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Pep Guardiola was visibly irate after Manchester City suffered a 2-1 defeat at the hands of Newcastle - and has explained what he said in angry confrontations with the opposition players. Harvey Barnes' second-half double ensured victory for the home team in a thrilling match at St James' Park, with drama continuing even after the final whistle. Barnes put the Magpies in the lead with a pinpoint finish from the edge of the box, only for Ruben Dias' deflected shot to level the score five minutes later.
Despite Gianluigi Donnarumma's best efforts, he couldn't prevent Barnes' close-range winner. The decisive goal was subject to a lengthy VAR review due to a tight offside call that ultimately favoured Newcastle, with Dias adjudged to have played Bruno Guimaraes onside from Nick Woltemade's header. City lodged protests with referee Sam Barrott, suggesting that Donnarumma had been fouled, but the goal was upheld following an extensive check.
Guardiola's annoyance at the lost points - which Arsenal could exploit when they face Tottenham on Sunday - boiled over post-match. The City manager shook hands with Eddie Howe before heading onto the pitch, where he had a confrontation with Joelinton, who had to be escorted away by his team-mates and coaching staff, and Guimaraes.
The City boss engaged in a lengthy and intense discussion with the Newcastle captain, which seemed far from friendly. He also approached Barrott and appeared to scold a camera operator.
When questioned by Sky Sports about his conversation with Guimaraes, Guardiola remained tight-lipped: "I said how good he is, and [asked about] the situation with Gigio and what happened, and the previous situations. Everything is fine."
Further probed on his words to Barrott, he responded: "No, nothing, nothing. Everything is fine... Everything is fine. It is what it is."
Guardiola did expand on his overall complaint that Donnarumma might have been fouled for Barnes' second crucial goal. "It happened against Bournemouth, it happened again... Gigio saw the action, I didn't see it," he stated.
"But I rely a lot on my players, so I didn't see it. I didn't see it. Otherwise, if he didn't feel touched. But VAR and the referees decided the opposite in the first-half, in the second-half. So it is what it is. We are used to it."
The defeat follows City's impressive 3-0 victory over Liverpool prior to the international break and leaves them third in the Premier League, four points adrift of Arsenal, who could extend their lead to seven points with a win over Spurs in Sunday's derby.