Mario Balotelli struck a dramatic stoppage-time penalty as Manchester City overcame a brave Tottenham Hotspur fightback to win 3-2 and maintain their lead at the top of the Premier League on Sunday.
Substitute Balotelli blasted in his spot-kick deep into stoppage-time after the Italian striker had been bundled over by Ledley King for a clear-cut penalty, but the City forwardâs winner was tinged with controversy after television replays suggested he was lucky not to be sent off in an earlier tangle with Scott Parker, where he appeared to kick out at the Spurs midfielderâs head.
The finale capped a remarkable game which had seen Spurs recover from 2-0 down to level at 2-2 with goals from Jermain Defoe and Gareth Bale, after City had taken the lead through Samir Nasri and Joleon Lescott.
The victory helped preserve Cityâs three-point lead at the top of the table after second-placed Manchester United kept up the pressure with a hard-fought 2-1 win at Arsenal.
United striker Danny Welbeck struck the winner nine minutes from time after Arsenal captain Robin van Persie had canceled out Antonio Valenciaâs first-half opener for the champions.
Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger was subjected to angry chants from the home fans toward the end of the game for his controversial substitution of Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain shortly after the young winger set up van Persieâs equalizer.
United manager Sir Alex Ferguson was delighted at his teamâs attacking display.
âWeâve had to play well today and for most of the game we did play well,â Ferguson said. âWinning after City had won their game, that was the important thing, but I think weâve done it in the right way â" we were adventurous, positive and had belief in ourselves.â
Wenger admitted his decision to replace Oxlade-Chamberlain with Andrey Arshavin was costly, especially as the Russian allowed Valencia to set up the United winner.
âWhen it was 1-1 it looked like we would win, but in the end one tactical mistake lost us the game,â Wenger said. âI do not want to dwell too much on that now, but one second of inattention can cost you.â
The story from a pulsating day of Premier League action remained at Eastlands, where Spurs boss Harry Redknapp was fuming at the failure of referee Howard Webb to send off City match-winner Balotelli.
âYes, I do think that,â Redknapp said when asked if Balotelli should have been sent off. âItâs not the first time heâs done that is it? Iâm sure it wonât be the last.Iâm the last person to talk about getting people sent off, but itâs blatantly obvious if you see that, he reacts like that at times to challenges. Iâm surprised the linesman hasnât seen it. The first [stamp] could be an accident, but the second one? Heâs back-heeled him straight in the head.â
Assistant City manager David Platt declined to comment on Balotelliâs clash with Parker.
âI havenât seen the incident with Balotelli so I canât comment on it until I see it,â Platt said. âIf we continue to amass points and carry on winning weâll be tough to beat, but it doesnât change anything in terms of the title race.â
After a scrappy first half where neither side managed to get a grip on the game, the contest exploded into life shortly after the restart with four goals inside nine minutes.
City drew first blood with a wonderfully worked opener on 56 minutes, David Silva releasing Nasri with a perfectly weighted through ball which took the French international beyond the Spurs defense. The former Arsenal star ghosted away from Kyle Walker and Younes Kaboul, then unleashed an unstoppable first-time shot that flew past goalkeeper Brad Friedel.

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