Here Are The Three Things We Learned From The Community Shield
5th August 2019
Here, AFP Sport looks at three things we learned from the annual curtain-raiser to the English top-flight season

- Manchester City won the Community Shield with a 5-4 penalty shoot-out win over Liverpool after a 1-1 draw at Wembley on Sunday
- Sterling always shines at Wembley for club and country and the England winger, who started up front before moving to the flanks after Leroy Sane's injury, was a constant menace with his pace and movement
- Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola and Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp are united in their belief that football's schedule makers are putting their players at risk with their unrelenting fixture list
LONDON, United
Kingdom- Manchester City won the Community Shield with a 5-4 penalty
shoot-out win over Liverpool after a 1-1 draw at Wembley on Sunday.
Here, AFP Sport looks at three things we learned from the
annual curtain-raiser to the English top-flight season:
Narrow margins
When Kyle Walker leapt acrobatically into the air to hook
Mohamed Salah's header off the goalline in the final seconds, it was a vivid
demonstration of the narrow margins that are sure to settle the battle for
supremacy between Manchester City and Liverpool this season.
"I'm a defender. I stop goals," Walker said.
"It starts off the season. We can start our momentum, and hopefully we can
replicate what we did last season."
Walker's incredible clearance, which allowed Pep Guardiola's
team to eventually win on penalties, was reminiscent of City team-mate John
Stones' remarkable stretch to block his clearance from deflecting into his own
net against Liverpool last season.
Stones managed to stop 11 millimetres of the ball from
crossing the line, setting the stage for a 2-1 City win that played a key role
in their successful title defence as they held off Liverpool by one point.
That title race was only concluded on the last day of the
season and required City to reel off a blistering sequence of victories to stop
Liverpool, beaten just once all season in the league, winning their first
English title since 1990.
With little to separate treble winners City and European
champions Liverpool in Sunday's ferociously-fought 'friendly', the expected
battle for the Premier League title between the rivals is likely to go down to
the wire once more.
Sterling, Salah shake off rust
Raheem Sterling and Mohamed Salah were two of the driving
forces behind Manchester City and Liverpool's success last season and they look
set to lead the way again after the star forwards were at the heart of the best
moments at Wembley.
Sterling always shines at Wembley for club and country and
the England winger, who started up front before moving to the flanks after
Leroy Sane's injury, was a constant menace with his pace and movement.
He opened the scoring with a close-range finish in the 12th
minute, but showed a brief sign of rust when he wasted a chance to put the game
out of Liverpool's reach in the second half as he stumbled when clean through
on goal.
It is likely to be a rare slip from Sterling and the same
will surely be said of Egypt's Salah.
While some might be concerned Salah failed to hit the target
from a host of opportunities, he was by far Liverpool's most dangerous forward
and on another day he would have had a hat-trick.
Schedule stress
Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola and Liverpool boss
Jurgen Klopp are united in their belief that football's schedule makers are
putting their players at risk with their unrelenting fixture list.
Liverpool were without Senegal winger Sadio Mane as he
rested after the Africa Cup of Nations, while Manchester City didn't have
Algeria's Riyad Mahrez following the same tournament.
Several other City and Liverpool stars including Mohamed
Salah and Sergio Aguero have only recently returned to training after their
international commitments in what is dubiously called the 'close-season'.
In the circumstances, both teams deserve credit for
producing tenacious performances after so little time to recover.
But with the Premier League starting next Friday -- earlier
than any of the other major leagues -- when Liverpool host Norwich, Klopp once
again made it clear he believes the authorities are being unfair on the players
by having such a small break before the domestic season begins.
And Guardiola, whose team open their league season at West
Ham on Saturday, totally agreed, slamming a "crazy" schedule he hopes
won't detrimentally affect City's title defence.