Howe's Historic Victory: How Newcastle United Stunned Pep Guardiola's Side
Howe praises 'outstanding' display in Man City victory
The Newcastle manager had tested various strategies.
Previously, Howe had sent out teams that applied intense pressure against Manchester City. He tried alternative approaches with teams that dropped deeper. Different systems were tested, but none yielded victory.
It reached the point where Howe was only partially joking when he stated "we don't have anything new left" before Saturday's match.
But he discovered a solution.
When Newcastle desperately needed a positive result, following a difficult loss at Brentford before the international break, The Newcastle management created a blueprint to finally defeat Guardiola's team.
The strategy paid dividends with a 2-1 win in front of a passionate home crowd marking Howe's initial Premier League success against Guardiola's side after 16 previous failures.
"I've got lists and lists of things that haven't worked against them so I could probably tell you what doesn't," Howe revealed. "Telling you what does is a very small piece of paper, but you just try and learn from experience and just tweak something the next time. That's what we did."
'Strategic evolution over revolution'
Planning commenced in the aftermath of their Brentford setback.
Howe spent numerous hours examining game film, assessing training and searching for fixes to their up-and-down form.
With a smaller squad during the international period, the team worked on restoring "their vitality and movement".
Several notable adjustments were implemented for Manchester City's visit.
Skipper Bruno Guimaraes took up a central midfield position, replacing Sandro Tonali who had occupied that spot, while returning full-backs Lewis Hall and Tino Livramento started together for the first time since September and made a substantial impact.
Fabian Schar returned to the starting lineup for the first time in two months, taking Sven Botman's position.
Nonetheless, instead of making sweeping alterations, Howe stuck with his favored 4-3-3 formation while two adjustments were enforced due to the absence of injured players Kieran Trippier and Anthony Gordon.
Most of the squad members who played at Brentford and during the disappointing West Ham loss received chances to make amends.
"I don't agree with completely overhauling systems," Howe emphasized. "Only in crisis situations would I consider drastic changes, which this isn't, and that's not my approach.
"I believe I have a clear understanding of our strongest players and I want to provide them every opportunity to demonstrate their qualities by assisting them and encouraging their progress."
Barnes Rises to the Occasion
Newcastle's record showed only one win in 35 previous top-flight matches against City
However, transformation was undoubtedly required.
Only struggling Wolves and Leeds United had scored fewer goals than Newcastle in the top flight before this match.
Record signing Nick Woltemade had appeared isolated, with limited service, particularly in away matches.
While Woltemade was on international duty with Germany, Newcastle practiced varied attacking patterns around their striker such as Barnes and Jacob Murphy, to maximize his effectiveness upon return.
Newcastle manufactured several scoring opportunities for Woltemade, but the City goalkeeper produced three important stops.
Although Newcastle had become too Woltemade-focused, other attackers have emerged as reliable options.
Notably Barnes.
The forward was responsible for several significant misses in the first half - even failing to hit the target with an open goal - and admitted he was not "the most popular man" at halftime.
But not only did Barnes open the scoring with an excellent effort from the edge of the area in the second half, he delivered the winner just minutes after Manchester City equalized through Ruben Dias.
The Magpies had held advantages against Arsenal, Brentford and West Ham but ended up defeated.
But they didn't collapse when Manchester City equalized or, indeed, after eight minutes of stoppage time were added.
This was an evening when Newcastle won more tackles and aerial duels, and made more blocks than their opponents.
Despite City's possession advantage, which distorts the data, Newcastle cleared their lines 36 times and confined City to merely four shots on goal.
That defensive performance impressed former Newcastle defender Jonathan Woodgate.
"Without the ball they were magnificent, complicating City's efforts to penetrate defensive lines," he commented during radio coverage. "Second half I considered them the superior team, consistently catching City on counter-attacks and ultimately scoring two magnificent goals by Barnes. What a spectacular game."
Home Dominance Continues
Yet should this result under the lights at St James' necessarily come as a massive surprise?
Only City (13) have collected more home league wins than Newcastle (11) in the current season.
Since the beginning of last season, Newcastle have won eight, drawn two and lost just two of their home fixtures against Manchester City, Arsenal, Liverpool, Chelsea, Manchester United and Tottenham across all competitions.
Yet in away matches, Newcastle have failed to win a Premier League game since April.
This accounts for their position just one point clear of the bottom three prior to Saturday's important win.
"As much as I'd prefer to claim the crowd shouldn't influence on-field performance, it transforms everything," Howe admitted. "We have to discover ways to create positivity in road games without spectator backing.
"This is our challenge to address, whether via tactical modifications, roster decisions. Whatever the solution, we must work diligently to find answers."