Newcastle's Tactical Masterclass: How Newcastle United Stunned Pep Guardiola's Side
Howe praises 'outstanding' display in Man City victory
The Newcastle manager had tested various strategies.
Newcastle's manager had experimented with high-pressing tactics against City. Other formations saw his team sitting back defensively. He experimented with multiple formations, all without positive results.
Howe was barely exaggerating when he said "we've tried everything" ahead of the weekend fixture.
However, he uncovered an effective approach.
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.
And their planning proved successful following a 2-1 victory at an electric St James' Park giving Howe his maiden win over Guardiola's Manchester City in league competition.
"I've got lists and lists of things that haven't worked against them so I could probably tell you what doesn't," Howe stated. "Identifying successful tactics requires minimal documentation, but we learn from each experience and make adjustments. That was our methodology."
'I don't believe in radical overhauls'
The groundwork began after Newcastle's recent 3-1 loss at Brentford.
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.
Bruno Guimaraes was deployed centrally in midfield, a role previously held by Sandro Tonali, with returning defenders Lewis Hall and Tino Livramento making their first joint start since autumn and creating a significant difference.
Fabian Schar also made his first top-flight start in two months, replacing centre-back Sven Botman.
Nonetheless, instead of making sweeping alterations, Howe stuck with his favored 4-3-3 formation and two of the three modifications to his starting lineup were essentially forced after Kieran Trippier and Anthony Gordon missed out through injury.
The majority of players who featured at Brentford and, indeed, in the damaging defeat at West Ham, were given opportunities to redeem themselves.
"I'm against making wholesale changes," Howe emphasized. "Unless the situation becomes desperate, which it hasn't, and that's not my managerial philosophy.
"I'm confident in identifying our best performers and aim to give them maximum chances to showcase their abilities by assisting them and encouraging their progress."
Barnes Delivers When It Matters
The Magpies had secured just a single victory in 35 prior Premier League encounters with Manchester City
Nevertheless, adjustments were clearly necessary.
Only the struggling offenses of Wolves and Leeds had produced fewer goals than Newcastle this season.
New signing Nick Woltemade had seemed detached, with minimal attacking supply, particularly away from home.
Despite Woltemade's absence with the German national team, the squad developed new supporting movements for their forward such as Barnes and Jacob Murphy, to maximize his effectiveness upon return.
Newcastle certainly created opportunities for Woltemade on Saturday, who was denied on three occasions by Manchester City goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma.
However, while Newcastle previously relied too heavily on Woltemade, additional squad members have started making important contributions.
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.
Yet Barnes didn't just score the opener with a quality finish from range in the second period, he netted the decider shortly after City drew level via Ruben Dias.
Newcastle had been ahead versus Arsenal, Brentford and West Ham but surrendered their leads.
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.
While City dominated the ball, inevitably skewing the numbers, Newcastle defended resolutely with 36 clearances and limited City to only four accurate shots.
The defensive display caught the attention of ex-Newcastle player Jonathan Woodgate.
"Defensively they were outstanding, making it extremely challenging for City to exploit gaps in midfield," he commented during radio coverage. "After halftime I viewed them as the better side, repeatedly threatening City on breaks and netting two superb Barnes goals. What an enthralling contest."
Home Dominance Continues
Yet should this result under the lights at St James' necessarily come as a massive surprise?
Just Manchester City (13) have secured more home Premier League victories than Newcastle (11) this year.
From the start of the previous campaign, Newcastle have recorded eight victories, two draws and only two defeats at home against top opponents including City, Arsenal, Liverpool, Chelsea, United and Spurs.
However, away from home, Newcastle haven't triumphed in the top flight since April.
This accounts for their position just one point clear of the bottom three prior to Saturday's important win.
"Although I wish to state that atmosphere shouldn't impact gameplay, it fundamentally alters proceedings," Howe acknowledged. "We must determine how to transfer positive energy into our away performances when we lack crowd support.
"This problem requires our solution, whether through formation tweaks, selection alterations. Regardless of the approach, we need to commit to finding remedies."