Shaun Wright-Phillips enhanced his England claims with another devastating
display of wing play as Manchester City put their FA Cup woes behind them at
home to Crystal Palace.
When Sammy Lee offers Sven-Goran Eriksson his opinion of Wright-Phillips' latest brilliant performance the England coach may find it impossible to leave the little winger out of next month's friendly with Holland at Villa Park.
It was not just Wright-Phillips' two goals - taking his seasonal tally to 11 - which caught the eye; more the sheer panic his appearance on the ball instilled in the Palace defence.
He opened City's account with an excellent finish from Joey Barton's through ball after 12 minutes and wrapped up victory in the final stages by turning home
Robbie Fowler's cut-back.
The impressive Fowler also deservedly got his own name on the scoresheet, doubling the Blues' advantage with a solo goal - and although Darren Powell pulled one back before the break, City were able to consign last week's costly loss at Oldham to the history books.
Any fears the Boundary Park debacle might prompt another City slump were
quickly dispelled as the hosts tore into their opponents.
Palace boss Iain Dowie is an advocate of the scientific approach to football.
But no amount of graphs and charts can provide an obvious solution to the major
problem facing every City opponent - namely how to stop Wright-Phillips.
In his programme notes, Keegan described the England international as the
heart-beat of his club. He might well have added lungs, legs and brains too -
given how heavily City rely on the little winger.
It soon became apparent that Palace simply were not good enough to stop him.
Only poor finishing prevented Wright-Phillips from putting City ahead after he
had left Powell looking stupid with a delightful turn on the edge of the box.
Having wasted one chance, he did not miss again when presented with a similar
opportunity two minutes later.
The Palace defence were completely oblivious to the 40-yard burst which
allowed him to pick up Barton's square ball and blast a shot past Gabor Kiraly.
All season long, Keegan has complained about his team's inability to make the
most of territorial dominance - so when Fowler skipped inside Powell and rasped
home a second within two minutes of Wright-Phillips' strike it appeared City
were on their way to an easy win.
Kiraly had other ideas, though, and proved to be just as important to the
Palace cause as Wright-Phillips is to City's.
Before half-time, the Hungarian had made half-a-dozen key saves - denying
Fowler alone three times.
The former Liverpool and Leeds man, restored to the Blues line-up after
missing last week's embarrassment because of a family bereavement, had one of
his more productive games as City took command.
David James was livid at the slack marking which allowed Powell to get a free
header at Wayne Routledge's free-kick.
But having got to the ball, credit must be given to the Palace defender who
glided his effort into the corner - giving the City goalkeeper no chance.
If Richard Dunne had not slid in to make a last-ditch tackle on Palace danger
man Andrew Johnson just before the break the visitors might even have got
themselves level.
As it was, City survived - allowing Wright-Phillips to host another
master-class at the start of the second half.
Whether he was running with the ball at his feet, scampering around looking
for a pass, shooting or crossing, the City wide man was a constant threat.
One shot was deflected wide; another smashed into the side-netting - and Steve
McManaman, on as a half-time replacement for Antoine Sibierski, nearly profited
from a far-post cross which evaded every visiting defender.
While Wright-Phillips' best endeavours might have brightened up a dank, grey
Manchester day, they did not bring City another goal - offering Palace the
encouragement to launch their own bombardment.
Substitute Wayne Andrews and Mikele Leigertwood both saw speculative efforts
flash just wide before Routledge caused panic in the City six-yard box with an
excellent free-kick which both Dunne and Danny Mills failed to clear before Jon
Macken eventually did.
City always seemed to have something to spare after that - and when Fowler,
who received a standing ovation when he was replaced by Nedum Onouha in stoppage
time, cut a superb cross back from the by-line a minute from time
Wright-Phillips wasted no time in finishing the Eagles off.
Teams:
Man City: James, Mills, Distin, Dunne, Thatcher,
Shaun Wright-Phillips, Barton, Bosvelt,
Sibierski (McManaman 45), Fowler (Onuoha 90),
Macken (Bradley Wright-Phillips 72).
Subs Not Used: Waterreus, Jordan.
Booked: Dunne, Barton.
Goals: Shaun Wright-Phillips 12, Fowler 15,
Shaun Wright-Phillips 90.
Crystal Palace: Kiraly, Boyce, Hall, Powell, Sorondo,
Routledge (Shipperley 77), Leigertwood, Watson (Andrews 45),
Soares, Lakis (Borrowdale 60), Johnson.
Subs Not Used: Speroni, Butterfield.
Booked: Leigertwood.
Goals: Powell 32.
Att: 44,010
Ref: A Marriner (W Midlands).