Gabriel Jesus: Relentless, Tenacious, and Now Ahead of Sergio Agüero?

 ‘Gabriel Jesus has a harrying physical presence, an intensity that isn’t dissipated away from the comforts of the Etihad Stadium.’ Photograph: Alex Livesey - Danehouse/Getty Images
‘Gabriel Jesus has a harrying physical presence, an intensity that isn’t dissipated away from the comforts of the Etihad Stadium.’ Photograph: Alex Livesey - Danehouse/Getty Images
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Gabriel Jesus: Relentless, Tenacious, and Now Ahead of Sergio Agüero?

 ‘Gabriel Jesus has a harrying physical presence, an intensity that isn’t dissipated away from the comforts of the Etihad Stadium.’ Photograph: Alex Livesey - Danehouse/Getty Images
‘Gabriel Jesus has a harrying physical presence, an intensity that isn’t dissipated away from the comforts of the Etihad Stadium.’ Photograph: Alex Livesey - Danehouse/Getty Images

Glory, glory Hallelujah, é Gabriel Jesus. The busker outside the Maracanã knew his audience. For a while the walkway to the stadium was closed before Brazil’s Olympic final, the crowd backing up down the stairs as fans in yellow shirts sang along to the in-vogue dirge of the Rio Games, a chant set to the tune of the American civil war song about John Brown’s body mouldering in his grave and adapted here to take in the feats of a slightly built 19-year-old utility attacker from the slums of São Paulo.

Six months on Gabriel Jesus would find himself looking a little cold and sad on breaks from hotel life in wintry Lancashire, a latecomer to the first raft of players to join Pep Guardiola at Manchester City. Fast forward another three years, 38 goals, four trophies and two semi-serious injuries, and City’s roving centre-forward produced his best moment to date for the club at Real Madrid on Wednesday.

There were plenty of fine performance at the Bernabéu. Jesus was something else, laying on a masterful display of deep attacking craft in a performance that may prove transformative, not only for himself but for the trajectory of this team. Glory indeed. But what next? Perhaps the answer lies in remembering how high his sights have always been set. Jesus is an unusual Brazilian in one sense: back home they actually do know how good he is.

Unlike other teenage exiles he took some time to bloom before the inevitable European move, scoring 37 times in 22 games in the under-17 championships, getting himself sent off for fighting (a decent PR move in itself) and forming part of that gold-medal-winning frontline alongside Neymar and Luan, the importance of which you probably have to be Brazilian to really get.

Whereas in England there will still be a slight sense of shock at just how good he was in Madrid. There has been a lurking sense of something lightweight about City’s backup striker, a view founded in his stick-thin physique when he joined, and in the assumption this is an essentially decorative footballer, a player made from sherbet and icing sugar.

Ask Sergio Ramos about that. From the opening minutes on Wednesday Jesus’s movement had something nightmarish about it. He kept pulling away into difficult spaces on the left, drawing Ramos across. Twice he bumped away the great defensive sneak, King Shithouse himself, with a shimmy of the hips.

His second-half goal was beautifully taken, the ball headed back across Thibaut Courtois in a gentle parabola from a strange hovering position. But best of all, and a point of distinction when it comes to City and centre-forwards: he was simply relentless.

By the end of the match Jesus had racked up four shots at goal, two headers, three dribbles and 42 touches. He had played at No 9, No 10, left wing and auxiliary central midfield. He had also mustered two tackles and two interceptions in the middle of it all. By way of comparison, Sergio Agüero has played three Champions League games and hasn’t got past one of either.

There had been some surprise at Jesus even being in the starting XI. His presence was lumped in with Raheem Sterling’s seat on the bench and the selection of the one-man wrestle-defence disaster zone, Nicolás Otamendi, as some kind of gamble. Again, this makes sense only if you haven’t really been watching.

Jesus may be slight with an agreeably rat-packish air about him, a footballer who looks as if he might also have popped up playing backing clarinet on an early Chet Baker album. But, besides that full range of attacking gears, he also has a harrying physical presence, an intensity that isn’t dissipated away from the comforts of the Etihad Stadium, and which speaks to how the Agüero-Jesus dynamic may work from here.

City have one significant task in their sights over the next three months: to win the Champions League, stick it to The Man, storm the Swiss bastille and all the rest of it.

Before Wednesday and the Bernabéu, the clearest obstacle was their complete lack of traction in this kind of game. Away in Europe really has been another country. Defeats at Spurs, Liverpool, Barcelona, Monaco and Madrid have been accompanied by an alarming sense of meekness.

How to change this? What patterns to recalibrate? One thing does stand out. In last season’s defeat at Spurs Agüero started up front and made no tackles, no interceptions and no blocks. He won no headers. He touched the ball 18 times. In defeat at the Bernabéu in 2016 he drew a similar statistical blank.

Agüero is a supreme creative finisher. But the fact remains he hasn’t scored away from home against a top-class team in a meaningful competition since November 2017 and the third goal in a 4-2 defeat of Napoli. By contrast what Guardiola loves about Jesus is not only his movement and his presence but the fact he plays on every pitch against every opponent as though this is all the same stage.

The goals have come too, with 13 in 18 appearances (11 starts) since the end of November. Jesus scores against the big teams too: Liverpool, Spurs, Arsenal, Leicester, Real Madrid. In the past two years City have lost three times when he has started the game and once when he has made it to 70 minutes on the pitch. Part of the thinking behind his recruitment was that he would in time surpass Agüero and become City’s most effective striker.

Perhaps this has now happened. It feels as if it is a key subplot in the endgame to City’s season. There is still the second leg of this tie to survive. But Real are not what they were. The house of Zidane is a grand old creaking thing these days, a squad stuffed with ghosts and skeletons.

From there it would be two tricky steps to Istanbul and a shot at one of the more strangely gripping Champions League triumphs. Part of the thrill is that narrowing of focus. City were intensely disciplined in Madrid, at a stage when Guardiola has sometimes blinked. Jesus up front was key to this. It could be key from here.

The Guardian Sport



Klopp Hopeful Salah will Agree New Liverpool Deal

Liverpool's Mohamed Salah celebrates after scoring his side's third goal during the English Premier League soccer match between Manchester United and Liverpool at Old Trafford, Sunday, Sept. 1, 2024, in Manchester, England. (AP Photo/Dave Thompson)
Liverpool's Mohamed Salah celebrates after scoring his side's third goal during the English Premier League soccer match between Manchester United and Liverpool at Old Trafford, Sunday, Sept. 1, 2024, in Manchester, England. (AP Photo/Dave Thompson)
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Klopp Hopeful Salah will Agree New Liverpool Deal

Liverpool's Mohamed Salah celebrates after scoring his side's third goal during the English Premier League soccer match between Manchester United and Liverpool at Old Trafford, Sunday, Sept. 1, 2024, in Manchester, England. (AP Photo/Dave Thompson)
Liverpool's Mohamed Salah celebrates after scoring his side's third goal during the English Premier League soccer match between Manchester United and Liverpool at Old Trafford, Sunday, Sept. 1, 2024, in Manchester, England. (AP Photo/Dave Thompson)

Former Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp expressed hope that Mohamed Salah will sign a new contract to stay at Anfield beyond the end of this season.

"I hope he stays. He is a fantastic player, a fantastic human being, an outstanding athlete, the best ambassador your country could have. So I hope he will stay at Liverpool," Klopp replied to a question about Salah from an Egyptian journalist during a press conference in Austria.

Klopp was speaking at his unveiling as Red Bull's head of global soccer, a role in which he will oversee the energy drinks conglomerate's football empire, AFP reported.

The German is starting out in the position having left Liverpool at the end of last season, after close to nine years as the club's manager.

Red Bull controls clubs in several countries around the world, including RB Leipzig in Klopp's native Germany, while it recently acquired a minority stake in French second-tier side Paris FC.

Klopp reiterated that he felt it was the right time to step down at Anfield and said he did not miss the daily grind of club management.

"I am more than happy not to be there," he said.

"It is really great that they are doing so well, I wish them all the best. I watch as many games as I can.

"It is great football. Even if you don't support Liverpool right now you had better watch them because it is really top football, maybe the best balanced in the world right now."

The former Borussia Dortmund coach added that he hoped Salah's fellow stars Virgil van Dijk and Trent Alexander-Arnold would also choose to extend their contracts, which expire at the end of the season too.

"I am so happy I am not in charge in that situation, having to answer these questions," he sighed.

"From my point of view I would love all three of them to extend their contracts but I don't know, they didn't tell me."

Asked if he could try to sign any of them for the Red Bull empire, which includes New York Red Bulls in Major League Soccer, he responded with a touch of irony:

"Oh yeah. Virgil I am sure would love to have five more years at Liverpool and then play from 41 to 44 for New York Red Bulls because he probably underestimates US football.

"Mo, yes I would love to, but I don't think we have a chance to pay him to be honest."

"I am just really happy I am no longer a part of it."