Football: Man City's winning run ended as Wenger overtakes Ferguson
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City's Sergio Aguero (centre) and team mates applaud on the pitch after the match.
PHOTO: AFP
Roy Hodgson's Crystal Palace frustrated their illustrious visitors in the first half at Selhurst Park and although City began to find their groove after the break, goalkeeper Wayne Hennessey denied Leroy Sane and De Bruyne.
Andros Townsend missed the home side's best chance of the half with about a quarter of an hour to go before Milivojevic fluffed his last-gasp chance to clinch all three points.
"It was an excellent point and before the game we would have been jumping through hoops with a point, but when you get a penalty late in the game and you miss like we have before there is an element of sadness," said Hodgson.
CITY CUSHION
Despite the disappointment of the 0-0 stalemate, City still have an enormous 14-point lead at the top of the Premier League table and the chances of any of their rivals catching them appear remote.
Arsenal - missing Mesut Ozil - played out a frustrating 1-1 draw with West Brom at a wet Hawthorns to climb to fifth in the table, three points behind fourth-placed Liverpool.
The match was Wenger's 811th in charge - moving him ahead of United legend Ferguson, who was at the helm for 810 matches in the Premier League era.
Arsenal looked to have sealed all three points when an Alexis Sanchez free-kick from the edge of the box found the net via a deflection from James McClean in the 83rd minute. The goal was ruled to be a McClean own goal.
But a last-gasp penalty from Jay Rodriguez levelled the match at 1-1 after Calum Chambers was deemed to have handled the ball, sparking frustration on the Arsenal bench.
A furious Wenger said his team had been denied all three points by referee Mike Dean's decision to award the controversial spot kick.
"We have a very difficult schedule and I believe we fought hard to win the game but didn't because of a bad decision," he said.
"He (Dean) didn't see it. There was a player in front of him. That's why I questioned his decision, he didn't see it." Jose Mourinho's Manchester United have stumbled over the Christmas period, drawing three games against sides they would have expected to beat and slipping behind defending champions Chelsea.
With games coming thick and fast over Christmas and the New Year, United and in-form Liverpool are back in action on Monday, against Everton and Burnley respectively.
City host Watford on Tuesday and Tottenham Hotspur travel to Swansea on the same evening while Arsenal and Chelsea will face off in a blockbuster clash on Wednesday.


