After Jose, rocking Robins target unbeaten Pep

Reuters
If they can keep any away-day deficit down to manageable proportions, Johnson's young, eager outfit could cause a few problems in the return at their tight Bristol fortress.
Reuters
After Jose, rocking Robins target unbeaten Pep
Reuters

Bristol City midfielder Korey Smith scores the team's second goal — the winner — past Manchester United goalkeeper Sergio Romero late during their English League Cup quarterfinal at Ashton Gate Stadium in Bristol, southwest England, on December 20, 2017.

After fashioning the sensation of the English football season with a League Cup triumph over Manchester United, Bristol City manager Lee Johnson knows there could only be one way to top a win over Jose Mourinho — and that is by beating Pep Guardiola.

The cheering was still reverberating at the Ashton Gate home of the second-tier Championship club on Wednesday after its last-gasp 2-1 quarterfinal win over the English Premier League giant when the semi-final draw offered it an even giddier follow-up.

For the Robins' reward on one of the finest nights in their 123-year history was to set up the prospect of another when Guardiola's Manchester City, Europe's team of the moment, visits in a last-four, second-leg tie in January.

Johnson was asked how it felt to be presented with the hardest task in English football against a side unbeaten in domestic matches this term.

"It's brilliant," he enthused.

"We move on now. We didn't show United too much respect. Now it's on to Manchester City over two legs and there's another chance for the players to test themselves against another elite group," he said. "City are a beast of an organization."

The beasts who have been devouring all EPL opposition this season, though, may find Ashton Gate as tricky and oppressive a venue as Mourinho's men, who became the Robins' fourth EPL victims of their inspired Cup run.

The key will be managing to stay in the tie in a testing first leg at City's Etihad Stadium early in the New Year.

If they can keep any away-day deficit down to manageable proportions, Johnson's young, eager outfit could cause a few problems in the return at their tight Bristol fortress.

After Jose, rocking Robins target unbeaten Pep
Reuters

Bristol City manager Lee Johnson

The exultant scenes that greeted Korey Smith's 93rd-minute winner would, reckoned Johnson, "live in the memory of this football club for many years".

His father Gary was one of Bristol City's more successful managers when Lee was a player at the club. "But I think tonight was the greatest moment in both of our tenures," reckoned Johnson, whose team are pushing for promotion in third place.

"My dad always says he was the most successful Bristol City manager so maybe I've pushed him a little bit close with that result.

"The players have been phenomenal. It's a young group with real quality and energy and every single one of them will go down in the folklore of Bristol City football club."

None more so than Joe Bryan, a popular Bristolian and product of the club's academy, whose wonderful second-half strike had put City ahead before Zlatan Ibrahimovic's equalizing free kick looked likely to inspire a United comeback win.

Still, the hosts kept believing and were rewarded by Smith's superbly taken left-foot winner on the turn in the final seconds.

Mourinho, while praising Bristol City for playing "the game of their lives", could not quite bring himself to offer unqualified admiration as he kept suggesting the home side was "lucky" to survive with Ibrahimovic and Marcus Rashford hitting the woodwork.

Yet he understood this was Bristol City's night, "a beautiful night for football", even if he did not have time to hang around and share the special 450-pound (US534) bottle of fine Portuguese wine that Johnson had bought to entertain him.

"Jose was very humble afterwards but he shot off so he couldn't stay and have some wine," smiled Johnson. "But I got to ask the questions I wanted."

And, anyway, who needed wine when this was clearly a night for champagne?


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