The millions that have been pumped into Manchester City by owner Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al-Nahyan of Abu Dhabi finally did the trick. But it wouldn’t have been possible without some help from Peter Crouch, who scored an own goal to give City a very special win and effectively sealed Tottanham’s fate as well on Tuesday night. Ironically, it was the Spurs striker who only a year ago had scored the winner to give the London side a Champions League playoff spot at their team’s expense. [caption id=“attachment_7820” align=“alignleft” width=“380” caption=“An own goal from Peter Crouch sent Man City through to the Champions League. Reuters/ Nigel Roddis”]  [/caption] It wasn’t a vintage City performance but Tottenham have been in such a decline since their Champions League exit at the hands of Real Madrid that it wasn’t surprisingly to see them lose. Roberto Mancini’s side was clearly nervous in the second half but they managed to hold on. “I’m happy because this was our first target,” Mancini said after the win. “I think we deserve the Champions League because we were in the top between first and fourth position all season. City could still finish higher than fourth to go straight into the Champions League group stage, Reuters reports. If they end the season in fourth place, which would be their highest ever Premier League finish, they will face an early-season two-legged playoff. With two games left, Mancini’s side has 65 points, two behind third-placed Arsenal and five adrift of Chelsea, who are second. Their neighbours Manchester United (76 points) need just one point to secure a record 19th English league title. Eastlands erupted on the final whistle to celebrate the feat, which provides a boost before Saturday’s FA Cup final against Stoke City, where the Manchester side will be aiming to win their first trophy for 35 years. “It will not be easy to prepare for the final in four days, to recover well, because we expended a lot of energy this evening,” added Mancini whose team’s victory also handed Stoke a place in the Europa League next season. It was a dogged display by City against a Spurs side who hogged possession but were punished for wasting chances, like Luka Modric’s excellent first-half opening when he shot just wide. Since 2008, the world’s richest club has spent more than 300 million pounds ($478.1 million) building a team. Offering big wages and high transfer fees, City have lured in world class players, such as David Silva and Yaya Toure, and will now have even more carrots to offer as they possess the one thing they did not have before – Champions League football. Tottenham’s very slim hopes of qualifying for the European competition they lit up this season with some exciting football and dramatic comebacks on the way to the quarter-finals, were extinguished by Crouch’s blunder after half an hour. Following a short corner, City midfielder James Milner’s low ball into the cluttered box was turned in by Tottenham’s England striker who held his head in his hands in disgust. The City fans barely noticed as they the did the ‘Poznan’ celebration, where they jump up and down with their arms around each other and backs to the pitch – a move learnt when they played Polish team Lech Poznan in this season’s Europa League. There was almost as much cheering when City captain Carlos Tevez, absent since tearing his hamstring nearly a month ago and seeming to have recovered just in time for Saturday’s FA Cup final, started warming up on the touchline. When he finally came on in the 83rd minute, he entered the field to a standing ovation and the City attack looked livelier than it had for most of the rest of the game. The hosts were happy to sit on their narrow lead and offered little going forward, while Spurs enjoyed nearly two thirds of possession and a good chance for substitute Steven Pienaar, whose goal-bound header was well saved by Joe Hart. One of City’s best chances came with the last kick of the match when Tevez forced a save by Carlo Cudicini, who had been drafted in to replace Heurelho Gomes who had a back problem and had also made several blunders in recent games. “It has been a great season, probably the best Tottenham have had in god knows how many years…,” said Spurs manager Harry Redknapp whose team are two points behind fifth-placed Liverpool and could still qualify for the Europa League. “It was our turn last year and it was their turn this year.”
Mancini’s team clinched a top-four finish in the EPL with a 1-0 win over Spurs and secured at least a place in the Champions League qualifiers next season.
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