Mistake is forbidden and competition is a legitimate right

A fiery confrontation awaits between the stars in the “Premier League” (Getty)

You will be fans football The English are on a date with a fiery summit awaited between Manchester United andManchester City In the city’s “derby”, this Sunday evening at the “Al Ittihad” stadium, in the framework of the 28th round of the “Premier League” championship, which is the summit that cannot be divided by two, because its result is very important for both parties.

The importance of the Manchester derby today is that Manchester City cannot bleed any point, because Liverpool will pounce on it and snatch the lead from it, while any stumble for Manchester United will be a strong blow to its ambition to reserve a qualified seat in the Champions League next season.

United’s historical superiority

The Manchester United team is superior in historical confrontations to its rival Manchester City in all domestic competitions. The two teams played 186 matches, “City” excelled in 56, while “United” won in 77, and 53 matches between them ended in a draw.

In the English Premier League, the two teams have faced each other in 153 matches (Manchester City won 46 games, compared to 59 wins for City, while 48 matches ended in a tie), noting that “United” has the highest offensive heel by scoring 265 goals compared to 253 for City in all local confrontations. .

Mistake is forbidden and competition is a legitimate right

Manchester City and Manchester United have the right to compete in the confrontation that will bring them together at the “Al-Ittihad” stadium, regardless of the technical differences between them.

In such matches, there is a margin for committing fatal errors on the field, whether by wasting opportunities in front of the goal, or defensive errors that cost goals in the goal, and such errors are prohibited at the Manchester Derby summit on Sunday evening, because any mistake will be costly in This stage of the season, especially with the tournament entering the last ten stages.

Leave a Replay