
Vincent
Kompany says Manchester City will be fired up for their crunch showdown with
Premier League title rivals Chelsea.
City will fall eight points behind leaders Chelsea next week if they follow
up their 2-0 loss to Arsenal with another reverse at Stamford Bridge.
Manuel Pellegrini's men rarely looked like a team capable of winning the
title on Sunday, but Kompany thinks it would be foolish to write his team's
chances off just yet.
In fact, the skipper thinks the result could actually help City's chances of
winning the league as he thinks the players will be even more determined to
beat Chelsea in what is already being billed as a 'title decider' on 31
January.
"In theory it should be better for us now because we will definitely be more
fired up for that (match)," the City captain said.
"We have always been great in games like this so I'm actually looking
forward to it."
City moved level with Chelsea over the Christmas period but draws against
Everton and Burnley have proved costly for Pellegrini's side.
When asked how damaging the Arsenal defeat could be for City, Kompany said:
"You are disappointed with any result that's not a win, but we've been in
situations like this before and it won't affect the way we look at the
Premier League, it won't affect the way we look at the Champions League or
the FA Cup.
"We will just make sure we are better the next game. We are always liable to
kick off a massive run and that's the kind of club that we are.
"Maybe this run has stopped, but the next one should be coming soon
hopefully."
Kompany did not put in the kind of display expected of him on his return
from a month-long hamstring injury lay-off.
The Belgian earned a booking for taking down Olivier Giroud and was lucky to
stay on the pitch after a second foul on Alexis Sanchez which went
unnoticed.
The former Hamburg defender also gave away the penalty that handed Arsenal
the lead, although replays showed there was minimal contact between the
centre-back and Nacho Monreal.
There was no doubting his hunger to impress, though, and that bodes well for
City as they look to retain the title in the coming four months.
"People who know me see I work like an animal when I am out," the
28-year-old said.
"I want to be back stronger and I've come back at the right time as well."
Kompany refused to criticise Mike Dean's decision to give a penalty against
him for the slightest of touches on Monreal.
"I've said my bit on the pitch and I don't want to go further," the Belgian
said. "It's football. We pick ourselves up now. That spirit is there, more
than ever, in this team."