Sergio Aguero became the joint-highest scorer in Manchester City history as Pep Guardiola’s side stretched their advantage at the top of the Premier League to five points with a 3-0 win over Burnley.
Guardiola’s men failed to scale the dazzling heights of recent performances, with a tenacious and disciplined Burnley display causing them moments of discomfort before quickfire goals from Nicolas Otamendi and Leroy Sane made victory safe inside the final 20 minutes.
The undefeated league leaders move on to eight wins from nine, and Manchester United’s surprise 2-1 reverse at Huddersfield Town means an increase in their early control of the title race.
Aguero opened the scoring with a 30th-minute penalty after Bernardo Silva went down under a challenge from Nick Pope, the Burnley goalkeeper, who then produced a pair of brilliant saves to prevent the Argentina striker from surpassing Eric Brook’s all-time City record of 177 goals.
Guardiola’s free-scoring side struggled for clear openings early on and might have gone behind in the 15th minute when Chris Wood capitalised on slack defending by Kyle Walker, but City goalkeeper Ederson was alert to the danger.
Wood’s impressive start to the game was cut short by an injury sustained in that challenge, and Ashley Barnes replaced the New Zealand international.
David Silva finally got City round the back of their opponents in the 23rd minute, but Bernardo Silva shot too close to Pope from Sane’s cutback.
An even more impressive David Silva pass put Kevin De Bruyne one-on-one with Pope five minutes later, and the goalkeeper saved before making an ill-judged dart from his line to deny Bernardo Silva on the rebound.
Whether there was enough contact to send the Portugal international sprawling in such a fashion was debatable, but it convinced referee Roger East, and after a brief melee involving players from both sides, Aguero did the rest.
Some ponderous possession near their own goal from City almost coughed up a Burnley equaliser, with Scott Arfield’s resulting shot deflected behind, while Pope twice denied Aguero brilliantly with his feet as City’s striker sensed history on the stroke of half-time.
Burnley had a penalty shout turned down six minutes into the second half when Fabian Delph hit a clearance against his own arm. Jack Cork was booked for his protests before City defended subsequent set-pieces unconvincingly.
David Silva skewed a drive wide when Sane and Aguero appeared better placed, and a pair of menacing De Bruyne crosses as City reasserted themselves after the hour were the sum of Burnley’s concerns until they were punished once more by an Argentina international.
With Aguero’s threat subsiding before his eventual substitution, centre back Otamendi rose to power in Sane’s left-wing corner in the 73rd minute, with Steven Defour’s efforts on the goal line leaving something to be desired.
De Bruyne had experienced a relatively quiet outing, but added to his majestic catalogue of assists with a wonderful sweeping pass into Sane’s path, and the Germany winger chalked up his seventh of the season with an unerring finish.
Aguero’s replacement, Gabriel Jesus, similarly found Pope in his way as he looked to add gloss to the scoreline – a margin of victory that would have been unjust on Sean Dyche’s side as their undefeated away run came to an end.
In other Premier League results:
Bournemouth scored twice in two first-half minutes to claim their first away Premier League points of the season with a 2-1 victory over struggling Stoke City.
Manchester United’s unbeaten start to the Premier League season came to an end in a shock 2-1 loss at Huddersfield Town on Saturday, with Victor Lindelof the villain of the piece.
Riyad Mahrez shone as Leicester City responded to the midweek sacking of manager Craig Shakespeare with a first win in seven Premier League games as they triumphed 2-1 at Swansea City.
Crystal Palace were denied their first away Premier League point of the season as Mikel Merino’s late header earned Newcastle United a 1-0 win at St James’ Park.