Manchester City boss confirms Mahrez might feature against Chelsea

Manchester City Pep Guardiola has confirmed that new signing Riyad Mahrez is in contention to start Sunday’s Community Shield clash with Chelsea at Wembley.

Mahrez was forced off during last weekend’s final match of the US pre-season tour against Bayern Munich with an ankle knock.

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However, at Friday’s press conference to preview the game against the FA Cup winners, Pep revealed that the attacking midfielder, who moved to the Club from Leicester last month, had trained and was fit for selection.

“Mahrez is good. He had a little bit of pain but he trained day before yesterday – I think so (he can play on Sunday),” Guardiola confirmed.

The City manager also revealed that he would have his full compliment of players available again after this weekend’s game.

Though the majority of players who were on duty at the World Cup finals in the summer have now returned to training, Raheem Sterling and Kevin De Bruyne are still on their post-Russia breaks.

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“Kevin and Sterling are not here but they will be back after the game on Sunday,” Pep confirmed.

“From Monday we will be back all together and think about what we have to do to keep last season’s level.

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The City manager also revealed how much he was looking forward to locking horns with new Chelsea manager Maurizio Sarri who has taken charge at Stamford Bridge this summer from Antonio Conte after leaving Napoli.

“I am happy that he is here in the Premier League,” Pep added. “I will learn a lot to see his team every weekend. I saw three games – he gets it, the team in a short time plays like he wants.

“I think it will be a good game, always Chelsea is a big rival. Antonio was, Maurizio will be too. The style of play will be perfect for English football.”

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The Community Shield evolved from the Sheriff of London Charity Shield that had been introduced in 1899 as a professionals versus amateurs cup (the gentlemen and players tradition).[4] The Football Association Charity Shield, as it was known at the time, was designed to replace the Sheriff of London Charity Shield after the leading amateur clubs fell out with the FA.The new format was to have the Football League First Division champions play the Southern League champions, and the first match was in 1908 between Manchester United (the First Division champions) and Queens Park Rangers (the Southern League champions). The match was drawn 1–1, so the game was replayed when Manchester United won 4–0. This is the only Charity Shield game to go to a replay. Both games were played at Stamford Bridge.

The competition format varied over the years: in 1913 the Shield was contested between Amateurs and Professionals XIs, while in 1921 the Shield was contested between the Football League and FA Cup winners for the first time. The format continued to vary in the 1920s, usually along the lines of Amateurs v. Professionals, including one year (1927) where the Professionals were represented by the FA Cup holders Cardiff City and the Amateurs by the Corinthians, echoing the format of the trophy’s predecessor, the Sheriff of London Charity Shield.

In 1930 the Football League winner v. FA Cup winner returned, and with a few exceptions, this format has remained to the present day. Notable exceptions include the 1950 Shield, which involved the England World Cup team against an FA team that had toured Canada that summer, and the 1961 Shield, when Tottenham Hotspur became the first team of the 20th century to win the Double, and so played a Football Association XI.

The game had been moved to the start of the season from 1959 onwards. The question of which two teams should contest the Shield should one team win both the FA Cup and League continued to linger. In 1971, Arsenal became the second team to win the Double since the Shield’s foundation, but owing to their previously arranged pre-season friendly matches, they could not take part. Leicester City were invited as Division Two champions to play FA Cup runners-up Liverpool instead and went on to win the trophy, despite having won neither the League (until 2016, when they contested it again and were runners-up) nor the FA Cup (at all).

In 1972, league champions Derby County and FA Cup winners Leeds United both declined to take part in the Charity Shield, so Manchester City, who had finished in fourth in the First Division, and Third Division champions Aston Villa were invited to take part; Manchester City won 1–0. Despite finishing the season eleventh, City also contested the 1973 Charity Shield but lost 1-0 to Second Division champions Burnley.

In 1974 the then FA secretary, Ted Croker, created the current format with the match being played at Wembley Stadium, and being contested by the reigning League and FA Cup holders.

Four drawn games in the 1980s and early 1990s resulted in each team holding the trophy for 6 months, but in 1993 penalties were re-introduced to decide drawn games.

With the formation of a new top league, the FA Premier League, the Shield became a showcase match between the Premier League and FA Cup winners from the 1993 competition onwards.

In 2002, the Charity Commission found that the Football Association failed to meet its legal obligations under charity law, by failing to specify what money from ticket sales went to charity, and delaying payments to the charities nominated. As a result, the competition was renamed the Community Shield. Arsenal were the first winners of the renamed Community Shield with a 1–0 victory over Liverpool.

In 2016, the FA’s official silversmith Thomas Lyte restored and rebuilt the Football Association’s original 1908 Charity Shield to mark 50 years since England beat West Germany in the 1966 FIFA World Cup.

The trophy was sold at auction with the proceeds going to the Bobby Moore Fund for Cancer Research UK raising £40,000. The auction was held at The Royal Garden Hotel in Kensington, where the England team celebrated the 1966 victory. The Bobby Moore Fund became the FA’s charity partner in July 2016

 

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