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Points for Guardiola, pain for Ranieri as EPL season starts

Published:Saturday | August 13, 2016 | 12:00 AM
Manchester City's Raheem Sterling (right) fights for the ball against Sunderland's Donald Love during the English Premier League match between Manchester City and Sunderland at the Etihad Stadium in Manchester, England, yesterday. Manchester City won 2-1.
Manchester City's new manager Pep Guardiola applauds during the English Premier League match between Manchester City and Sunderland at the Etihad Stadium in Manchester, England, yesterday.
Hull City's Abel Hernandez celebrates scoring his side's first goal against Leicester City during the English Premier League match at the KCOM Stadium, Hull, England. Hull won 2-1.
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LONDON (AP):

Pep Guardiola's first match in charge of Manchester City ended with an unconvincing 2-1 win over Sunderland yesterday, just hours after the new English Premier League season got under way with a shock defeat for champions Leicester at Hull.

With US$200 million spent on new players and Guardiola arriving from Bayern Munich to manage an already impressive line-up, City are the hot favourites to win the league this season.

But instead of making a stylish debut against modest opposition, Guardiola's team needed an 87th-minute own goal by luckless Sunderland defender Paddy McNair to start with a win.

At least, the outcome was better than Leicester's at Hull, where the champions were left stunned by a 2-1 defeat to a newly promoted team.

Elsewhere, Tottenham had to come from behind to finish 1-1 at Everton. There were 1-1 draws, too, for Southampton against Watford, and Stoke at newly promoted Middlesbrough, along with 1-0 wins for Swansea against Burnley and West Bromwich Albion at Crystal Palace.

But the day's spotlight was inevitably going to be trained on Guardiola, given his trophy-laden spells at Bayern and Barcelona, and his new club's hunger for league success.

The Spaniard signalled the changes with his very first starting line-up. England goalkeeper Joe Hart was dropped in favour of Willy Caballero, and there were debuts for defender John Stones after his £47.5 million (US$62 million) move from Everton and Spain forward Nolito.

His team certainly got off to a perfect start, with Raheem Sterling winning a penalty that was converted by Sergio Aguero after only four minutes.

But despite having nearly all the possession, City laboured to make their superiority count and were pegged back in the 71st minute, when Sunderland striker Jermain Defoe rifled home an equaliser.

McNair handed City all three points, though, when the ball struck his head and flew into his own net following a deflected low cross by Jesus Navas.

"It was tough for everybody and that is why the people say the Premier League is tough," Guardiola said. "We were constant and we deserved the victory."

Claudio Ranieri knew what his Leicester players were doing against Hull, and he didn't like it.

Along with the missed opportunities in front of goal, Ranieri said a lack of teamwork meant his team was second-best on the day.

"They played better; we tried to do our best," the Italian told Sky Sports. "The effort was amazing, but individual effort - not as a team. And I think this is the key of the match."

 

TABLES TURNED

 

Having defied odds of 5,000-1 to win the league last season, the tables were turned on Leicester as the surprise champions lost to a club that was struggling with preseason injuries and protests by fans against the owners.

Although Leicester have managed to keep all but one of their key players from last season - with combative midfielder N'Golo Kante moving to Chelsea - Ranieri's team lacked its usual bite.

Adama Diomande put Hull ahead in first-half stoppage time, Riyad Mahrez levelled from the penalty spot just after the restart, and Robert Snodgrass scored the winner in the 57th minute.

Hull, with Mike Phelan in the role of caretaker manager after Steve Bruce left in July, had been struggling in the run-up to Saturday's match.

"A lot of the time it was fingers crossed to make sure that we had enough players to get out on to this field today," Phelan said.

Ross Barkley gave Everton a fifth-minute lead in Ronald Koeman's first game in charge, but Erik Lamela headed a second-half equaliser for Spurs.

Nathan Redmond scored an equaliser on his Southampton debut against a Watford side that finished with 10 men after taking a ninth-minute lead through Etienne Capoue, while a free kick from Swiss playmaker Xherdan Shaqiri earned Stoke a point at promoted Middlesbrough.

Leroy Fer scored Swansea's late winner against Burnley and a header from West Brom's Salomon Rondon gave the visitors their victory at Crystal Palace.

Today, JosÈ Mourinho's Manchester United play at Bournemouth and Arsenal host Liverpool.

Chelsea host West Ham in a London derby tomorrow night.