Manchester City defender Nathan Ake has struck in the second half to earn a hard-fought 1-0 victory over visitors Arsenal in the FA Cup fourth round.
The top two teams in the Premier League cancelled each other out in the first half, with Erling Haaland twice going close for champions City, while pacesetters Arsenal forced home goalkeeper Stefan Ortega into two fine saves to keep them at bay.
City's Pep Guardiola brought Julian Alvarez off the bench early in the second half, with the Argentina striker playing a big part in the winner, firing against the post, before Ake slotted home from the follow up in the 64th minute.
Arsenal's coach Mikel Arteta rang the changes in search of a leveller, but they could not break City's resistance, as the hosts progressed and remain in the hunt to win the domestic trophy Guardiola has claimed just once during his time in England.
Despite making six changes to the side that beat Manchester United last weekend, with a first Premier League title in almost 20 years in sight, Arsenal started the brightest at the Etihad.
January signing Leandro Trossard from Brighton & Hove Albion looked lively, setting up an early opening for Takehiro Tomiyasu, who was denied by Ortega.
Eyeing his 32nd goal in all competitions in a remarkable debut season in England, Haaland was feeding off scraps, but all he needs is a half chance, and the striker used his pace to capitalise on two Arsenal errors, but was unable to find the net.
Kevin De Bruyne curled a shot wide, but Trossard went closest to breaking the deadlock in the opening period, bringing a fine one-handed stop from Ortega.
City upped the ante after the break, finally wearing Arsenal down, as Dutch defender Ake showed the finishing skills of a striker, calmly finding the bottom corner, after Alvarez's effort had thundered against the upright.
With their main attention clearly elsewhere, Arsenal did not offer enough to find an equaliser. With the Premier League the priority, fewer games in a congested season could benefit the London side's quest for the big prize.
Reuters