Schmeichel Jr began this season expecting at best to be loaned out to a lower league club and at worst to be stewing as third or fourth choice at Eastlands. Sven-Goran Eriksson had initially intended to recruit an experienced goalkeeper to compete with his compatriot Andreas Isaksson for first-team selection. As it is, an injury to the Swede and the onus placed on strengthening elsewhere handed the 20-year-old an opportunity which he has grasped.Even so, it is hard to fathom just how the youngster had remained impregnable for 350 minutes of league football. There is a wide-eyed naivety to Schmeichel's approach at times which is understandable for someone so young. His fragile frame makes him appear vulnerable whenever crosses veer into the area, and his indecision within the six-yard box can occasionally prompt panic even in the resolute Richard Dunne and Micah Richards.
Yet the reality is that the Denmark Under-21 international did everything asked of him here when Arsenal eventually found their range to the extent that he even saved a penalty from Robin van Persie. The saves summoned thereafter had his father nodding in appreciation in the stand. "He's not flash, he concentrates very well and that's the key to being a good goalkeeper," he said. "You need to be reliable to your team. The Arsenal game was a good example because a very tired City team relied on him.
"They trust him. That's the best thing you can do as a goalkeeper. In the last two weeks I have played a big part with Kasper but only because he was playing United and Arsenal. I've been talking to him about playing in big occasions. I'm just trying to keep his feet on the ground."
His approach appears grounded enough with his reaction at the end, head buried in the turf in disappointment, suggesting as much. He will have accepted some culpability for the goal he finally shipped, thrashed beyond him at his near post by the excellent Cesc Fábregas from an awkward angle. Richards had perhaps permitted the Spaniard too much space in which to summon such venom for his shot, though Schmeichel would have expected to have blocked the attempt.
Eriksson will not be adding a goalkeeper to his ranks ahead of the closure of the transfer window on Friday but that is because he hopes Isaksson is nearing a return from a broken thumb rather than on the youngster's emergence. The City owner, Thaksin Shinawatra, however, did confirm more money will be spent this week.
"I don't know whether his inexperience would eventually cost us, but the way he works and behaves, he doesn't look 20," conceded the former England manager. "I've never had a first-choice goalkeeper this young before. He's not as tall as Petr Cech but he is quicker. He has to be cleverer but he hates to see the ball go into the net."
His disgust was Arsenal's relief. This was a far better performance than Eriksson's side had mustered conjuring an unlikely victory in the derby with United the previous week and both Martin Petrov and Emile Mpenza might have secured the visitors a lead before the hosts found late bite. Arsenal were their usual blend of the entrancing and the infuriating. They were slick and inventive venturing forward, the slippery Alexander Hleb and Tomas Rosicky gliding menacingly down the flanks, and thrilled with their rat-a-tat approach play.
Nevertheless the first shot summoned on target was effectively Van Persie's penalty just after the hour, by which time plenty of the home fans were despairing as they hollered for an effort at goal. Schmeichel's save - the referee's assistant had flagged for the penalty to be retaken after the goalkeeper encroached from his line, only to be ignored by Chris Foy - actually served to spur the hosts on with a flurry of subsequent chances eventually culminating in Fábregas' ferocious finish.
Eriksson forecast that last season's top four would re-establish themselves at the summit again this season, though Arsène Wenger was more wary, his mood hardly improved by Michel Platini's proposals to grant the fourth Champions League place to the FA Cup winners. "The team that plays 38 games and finishes fourth deserves it more than a team that has had six good games," said the Frenchman. "I don't understand what is behind that thinking. But, personally, I feel it will be harder than ever to finish in the top four. It will be more open because more investors have come in - West Ham are ambitious, Aston Villa, Newcastle, Everton are strong." City were not mentioned in that list, though they have served notice of real quality.
Man of the match Richard Dunne
The Irishman was again outstanding, his presence clearly engendering confidence in Micah Richards at his side. It was cruel on him when City were eventually pierced.
Best moment The block on Tomas Rosicky's second-half shot, though there were many timely challenges.
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