody clean through on goal.

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90+4 min Foden is booked for pulling back Broja, who has protected the ball really well since coming on.

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90+3 min A really promising Everton break, sparked by a neat turn from Broja, ends with Gueye’s cross being blocked by Gvardiol at the near post. At one stage they had four on four and City were in trouble.

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90+1 min Savinho’s pass, intended for De Bruyne, is mishit but runs kindly for Lewis, who whips over the bar from 16 yards. Half a chance.

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90+1 min There will be six added minutes.

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90 min: Everton substitution Nathan Patterson replaces Seamus Coleman.

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90 min “Hi Rob,” writes Kári Tulinius. “Has a consensus pick for the world’s best player ever looked better than Rodri does now?”

Good question. Roy Race?

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89 min Plenty of City pressure now, though it’s all a bit scruffy and desperate. A draw wouldn’t flatter Everton.

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87 min De Bruyne gets away on the right side of the penalty area, the space in which he is so dangerous, but his cross is crucially blocked at the near post. Branthwaite is then booked for a tackle on Savinho.

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85 min: Double substitution for City Ilkay Gundogan and and Jahmai Simpson-Pusey replace Nathan Ake and Mateo Kovacic.

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84 min “Delighted to read Paul McGrory’s recollection of that 3pm Ireland vs Poland Euro 92 qualifier,” writes Bob H. “It wasn’t the only game that kicked off early thanks to Lansdowne’s lack of floodlights, as Paul mentions. I remember being in class while the Ireland vs England game was on and the principal announcing over the PA in the most ‘school principal’ tones possible, ‘For those of you interested in the football, I have some bad news: David Platt has just scored for England.’ Cue an entire school’s worth of groans and angry yells. We didn’t learn about the equaliser until we’d got home. Great days.”

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83 min: Just wide from Mangala! A cross from the left is cleared as far as Mangala on the edge of the area. He smashes a low shot that is going wide of the near post until it takes a huge deflection off Akanji and flashes just wide of the far post. That looked really close.

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81 min: Everton substitution Jesper Lindstrom replaces the goalscorer Iliman Ndiaye.

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80 min Meanwhile, Luke McLaughlin has all the team news for the 3pm games.

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78 min: Chance for City! Savinho slips Branthwaite on the right edge of the area and curls a fine cross towards the backpedalling Haaland at the far post. He could go for goal but tries to give Bernardo Silva an easier chance with a header back across the face. There’s slightly too much on it and Everton are able to clear.

I think it was the right decision to try to find Bernardo; the trajectory and speed of the cross were such that even Haaland would have struggled to generate the necessary power for a header at goal.

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78 min Branthwaite is coming back on so hopefully it was an impact injury rather than any muscular damage.

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76 min Branthwaite stays down after making a good sliding tackle on Haaland. This is a worry; he’s been terrific again today.

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75 min: Man City substitution Kevin De Bruyne replaces Jeremy Doku, who had an okay game on the left.

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73 min If it stays like this City will have won only one of the last 13 games in all competitions, which is beyond bonkers.

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70 min: Everton substitution Armando Broja replaces Dominic Calvert-Lewin up front.

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70 min The resulting corner is a shambles, totally wasted.

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69 min A good Everton break almost leads to a second goal. Harrison runs Gvardiol and stands up a very deep cross towards Doucoure. He twists his body to sidefoot a volley that hits Lewis and dribbles just wide of the near post.

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68 min City are starting to stir from their post-penalty slump, though they’re still a million miles from their rhythmic best.

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66 min Haaland receives the ball in the area and tries to go past Branthwaite, who stays on his feet to make a calm tackle. Moments later Savinho curls a fair way wide from the right side of the area.

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64 min Coleman plays an early pass up to Calvert-Lewin, who tries to run the last man Ake. For a split second it looks like he’s away but an imperfect touch allows Ake to slide in and knock the ball back to Ortega. Crucial defending.

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63 min “This match is all squeak and no bubble,” says Lee Woodard. “Haaland is the fashionable Christmas toy everyone wanted a few years back but now realise it’s made playtime a bit boring and samey. Time to put the big toy back in its box and find the fun again.”

I’m all for an extended analogy but that feels more than a little harsh on Haaland. The old quote about failure being an orphan doesn’t apply to this City collapse.

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61 min Kevin De Bruyne, who has had a touch of flu, is warming up. Bernardo Silva rakes a drive from 25 yards that is booted away.

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59 min That penalty save has winded City, who had started the second half really well. This is so weird. I can’t think of a single precedent, certainly in English football, for a truly great team collapsing like this. Man Utd had a shambolic spell in November and December 2001 but they didn’t lose nine in 12.

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57 min Calvert-Lewin wins a header to find Ndiaye, who leaves the ball behind on the edge of the area but reacts quickly to return it to Calvert-Lewin. He tries to nip past Ake, who sticks out a leg to make an important tackle. Had he misjudged that it would have been an other penalty.

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56 min Haaland’s penalty was far from perfect, slightly scuffed and not in the corner. Still a very good save though. One day Jordan Pickford will get the recognition he deserves.

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55 min “Thanks for manning the MBM presumably whilst dehydrated from excess Tin,” writes Paul McGrory. “The England-Albania radio lesson reminded me of a May afternoon in 1991. Ireland (in the same group as England) had a crucial Euro 92 qualifier at home to Poland, which kicked off at 3pm due to Irish rugby bosses not needing floodlights at Lansdowne Road. Big Jack mania was at its peak, and our German teacher could sense that the half-class who had bothered to turn up weren’t interested in the dative case, so he pulled his car up outside the portacabin and blared the radio out. We all got to enjoy the first half hour of a 0-0 snorefest that ultimately cost Ireland qualification. Bah.”

I have a vague memory of being at school for the 1-1 draw with England during the same campaign. Great story. You can imagine what the Sittingbourne under-16s brains trust made of Graham Taylor’s decision to omit Paul Gascoigne.

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53 min Amazing. Haaland’s penalty was superbly saved by Pickford, diving low to his right. The ball kicked up and was headed across goal for Haaland to nod into the empty net – but he was a long way offside.

Erling Haaland hits the penalty… Photograph: Molly Darlington/Getty Images

… and Pickford saves! Photograph: Darren Staples/AFP/Getty Images

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52 min Seamus Coleman is booked for playing silly buggers.

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51 min: Penalty to City! Savinho, who has tormented Mykolenko at the start of the second half, beats him to a loose ball just inside the area and is kicked on the knee. A clear penalty.

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50 min A deep cross is headed back by Haaland towards Savinho on the edge of the area. He whistles a half-volley through the crowd that is kicked away by Pickford, a good save as he must have seen it late. Kovacic then cracks just wide from 25 yards.

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49 min Savinho beats Mykolenko again and crosses deep towards Haaland. It’s slightly too high for a header at goal so Haaland nods it back across the face and Everton clear.

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48 min “What a contest,” weeps Paul Griffin. “Will the victor be this once iconic but now struggling side from the North West, which not so long ago had an almost unmatchable tradition of picking up trophies, but which slumped despite the largesse of a super-rich owner and access to crème de la crème La Liga coaching? Or will Manchester City pick up the points?”

I mean we all knew what was coming, but at least it was delivered with a bit of flair.

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47 min Savinho sprints away from Mykolenko, who makes an important lunging challenge to concede a corner. Foden curls it onto the head of Gvardiol, whose flicked header is blocked by Harrison in the six-yard box.

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46 min No changes on either side as City begin the second half.

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“Everton seemed to have forgotten how to play football for 25 minutes,” begins Gary Naylor, “but once they remembered how to control and pass a ball, the lads have done well, probably shading it since then. There’s a feeling in the home crowd that Evertonians will recognise – an anticipation of an opportunity to moan and groan that so often brings it on. Next goal the winner?”

I’m probably not the best person to ask given I congratulated myself on six Fantasy Premier League points for Rico Lewis before the match had even kicked off.

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Half-time reading

David Squires on … ‘must-have’ Christmas gifts for football fans

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Another face-scratching half of football for Manchester City. They took an early lead when Bernardo Silva’s shot deflected in off Jarrad Branthwaite, and with Everton’s goalscoring record away from home it was tempting to think that was that.

It was not. Bernardo missed an excellent chance to make it 2-0, and a few minutes later Iliman Ndiaye flicked an excellent equaliser. It was Everton’s first goal away from home since mid-October. Strange times indeed.

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45+1 min Harrison plays a neat one-two on the edge of the area with Mangala and lifts a cross that is headed behind by Gvardiol. Harrison’s inswinging corner is headed over by Calvert-Lewin, under pressure six yards from goal. Not a great chance, but a chance nonetheless.

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45 min Now Foden, who has been increasingly excellent, has a shot from the left side of the area that is well blocked by Coleman.

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44 min Foden’s corner is headed away to the edge of the area by Tarkowski. Savinho cracks a sweet half-volley that is blocked by one of the many outrushing defenders.

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43 min Nothing comes of the free-kick. Coleman then gives the ball away from Bernardo near the byline and is rescued by Branthwaite, who belts the resulting cross behind for a corner.

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42 min Doku is fouled just outside the area by Mykolenko, who gets a yellow card for his pains.

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40 min Suddenly Everton fancy their chances. Ndiaye shuffles away from Lewis on the left of the area and hammers a cross that flashes behind Calvert-Lewin. That attack elicits a roar from the home crowd that is two parts defiance, two parts fear and fifty parts what-the-hell-is-going-on.

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Iliman Ndiaye has equalised out of nothing. Doucoure’s cross from a narrow position on the right came at an awkward height for Akanji, who should nonetheless have cleared it. Instead it brushed his knee, which wrongfooted Lewis and allowed the ball to reach Ndiaye beyond the far post. He took a touch and poked an early shot back across Ortega and into the net. That’s a terrific finish, really clinical. But Akanji should have cleared the cross.

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Not again.

Everton’s Iliman Ndiaye (right) celebrates scoring twith Orel Mangala. Photograph: Phil Noble/Reuters

Iliman Ndiaye equalises for Everton with a great finish! Photograph: Matt West/REX/Shutterstock

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33 min: Chance for Bernardo! City should be 2-0 up. Haaland seized upon a headed clearance and gave the ball to Foden, who rolled an inviting square pass towards the onrushing Bernardo Silva. He was through on goal, with time for a touch, but decided to take the shot first time from the edge of the area with the outside of his left foot. It whistled just wide of the far post.

It would have been a lovely goal, and made City need a moment of swaggering brilliance to spark them, but it wasn’t the percentage option.

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