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Jeglertz not worried by Man City title wobble - should he be?

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Alex Brotherton

BBC Sport journalist

Manchester City remain firmly in the driving seat in the Women's Super League title race - but they might be making life difficult for themselves.

A 3-2 defeat by Brighton & Hove Albion on Saturday has probably cost them the opportunity to be crowned champions next week, and the trophy's destination may not be decided until the final day.

Andree Jeglertz delivered 16 wins from his first 19 WSL games in his debut season as head coach.

His 20th league game was one to forget though, as Brighton bounced back from conceding an early opener to punish City's profligacy in front of goal.

"I'm not worried. You learn a lot in these games and I am fully sure that when we are back in training, we will be focused for Liverpool next week," Jeglertz told Sky Sports.

"It is still in our hands. We will do everything we can to finish off with two wins."

If Arsenal were to win all three of their games in hand - starting with bottom side Leicester City on Wednesday - they could pile pressure on City.

But it is City's to lose, and they will be looking for ruthlessness in their remaining two matches - Liverpool at home and West Ham away on the final day - to erase all doubt and clinch a first league title since 2016.

If Jeglertz's side win those, Arsenal will be powerless to prevent City lifting the silverware.

Former Scotland captain Rachel Corsie, assessing City's post-Brighton situation for Sky Sports, said: "A tiny feeling of doubt has opened up. We thought it was cut and dried, but that was a bit of a wobble."

Former Manchester City and England midfielder Izzy Christiansen added: "City were nowhere near their best and this makes the end to the season a whole lot more interesting."

What went wrong at Brighton?

Manchester City boss Andree Jeglertz and Kerstin Casparij applauding after the defeat by BrightonPA Media

On Saturday, City created ample opportunities to add to Kerolin's opener in the fifth minute, but she and Khadija Shaw both failed to convert chances when through on goal.

Instead, Brighton equalised on the stroke of half-time and carried that momentum into the second half.

"It's about details," Jeglertz said. "It was a tough game, but it is about scoring goals. We created a lot of chances in the first half and we needed to score."

Once the momentum shifted in Brighton's favour, City struggled to cope with the hosts' transitions and looked vulnerable to balls in behind the backline.

"Brighton challenged us a lot - we need to protect our penalty box a little better," Jeglertz said. "It's important we learn from this game. Today, we dropped a couple of percentages in some moments and we were punished."

Before kick-off, Jeglertz conceded the international break had been long.

A near three-week gap between games cannot have been conducive to maintaining momentum, while the experienced Vivianne Miedema missed this game for family reasons.

"Their performance was shaky and their possession nowhere near the level we've seen this season," Corsie said.

To their credit, Brighton were excellent after a tough opening period and were thoroughly deserving of only their second WSL win over City in 15 attempts.

"In the first half we were, if I can be quite blunt, awful," Brighton's former England midfielder Fran Kirby said.

"We were lucky not to be 3-0 or 4-0. But we had belief and the second half was a really good performance from everyone."

![WSL table

Man City, played 20, 49 points

Chelsea, played 19, 40 points

Arsenal, played 17, 38 points

Man Utd, played 19, 38 points

Tottenham, played 19, 29 points

Brighton, played 19, 24 points](https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/ace/standard/640/cpsprodpb/451d/live/689e2520-40bc-11f1-b55d-0f258dce1735.jpg)

Will City mess it up, or was this a blip?

It is now 10 years since Manchester City won the title, and since then they have been involved in some close shaves.

In 2020-21, they won 12 games in a row to keep up the pressure on Emma Hayes' dominant Chelsea, but a 2-2 draw with the defending champions with two games left to play cost them.

Under Gareth Taylor in 2023-24, City held a six-point lead at the top of the table late in the campaign.

After Chelsea won their game in hand to close the gap to three, City conceded twice in the dying minutes to lose 2-1 to Arsenal. Chelsea subsequently won the title on goal difference.

In a neat twist to the narrative, City play against their former boss Taylor's Liverpool in their next WSL game on Sunday, 3 May.

Arsenal face a major test of their squad strength to capitalise on City's latest slip.

Renee Slegers' side must win all five of their remaining games, and hope that City drop points.

With a two-leg Women's Champions League semi-final against Lyon to deal with as well, the Gunners might have too much on their plate.

"I don't think City should be worried. In situations all season they have shown tremendous character, resilience and creativity. Brighton caught them off guard a bit today," said Christiansen.

Even so, Manchester City will be wary of the possible peril of slipping again.

"While it is still in our hands, we need to stay really positive and look forward to next week," City captain Alex Greenwood said.

"Two cup finals, two wins - that's the mentality moving forward."

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Ellen White, Jen Beattie and Ben Haines

Ben Haines, Ellen White and Jen Beattie are back for another season of the Women's Football Weekly podcast. New episodes drop every Tuesday on BBC Sounds, plus find interviews and extra content from the Women's Super League and beyond on theWomen's Football Weekly feed

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