EPL: Southampton 0-1 Manchester City

Manchester City became the first English top-flight side in history to reach 100 points and 32 wins
Gabriel Jesus' injury-time winner took Premier League champions Manchester City to an unprecedented 100 points as Southampton secured safety despite the 1-0 defeat at St Mary's Stadium.
City's sensational season appeared to be ending with a stalemate, but Jesus brought down Kevin De Bruyne's pinpoint ball forward before lobbing Alex McCarthy to score their 106th league goal in the fourth minute of added time.
Man City have long since wrapped up the Premier League title - but their hunger for records continued until the final kick of the final day.
The victory sees Pep Guardiola overtake his own record of 99 points with Barcelona (2009-10), while City also break the record for the most away wins (16) and points (50) in the Premier League era, as well as the biggest winning margin (19 points). For good measure, they also achieved the most wins in an English top-flight season (32).
With Swansea needing an escape act Houdini would have been proud of, Southampton knew it was about containment against City, no mean feat given the champions' haul of 105 league goals going into the match.
However, it was the Saints who went closest to breaking the deadlock early on, with Wesley Hoedt's header cannoning off the bar from Dusan Tadic's corner.
As news of Stoke taking a first-half 2-1 lead at Swansea filtered through at St Mary's, the home supporters finally broke out into chants of 'We are staying up!' - confident a 10-goal swing was now, finally, an impossibility.
After no attempts on target from City in the first half, they ramped up the pressure after the break, and went close to scoring just after the hour-mark, but Raheem Sterling saw his shot deflect onto the post before McCarthy tipped over John Stones' header.
After Fernandinho cleared Dusan Tadic's effort off the line, and following the introductions of Brahim Diaz and Phil Foden for City - who made their fifth league appearances of the season to earn winners' medals - it was the turn of another substitute, Jesus, to cap off City's remarkable season.
Following a campaign of free-flowing football, it was ironic, though somewhat fitting, that De Bruyne grabbed an assist with a long ball forward. Jesus' first touch miraculously brought it down, while his second deftly lifted the ball over McCarthy and into the net.
Cue scenes of wild jubilation, from the players, from the fans, and from Guardiola on the sideline. And with Southampton safe, there was cause for celebration from both sides as the full-time whistle sounded.