Manchester City 4 Porto 0 (agg 6-1): Sergio Aguero scores after 19 seconds

Manchester City 4 Porto 0 (agg 6-1): Aguero is the early bird as holders swept aside

Manchester City produced a strong finish to power into the last 16 of the Europa League at the expense of 10-man holders Porto.

Sergio Aguero set up victory by extending City's 2-1 first-leg lead after just 18 seconds at the rainswept Etihad Stadium before hitting the bar later in the first half.

Edin Dzeko came off the bench to add a second after 76 minutes before the sending off of Rolando preceded further goals from David Silva and David Pizarro in the closing minutes.

Early bird: Sergio Aguero (right) celebrates opening the scoring after just 19 seconds

Early bird: Sergio Aguero (right) celebrates opening the scoring after just 19 seconds

No stopping that: The Argentina striker (left) breaks the deadlock with a right-foot shot

No stopping that: The Argentina striker (left) breaks the deadlock with a right-foot shot

Back of the net: Aguero's (right) shot beats Helton in the Porto goal

Back of the net: Aguero's (right) shot beats Helton in the Porto goal

MATCH FACTS

Man City: Hart, Richards, Kompany,
Lescott, Clichy, Barry (Milner 58), De Jong, Nasri (Dzeko 69), Yaya Toure, Silva, Aguero (Pizzaro 80).

Subs not used:
Pantilimon, Zabaleta, Savic, Balotelli.

Goals: Aguero 1, Dzeko 76, Silva 84, Pizarro 86.

Booked: Yaya Toure

FC Porto: Helton, Maicon, Rolando,
Alex Sandro, Otamendi (Sapunaru 63), Gonzalez, Joao Moutinho, James Rodriguez (Defour 80),
Fernando, Varela (Cristian Rodriguez 63), Hulk.

Subs not used: Bracali, Kleber,
Djalma, Podstawski.

Booked: Otamendi, Gonzalez

Red card: Rolando

Referee: Wolfgang Stark (Germany)]

Attendance: 39,500

Although the decisive goals came late, the result did not flatter the Barclays Premier League leaders.

The Portuguese champions may have controlled the game at times but they lacked a cutting edge and Roberto Mancini's side always looked more threatening in attack.

The build-up to the match was overshadowed by City striker Carlos Tevez's apology for his recent conduct while Chelsea's latest troubles also commanded headlines.

Both issues were again highlighted as Mancini said prior to kick-off he would meet Tevez tomorrow while Chelsea's under-pressure manager boss Andre Villas-Boas arrived to watch the game.

Villas-Boas won the Europa League with Porto last season but his former club's grip on the trophy was loosened almost as soon as the game began.

The 5pm kick-off may have been problematic for some fans but the players raced out of the blocks to make the perfect start.

Aguero, who struck six minutes from time last week, started where he left off as he was played through by Yaya Toure and slipped the ball low past Helton.

Nutmeg: Edin Dzeko doubles City's advantage on the night by slotting through Helton's legs

Nutmeg: Edin Dzeko doubles City's advantage on the night by slotting through Helton's legs

Tap in: An unmarked David Silva finishes at the back post from David Pizarro's cross for the third goal

Tap in: An unmarked David Silva finishes at the back post from David Pizarro's cross for the third goal

Icing on the cake: David Pizarro (centre) bundles through to score City's fourth of the night

Icing on the cake: David Pizarro (centre) bundles through to score City's fourth of the night

City looked comfortable for their lead and could have had a second when Silva beat the defence with a brilliant ball for Toure. Helton rushed out of goal to meet the Ivory Coast midfielder on the edge of the box and spread his body to block his shot.

Porto enjoyed some spells possession but struggled to create meaningful chances until first-leg goalscorer Silvestre Varela found space to test Joe Hart. Joao Moutinho curled a free-kick over as Porto continued to look for a way back into the tie.

Who's a naughty boy Referee Wolfgang Stark gives Porto striker Hulk a talking to

Who's a naughty boy Referee Wolfgang Stark gives Porto striker Hulk a talking to

Aguero was unlucky not to score a second as he seized upon a long ball and headed it past the advancing Helton. It left him at a tight angle wide on the left but his chip was almost perfect as it dropped on to the bar.

Porto again showed composure in possession but did not threaten much around the box, although Lucho Gonzalez fired over. The powerful Hulk tried to create problems but drove a cross across goal from a good position.

Hands up if City are going through: Yaya Toure (right) and Porto's Maicon (left) both appeal for a foul

Hands up if City are going through: Yaya Toure (right) and Porto's Maicon (left) both appeal for a foul

City spurned another chance to extend their advantage as they broke from deep and Aguero released Toure. Toure appeared to have a good shooting opportunity but he checked back as cover arrived and Aguero drove wide.

Nicolas Otamendi missed the target as Porto went close just before the break. The game remained open as the second half got under way with Aguero dribbling into the Porto box to tee up Silva but Maicon slid in to deny the Spaniard.

Marching orders: Porto defender Rolando (left) is shown the red card for protesting after Dzeko's goal

Marching orders: Porto defender Rolando (left) is shown the red card for protesting after Dzeko's goal

At the other end Gonzalez prodded an effort narrowly wide from 18 yards. Porto then pieced together a nice passing move and Maicon drove the ball into the box but the offside flag was raised before James Rodriguez turned it into the net.

Hulk almost broke through as Porto attacked again but Samir Nasri got a foot in at a vital moment.

City again pressed for another with Silva winning a corner from Helton with a powerful drive, before play was held up after Otamendi was accidentally kicked in the face by team-mate Maicon.

City put the result beyond any doubt as substitute Dzeko, who had been on the field just seven minutes, was slipped in by a fine ball from Aguero and finished with confidence.

Remember the name: The impressive Pizarro celebrates after rounding off the scoring

Remember the name: The impressive Pizarro celebrates after rounding off the scoring

It quickly became a double blow for Porto as Rolando, who had been booked early in the game, was shown a second yellow card as City celebrated – perhaps for protesting too much for offside – and left the field.

City then went on to wrap up the game in style as Silva added a third after 84 minutes after substitutes Pizarro and Dzeko combined to provide a tap-in.

Another followed two minutes later as Pizarro again linked up with Dzeko and broke into the box to slam past Helton for his first goal for the club.

Carlos Tevez back playing for Manchester City in two to three weeks – Roberto Mancini

Tevez will be back playing for City in two to three weeks, says Mancini after Porto romp

Manchester City manager Roberto Mancini has said he had 'no problem' with Carlos Tevez and the striker could be considered for selection in 'two or three weeks'.

Tevez said in a statement released by City that he was 'sincerely and unreservedly' sorry for his actions in taking an unauthorised three-month leave of absence from the club. The Argentinian also withdrew his appeal against a fine of six weeks' wages.

Tevez has not played for City since he was accused of refusing to warm up during the Champions League defeat at Bayern Munich on September 27. Mancini, at the time, said Tevez was 'finished' at the club as a result and the dispute escalated when the player then flew to Argentina without permission on November 7.

Back at City: Carlos Tevez

No problem: Roberto Mancini

No problem: Carlos Tevez (left) is back at Manchester City with Roberto Mancini

However, after the 4-0 defeat of Porto booked City's place in the last 16 of the Europa League, Mancini said Tevez would be available once he deems him match fit.

The Italian told ESPN: 'One week after Munich I called him to my house and said, “Carlos, apologise to everyone and it's finished”.

'I have no problem. I think he needs two to three weeks to train, then some games.'

City captain Vincent Kompany believes he and his team-mates showed they are in the Europa League to win the competition after they thrashed Porto.

A first-minute goal from Sergio Aguero set City on their way to seal a 6-1 aggregate triumph, with late strikes from Edin Dzeko, David Silva and David Pizarro inflicting further damage at the Etihad.

Kompany told ESPN: 'It was a great victory. I think today showed how serious we are about this competition.

'Four-nil is a great result against the holders of the competition from last season.

Just a minute: Sergio Aguero struck after only 19 seconds against Porto

Just a minute: Sergio Aguero struck after only 19 seconds against Porto

Impressive: City celebrate knocking the holders out of the Europa League

Impressive: City celebrate knocking the holders out of the Europa League

'I didn't think we were at our best but we did exactly what we needed to.'

Aguero's early goal effectively killed off the tie, another valuable strike from the Argentinian who joined City last summer.

'And this is his first season (at City) as well,' Kompany said. 'He is doing so many great things for the team.'

Pointing out the threat City possess, and the abundance of scoring opportunities they had tonight, Kompany added: 'It just shows we always create chances. The strikers have a lot of fun up front.

'It's good the end of the season is approaching, I don't think our team has ever been stronger.'

Something to prove: Yaya Toure (left) is hungry for a trophy this season

Something to prove: Yaya Toure (left) is hungry for a trophy this season

Midfield general Yaya Toure said: 'I think the game today was fantastic. To score early was very important for us.'

Defeat with the Ivory Coast in the African Nations Cup final was a jolt for Toure, and has increased his hunger for a trophy with City.

'It's very important for me,' he said. 'We lost that final against a good team.'

Toure added: 'It's very important for us to win something this year.'

Carlos Tevez: Five reason why Manchester City fans should welcome him back

Remember me Five reasons why City fans should welcome Tevez back with open arms

For nearly half-a-year, sorry seemed to be the hardest word for Carlos Tevez.

But after finally apologising for refusing to warm up in a Champions League game at Bayern Munich last September, the Manchester City striker is aiming to kick-start his career at the Etihad Stadium.

For those wondering whether the former Manchester United and West Ham star is worth the hassle, Sportsmail has put together a video special of his five finest moments in a City shirt.

Low profile: Tevez has returned to training and could play again for City soon

Low profile: Tevez has returned to training and could play again for City soon

Manchester City 2-1 Manchester United (Jan 2010)

This was Tevez's first season at the Etihad Stadium since moving from United, and the first leg of the Carling Cup semi-final came off the back of a thrilling but controversial 4-3 derby loss for City earlier in the campaign at Old Trafford.

The hosts went a goal down to a Ryan Giggs tap-in early on but City, and Tevez especially, hit back.

The Argentine netted an equalising penalty before heading home from close range to secure the win. Sadly for City, United would lose the battle but win the war by winning the second leg 3-1.

Chelsea 2-4 Manchester City (February 2010)

A game that centred around Wayne Bridge and John Terry not shaking hands before the match but it was Tevez that stole the show.

The striker equalised in first half injury time when he ended a tricky run by squeezing a weak shot into the bottom corner.

The 26-year-old then doubled his tally in the 76th minute when he slotted home a penalty to hand City a 3-1 lead and eventually a famous win at Stamford Bridge against a Blues side who would go on to win the double.

Manchester City 3-0 Wigan (March 2010)

Not his first hat-trick in a City shirt, that came two months earlier against Blackburn in a 4-1 win, but arguably his most devastating.

After going down to 10 men earlier in the game, the Latics were just 18 minutes away from holding out for a goalless draw.

Just 12 minutes later they were dead and buried with the Argentine netting in the 72nd, 74th and 84th minute to ensure he was taking home three points for his side and the match ball.

Manchester City 1-0 Stoke (May 2011)

An injury in a 3-0 defeat at Liverpool a month earlier had already ruled Tevez out of the FA Cup semi-final with Manchester United, but the striker won his race to be fit for the final at Wembley.

Despite not scoring, Tevez was a handful all game for the Potters in his first start since returning to the side. His two years of talismanic displays on the pitch finally went rewarded when he lifted City’s first major trophy since 1969.

Manchester City 2-0 Stoke (May 2011)

Three days after the final, the Potters visited the Etihad Stadium where they were taken apart by Tevez at his best.

His first goal after 14 minutes, after a one-two with James Milner, was impressive enough but it was his second strike that will go down in memory.

A stunning curling free-kick into the top corner from 30 yards is to date his last goal for the club and after being substituted on 88 minutes he was given a standing ovation.

He has much making up to do if he will ever get another one at the Etihad Stadium.

Andre Villas-Boas v Luiz Felipe Scolari – how do they compare

Villas-Boas v Scolari: How do Abramovich's two struggling bosses at Chelsea compare

You know results haven’t been going your way as Chelsea boss when you are compared with Luiz Felipe Scolari.

But that is the position Andre Villas-Boas finds himself in after his disastrous league form was coupled with another crushing defeat away at Napoli in the Champions League.

With it being just over three years since the Brazilian was sacked at Stamford Bridge, Sportsmail assesses Villas-Boas against ‘Big Phil’ to see how his record stacks up.

Andre Villas-Boas

Luiz Felipe Scolari

Under fire… and fired: Andre Villas-Boas (left) and Luiz Felipe Scolari

Strength of squad inherited

Since 2004 every Chelsea squad has had the strong spine of Petr Cech in goal, John Terry at the back, Frank Lampard in midfield and Didier Drogba in attack.

But Scolari was fortunate to have those key players at their peak, unlike Villas-Boas who has Lampard and Drogba past their best at nearly 34-years-old.

Out in the cold: Frank Lampard has been benched this season

Out in the cold: Frank Lampard has been benched this season

The Brazilian was also fortunate to take on a side that had strength in depth. Ricardo Carvalho had a rock solid partnership with Terry, while Michael Ballack and Florent Malouda were then big names to have in the midfield.

Nicolas Anelka was also at his peak, making it one of Chelsea’s most impressive squads in recent years. Villas-Boas has not been so lucky, the squad left behind by Carlo Ancelotti was badly lacking in depth following a clear-out the previous summer. While it had quality, it lacked leadership overall and its confidence has been fragile this season.

Competition record

Following some patchy results in the Premier League, Scolari was sacked after 25 games following a 0-0 draw at home to Hull. It left Chelsea in fourth place and 10 points behind league leaders Manchester United.

On the same amount of matches, Villas-Boas has six points less having won only two of his last 10 league games, and is struggling to even qualify for the Champions League – the worst performance by any manager in the Abramovich era.

Humbled: Napoli proved too strong for Chelsea on Tuesday

Humbled: Napoli proved too strong for Chelsea on Tuesday

The two had identical records in the Champions League group stage with 11 points, but Scolari was dismissed before he could face Juventus in a last 16 clash.

In domestic cup competitions, Scolari made easy progress in the FA Cup, unlike Villas-Boas whose team were held at home to Birmingham in the fifth round at Stamford Bridge. The Brazilian however did oversee a shock Carling Cup defeat at home to Burnley in the fourth round while Villas-Boas exited against Liverpool in the quarter-finals.

Transfer dealings

Villas-Boas cannot complain he hasn’t had funds to spend. The 34-year-old has splashed out over 80million trying to improve his squad but has so far found only one star performer in 29m midfielder Juan Mata.

Gary Cahill still needs time to find his feet, while Oriol Romeu has shown promise but still looks raw. Romelu Lukaku (18m) looks far from ready at 18-years-old while Raul Meireles has been hit-and-miss since joining from Liverpool.

Bright future: Juan Mata has been a huge success at Chelsea

Bright future: Juan Mata has been a huge success at Chelsea

Villas-Boas has had a relatively weak squad given to him, but he has spent too much money on potential rather than existing quality which the team would have benefited more from. To make matters worse, experienced duo Alex and Anelka were moved on in January.

Scolari was more prudent (for a Chelsea boss) but one dimensional in signing mainly his old buddies from his days as Portugal manager. Jose Bosingwa (16.2m) and Deco (7.9m) came in to play a big enough role but winter loan signing Ricardo Quaresma proved to be a flop.

The former Brazil manager was handy at moving on dead wood though, dispensing of fringe players Wayne Bridge, Shaun Wright-Phillips, Tal Ben Haim, Khalid Boulahrouz, Steve Sidwell and Hernan Crespo. Despite his dismissal none were sorely missed.

Influence: Didier Drogba

Influence: Didier Drogba

Player support

‘When Scolari started blaming individuals, then that was bad.’ Those were the words spoken by Drogba shortly after the 63-year-old was sacked and he wasn’t the only one with Terry also hinting at a divided dressing room.

Players were unhappy with the Brazilian’s man-management style which seemed to backfire. Lampard also claimed that by the end of his reign the players lost the feeling of being able to win every week.

Villas-Boas’ approach of ‘my way or the highway’ has also had negative effects. Before their inevitable January departures, Alex and Anelka were banished from any first-team involvement a month earlier and team morale hasn’t improved since.

Senior players such as Lampard and Cole have been unhappy at being left out of the side, while Drogba’s half-time team talk in front of the TV cameras against Birmingham started debates about who was running the show at Stamford Bridge.

Fan support

There was high expectations of Scolari who had knocked England out of three successive international tournaments with Brazil and Portugal, in doing so displaying some fine football in the process.

Unfortunately he couldn’t get a side used to playing an efficient winning style under Jose Mourinho to adapt to a new philosophy despite a promising start.

A 1-0 home defeat against Liverpool in October 2008 ended an 86-match unbeaten league run at Stamford Bridge and a month later another followed with a 2-1 reverse against Arsenal.

/02/22/article-2104880-11D8095E000005DC-529_468x312.jpg” width=”468″ height=”312″ alt=”Support: Chelsea fans gather in Naples before the match” class=”blkBorder” />

Support: Chelsea fans gather in Naples before the match

There was more curiosity surrounding Villas-Boas, with much of the hype surrounding how he had been the man giving out DVDs to players in the Jose Mourinho days.

Despite his knowledge of the game, his inexperience at the very top has been shown throughout the season. For example, high defensive lines have cost his side many goals, and points with them.

Naturally having led Chelsea to their worst season as it stands under Abramovich, there are many fans who have had enough, but there are supporters who argue the Portuguese boss needs more time to adapt. He may have a worse record than Scolari, but while there are boos at the final whistle there are currently no ‘Villas-Boas out’ banners.

Final verdict

On paper Scolari comes out on top. He undeniably performed better than Villas-Boas during the same amount of games and was less rash in the transfer market – being able to get more for his money.

But the Brazilian should have done better with a Blues squad at its peak. Given his lofty reputation as a manager he should have been able to reverse the terminal slide in results that kicked in three months into his reign. Most managers sacked in a season haven’t been given enough time but there was a sense the 63-year-old had underperformed.

Villas-Boas has made mistakes, but did anyone expect anything less from such an inexperienced and young manager who had taken control of a Chelsea squad at its weakest for many years

Too much money has been spent on the future and he has mis-read the power of the big names in the dressing room but there have been other factors that have gone against him too.

The emergence of Tottenham and Manchester City has made reaching the top four not as easy as it was three years ago and the overall competition has made it harder for the Portuguese manager to assert authority as he struggles to compete.

The 34-year-old would have learned plenty of lessons this season which would make him undoubtedly a better manager if he is still at Stamford Bridge next term.

After all there have been flashes of his tactical nous. Chelsea ended Manchester City’s unbeaten start for instance after going a goal down to eventually win 2-1.

Given the cards he has been dealt compared to Scolari, he deserves to be given more time to build a squad. But if there is one club where he probably won’t get it – it’s Chelsea.

Manchester City v United moved to Monday April 30 – and United won"t play any more Saturdays

Manchester derby moved to Monday… and victory over Ajax will end United's Saturday kick-offs

The Manchester derby – which could be the Barclays Premier League title decider – has been switched from Saturday afternoon to Monday evening to be shown live on Sky Sports.

The controversial move comes after violence at recent matches and warnings from Greater Manchester Police they will crack down on any troublemakers.

The game, which was scheduled for April 28 will now be played two days later to accommodate the satellite TV channel's cameras.

Red alert: The highly-anticipated match with City has been moved

Red alert: The highly-anticipated match with City has been moved

Tensions will be higher with the rivals
locked in a battle for the Premier League title and the battle for three
points shaping up to be the difference between finishing first or
second.

Trouble between the two sets of fans has
marred meetings, with 29 arrested after the Carling Cup semi-final
first-leg tie two years ago.

Blown over: High winds in the North West caused damage at United's Carrington training ground

Blown over: High winds in the North West have caused damage at United's Carrington training ground

Blown over: High winds in the North West caused damage at United's Carrington training ground

Further disturbances have scarred the
latest meetings and fears will now raise that the 8pm evening kick-off
will allow for the possibility of drunken rival factions fans to clash
around the Etihad Stadium.

A
move to Sunday was not an option with 8,000 runners due to compete in
the Greater Manchester Marathon around the city on Sunday April 29.

Flaring up: United and City fans have clashed in recent meeting and police will be on high alert to avoid any further trouble

Flaring up: United and City fans have clashed in recent meeting and police will be on high alert to avoid any further trouble

Flaring up: United and City fans have clashed in recent meeting and police will be on high alert to avoid any further trouble

Manchester United fixtures

v Norwich (A) – Sun Feb 26
v Tottenham (A) – Sun Mar 4
v West Brom (H) – Sat Mar 10*
v Wolves (A) – Sun Mar 18
v Fulham (H) – Mon Mar 26
v Blackburn (A) – Mon Apr 2
v QPR (H) – Sun Apr 8
v Wigan (A) – Wed 11 Apr
v Aston Villa (H) – Sun 15 Apr
v Everton (H) – Sun Apr 22
v Man City (A) – Mon Apr 30
v Swansea (H) – Sat May 5**
v Sunderland (A) Sun May 13

*Clashes with Europa League
**Scheduled to change due to FA Cup final clash

Greater Manchester Police will be
on high alert, both around the Etihad Stadium and in the city centre and
local pubs as they look to keep the peace.

Meanwhile United fans have discovered
that if they beat Ajax on Thursday, the club will not play any further
games on Saturday this season.

Football
traditionalists will be disappointed to learn that the club's
continuing involvement in the Europa League means there will be no
Saturday kick-offs until the 2012-13 term.

United have released full listings of
the kick-off changes due to TV commitments and the on-going involvement
in European competition.

And no games are scheduled to be played on Saturday even in May as the match with Swansea has been moved to avoid a repeat of the clash with the FA Cup final on May 5.

Running the rule: Sir Alex with fitness coach Tony Strudwick watching over the players as they go through their final training session ahead of the Ajax clash

Running the rule: Sir Alex with fitness coach Tony Strudwick watching over the players as they go through their final training session ahead of the Ajax clash

Sky Sports' confirmed live fixtures

FEBRUARY
Sat 25 – Man City v Blackburn (5.30pm)
Sun 26 – Arsenal v Tottenham (1.30pm)
Sun 26 – Carling Cup Final – Cardiff v Liverpool (4.00pm)

MARCH
Sat 3 – Liverpool v Arsenal (12.45pm)
Sun 4 – Fulham v Wolves (2.05pm)
Sun 4 – Tottenham v Man United (4.10pm)
Sat 10 – Bolton v QPR (12.45pm)
Sun 11 – Norwich City v Wigan (4.00pm)
Mon 12 – Arsenal v Newcastle (8.00pm)
Sun 18 – Wolves v Man United (1.30pm)
Sun 18 – Newcastle v Norwich (4.00pm)
Mon 19 – Man City v Chelsea (8.00pm)
Sat 24 – Chelsea v Tottenham (12.45pm)
Sun 25 – West Brom v Newcastle (4.00pm)
Mon 26 – Man United v Fulham (8.00pm)

APRIL
Sun 1 – Newcastle v Liverpool (1.30pm)
Sun 1 – Tottenham v Swansea (4.00pm)
Mon 2 – Blackburn v Man United (8.00pm)
Fri 6 – Swansea v Newcastle (4.30pm)
Sat 7 – Sunderland v Tottenham (12.45pm)
Sun 8 – Man United v QPR (1.30pm)
Sun 8 – Arsenal v Man City (4.00pm)
Mon 9 – Fulham v Chelsea (8.00pm)
Wed 11 – QPR v Swansea (8.00pm)
Sat 14 – Norwich v Man City (12.45pm)
Sun 15 – Bolton v Tottenham (1.30pm)
Sun 15 – Man United v Aston Villa (4.00pm)
Sat 21 – Arsenal v Chelsea (12.45pm)
Sun 22 – Man United v Everton (12.30pm)
Sun 22 – Wolves v Man City (4.00pm)
Sun 29 – Chelsea v QPR (1.30pm)
Sun 29 – Tottenham v Blackburn (4.00pm)
Mon 30 – Man City v Man United (8.00pm)

Ravel Morrison homophobic tweet: Fined 7,000 by FA

West Ham youngster Morrison fined 7k by FA over homophobic tweet

West Ham midfielder Ravel Morrison has been fined 7,000 by the FA in response to a homophobic remark made on Twitter.

Morrison, who completed an undisclosed switch to Upton Park from Manchester United at the end of January, is reported to have made the comment in response to another Twitter user.

The 19-year-old was also warned as to his future conduct by the FA after he admitted a charge of using abusive and/or insulting words including a reference to a person's sexual orientation.

Charged: Ravel Morrison is yet to play for his new club West Ham

Charged: Ravel Morrison is yet to play for his new club West Ham

Morrison was charged by the FA last Wednesday and quickly admitted his actions ahead of today's punishment, for which he requested a non-personal hearing.

An FA statement read: 'West Ham United's Ravel Morrison has been fined 7,000 and warned as to his future conduct after he admitted a charge of using abusive and/or insulting words including a reference to a person's sexual orientation.

'The charge was in relation to comments Morrison made on Twitter.'

Twitter storm: Morrison has given explanation to the FA for his tweet

Twitter storm: Morrison has given explanation to the FA for his tweet

Morrison, who is yet to make his
Hammers debut, has not enjoyed the smoothest of starts to his career
with the npower Championship club having also been involved in various
off-field controversies while at Old Trafford.

Manchester United allowed the
teenager to leave despite him being rated as one of the finest prospects
to come out of the club in recent years.

Manchester City v Porto live

EUROPA LEAGUE LIVE: Manchester City v Porto – all the action from the Etihad Stadium as it happens

Follow Sportsmail's coverage of the Europa League as Manchester City host Porto at the Etihad Stadium in the second leg of their last 32 clash. Roberto Mancini's men came from a goal down to win 2-1 at the Portuguese side last week and hold the advantage as they bid to reach the last 16. Email me your thoughts on the game at dan.ripley@dailymail.co.uk or contact me on Twitter @Ripinho.

Manchester City 1-0 Porto (5pm)
Aggregate: 3-1

Click here for the live goals as they go in

Man City: Hart, Richards, Kompany,
Lescott, Clichy, Barry, De Jong, Nasri, Toure Yaya, Silva, Aguero.
Subs:
Pantilimon, Zabaleta, Milner, Pizarro, Dzeko, Savic, Balotelli.

Goals: Aguero 1.

FC Porto: Helton, Maicon, Rolando,
Alex Sandro, Otamendi, Gonzalez, Joao Moutinho, James Rodriguez,
Fernando, Varela, Hulk. Subs: Bracali, Cristian Rodriguez, Kleber,
Djalma, Sapunaru, Defour, Podstawski.

Referee: Wolfgang Stark (Germany)

17.53: Porto have been a threat but you wouldn't expect anything less from the holders of this competition.

City have not been at their best but their performance has been disciplined and professional and providing they keep their focus should be on their way to the last 16.

Special mentions for Toure and Aguero though who have been immense.

Half-time: Manchester City 1-0 Porto (3-1 agg)

45min: One minute added on.

43min: Another Porto free-kick 20 yards out – but the same result. Hulk elects power, and De Jong blocks for a corner.

From the set-piece though the ball falls loose for Otamendi who lashes a volley way over. Maicon just yards behind him is furious he didn't leave it.

40min: But City counter from it and really should score. Aguero's through ball is over hit for Toure who after controlling the ball, lays it back to the striker.

Aguero though on the edge of the box lashes wide.

39min: Free-kick for Porto. Hulk elects power but Nigel De Jong stands strong in the City wall to block the shot – he will have an imprint of that ball on his back tomorrow.

37min: Rodriguez tees up Gonzalez on the edge of the box, but the Argentine's shot clears Hart's crossbar.

35min: That's good play from Hulk. He is limited for options on the left byline, so elects to fizz a low ball across goal that was just begging for a Porto player to tap home. No one does though and City clear.

33min: Remember that fine rain Scrap that, it's falling down now.

Fernando and Silva carry on their spat from the last leg following a tackle by the latter, but Stark again is on the scene to diffuse the situation before pointing at his respect badges. Get this guy into the Premier League.

Denied: Sergio Aguero saw his shot crash off the crossbar

Denied: Sergio Aguero saw his shot crash off the crossbar

30min: So unlucky from Aguero. He latches on to a Silva through ball and Helton once again races out of his box to try and intercept.

But the Argentine wins the ball by flicking the ball to the right wing, and with the keeper 20 yards out of his goal, his shot crashes off the bar before the visitors clear.

28min: On to the free-kick, Joao Moutinho strikes it well but it just dips over the bar.

27min: A chance here though. James Rodriguez is brought down by Micah Richards on the edge of the box.

Top marks for Wolfgang Start though, who before the kick books Nicolas Otamendi for brandishing one of those imaginary yellow cards. The German official has gone up in my estimation after that.

24min: The action has hit a lull in the past few minutes and a weak atmosphere isn't helping.

Conditions are difficult too though with fine rain falling in Manchester.

21min: The kick-off time may have hurt ticket sales but that has only opened an opportunity for Ajax fans.

They are in town for their side's clash at Manchester United tomorrow and they have a few tickets in the upper tier.

After all, why not make the most of your trip

Feeling the Blues: Chelsea manager Andre Villas-Boas was present at the Etihad Stadium

Feeling the Blues: Chelsea manager Andre Villas-Boas was present at the Etihad Stadium

18min: And quick as a flash, there is nearly an equaliser. Such fine margins.

Silvestre Varela beats the offside trap, but not Joe Hart who blocks his shot from an angle.

16min: Should be two. David Silva's pass is nearly perfect for Toure, but Helton is quick off his line to tackle the midfielder outside the box.

The ball falls for Nasri who elects to pass back to Toure rather than shoot at an open goal, but the Ivorian is offside.

13min: Bit harsh that. Rolando is booked for tugging Aguero's shirt on the halfway line and the reaction of his team mates suggests they are not happy either.

Lucho Gonzalez is booked for the nature of his protest.

10min: Porto have had most of the ball in these opening exchanges but they are struggling to create chances. City defending easily enough so far.

7min: From OptaJoe:

19s – Aguero's goal was the fastest scored in the Europa League this season, beating Taison vs Red Bull Salzburg by one second. Flash

5min: That doesn't change too much in the context of this game though. Porto, like they did before the game, still need two goals to get back into this.

4min: A small injury worry for City as Nasri has to limp off but he looks like he will be okay to continue.

Fast start: Sergio Aguero scored after just 19 seconds for Manchester City

Fast start: Sergio Aguero scored after just 19 seconds for Manchester City

Fast start: Sergio Aguero scored after just 19 seconds for Manchester City

1min: GOAL! MANCHESTER CITY 1-0 Porto

Quite incredible. Porto give the ball away trying to play out of defence, and Yaya Toure simply splits the back four to allow Sergio Aguero to slot into the bottom corner after 19 seconds.

Kick-off: Porto get us going then.

Damp atmosphere: Manchester City boss Roberto Mancini looks on before the game at the Etihad Stadium

Damp atmosphere: Manchester City boss Roberto Mancini looks on before the game at the Etihad Stadium

16.57: We are just about ready to go then. One notable face in the crowd. None other than Chelsea boss* Andre Villas-Boas.

*Correct at time of typing.

16.53: Here come the players then, quite a respectable crowd given the ridiculous kick-off time.

16.50: As far as I'm aware, and I will confirm if it comes to it, away goals count before extra-time.

So a 1-0 defeat for City should take them through to the next round.

16.46: A last 16 place is at stake tonight and we already know (sort of) who tonight's winner will face.

Legia Warsaw or Sporting Lisbon await in the next round – they played out a 2-2 draw in the first leg in Poland. That's entertainment.

16.41: And on the subject of Tevez's return, may I point you in the direction of probably the greatest video special anyone has ever put together…ever (no bias here.)

16.38: He does touch on that he will speak with Carlos Tevez tomorrow, following the striker's apology over that incident back in September.

16.37: Roberto Mancini as ever in a philosophical mood before the game. Here is the highlight of his chat with ESPN:

'We need to do our job which is not concede and score goals to go through'

…thanks for that Roberto.

16.34: As I touched on earlier, some of you are probably looking to get home as soon as this kicks off.

But you can still stay up-to-date with the scores by following our excellent live goal service here.

Every goal from a game involving a Premier League side as it goes in – you can't ask for much more than that.

Sergio, you're starting! Manchester City coach Attilio Lombardo (left) chats to Aguero in training

Sergio, you're starting! Manchester City coach Attilio Lombardo (left) chats to Aguero in training

16.31: Manchester City boss Roberto Mancini makes just one change as he looks for his team to secure a place in the last 16 of the Europa League tonight.

Striker Sergio Aguero, who came off the bench to score the late winner as City won the first leg of their last 32 tie against Porto 2-1 last week, replaces Mario Balotelli for the return at the Etihad Stadium.

Balotelli, the subject of alleged monkey chants at the Estadio do Dragao last Thursday, is on the bench alongside fellow forward Edin Dzeko.

16.26: Full team news from the Etihad Stadium:

Man City v FC Porto
Man City: Hart, Richards, Kompany, Lescott, Clichy, Barry, De Jong, Nasri, Toure Yaya, Silva, Aguero. Subs: Pantilimon, Zabaleta, Milner, Pizarro, Dzeko, Savic, Balotelli.

FC Porto: Helton, Maicon, Rolando, Alex Sandro, Otamendi, Gonzalez, Joao Moutinho, James Rodriguez, Fernando, Varela, Hulk. Subs: Bracali, Cristian Rodriguez, Kleber, Djalma, Sapunaru, Defour, Podstawski.

Referee: Wolfgang Stark (Germany)

16.21: So why have kick-off the day before at a time when everyone is just leaving work

Well City cannot play at home on the same day as Manchester United, and I think UEFA don't want this clash to overshadow the Champions League. That's my two cents anyway.

16.18: That's enough time spent thinking back to Japan/Korea 2002, we have a Europa League clash to deal with.

This is the only tie of the night by the way, with some tournament called the Champions League following after.

Gloves are on: Porto players train at the Etihad Stadium on the eve of the last 16 clash

Gloves are on: Porto players train at the Etihad Stadium on the eve of the last 16 clash

16.15: Porto starting XI:

Helton, Maicon, Otamendi, Rolando, Alex Sandro, Fernando, Moutinho, Lucho Gonzalez, James Rodriguez, Hulk, Varela.

16.10: No holding back from Roberto Mancini then. He wants to progress in this competition and good on him. English clubs need as many flags as they can fly in Europe right now.

16.05: Manchester City starting XI:

Hart, Richards, Kompany, Lescott, Clichy, de Jong, Barry, Nasri, Yaya Toure, Silva, Aguero.

16.00: Good news Manchester City fans, you're back on Wednesday action for European football (Wahey!) The bad news is it's not to save the Premier League's laughable assault on the Champions League (boo!)

Yes it's Europa League football on a Wednesday afternoon, with the strangest time for a weekday match (5pm) since the 6am games at the 2002 World Cup.

While I reminisce over tea, toast, bed and China v Costa Rica, let me also dig out some team news which is on the way.

Which way to the last 16 Sergio Aguero scored City's late winner at Porto in the first leg

Which way to the last 16 Sergio Aguero scored City's late winner at Porto in the first leg

Henri Lansbury ready to answer West Ham goalkeeper SOS

Hammers to appeal Green red but stand-in Lansbury is ready to answer Big Sam SOS

Henri Lansbury is ready to answer Sam Allardyce's goalkeeping crisis after his stand-in heroics during West Ham's 4-1 win over Blackpool.

With no back-up goalkeeper on the bench, the on-loan Arsenal midfielder was unexpectedly hauled on to replace Robert Green after the Hammers No 1 was sent off at Bloomfield Road.

But Lansbury was unfazed during his 35 minute cameo and has offered to do it again this Saturday against Crystal Palace if Green's expected appeal over his three-match ban fails.

Super Hands: Henri Lansbury kept a clean sheet after replacing sent-off goalkeeper Robert Green during West Ham's win over Blackpool

Super Hands: Henri Lansbury kept a clean sheet after replacing sent-off goalkeeper Robert Green during West Ham's win over Blackpool

'I'm going to take my gloves into training! Hopefully I can make the squad as a goalkeeper,' Lansbury joked, speaking to the club's official website after the Hammers reclaimed their place at the top of the Championship.

'I was a bit shocked at first but then the gaffer turned around and said “You're going in” so I thought “Alright” and I couldn't wait to get on. It was enjoyable.

All smiles: Lansbury is congratulated by team-mate jack Collison

All smiles: Lansbury is congratulated by team-mate jack Collison

'I enjoy playing in goal. I did it quite a bit when I was with my mates and in five-a-side tournaments I go in goal, but to play out on the pitch is another level.'

West Ham's travelling fans sang 'Are you Ludo (Hammers favourite Ludek Miklosko) in disguise' to Lansbury in honour of his emergency shot-stopping stint between the sticks.

But it was not the first time he's played in goal – he had to replace Middlesbrough's Jason Steele for England Under 21s, letting in a penalty against Portugal in November 2010.

'I let a penalty in playing for England Under-21s, but I suppose you don't have to count that, so it's two clean sheets. Maybe I could go in goal again sometime!'

West Ham will lodge their appeal to the FA over Green's dismissal hoping they can overturn the decision.

Ruud Boffin is in contention to deputise or Allardyce might ask for an emergency loan signing should they fail after co-chairman David Sullivan admitted this week that highly-rated Czech Republic keeper Marek Stech is unlikely to play for the club again

Sullivan revealed the youngster has a clause in his contract which stipulates the east London side would have to pay his former club Sparta Prague 700,000 should he make two more first-team appearances.

Appeal: West Ham are set to challenge Robert Green's sending off

Appeal: West Ham are set to challenge Robert Green's sending off

Football League blog

It's the third successive game the Hammers have had a player sent off but Lansbury hopes the win will spur them onto promotion.

He added: 'I think we've started to play well now and even with ten men we look like we're going to score every time we attack.

'We've just got to try to keep this run going until the end of the season.'

Accenture Match Play: Live scores

Accenture Match Play: Keep up with the latest scores in Arizona

The biggest names in the game line up for the Accenture Match Play Championship and you can keep track of the latest scores right here.

Luke Donald beat Martin Kaymer in last year's final and the victory lit the spark on an amazing 2012 for England's world No 1.

CLICK HERE FOR THE LATEST SCORES
Positive sign: Luke Donald stopped for autographs before his practice round

Positive sign: Luke Donald stopped for autographs before his practice round

Stuart Broad: England still tasty without Alastair Cook

My Twenty20 stars are still tasty without Cook, says England captain Broad

Resurgent England will return to one
of their world-beating disciplines on Thursday under a Twenty20 captain
confident they have the potential to improve still further.

Stuart Broad takes over the reins
from one-day international leader Alastair Cook for three Twenty20s
against Pakistan, after the latter impressed so much with his 50-over
batting in the unexpected 4-0 series whitewash England completed on
Tuesday.

The prize: England captain Stuart Broad and Pakistan skipper Misbah-ul-Haq unveil the T20 series trophy

The prize: England captain Stuart Broad and Pakistan skipper Misbah-ul-Haq unveil the T20 series trophy

Cook's run of form has, in fact, seen him retained as cover – Ravi Bopara has a back injury, but was able to take full part in practice – for a format in which the opener mustered the last of only four caps to date back in 2009.

While England grapple with the conundrum of whether to give the in-form Cook a chance to prove the doubters wrong again, by adapting his style effectively to the demands of Twenty20, Broad is confident – whoever plays at the Dubai International Cricket Stadium – his team has many bases covered.

'I look through the squad, and it excites me,' said Broad, who has just seven fixtures to try to fine-tune England's resources between now and the warm-up matches in Sri Lanka next September when they will defend their ICC World Twenty20 crown.

England captain Stuart Broad

Ravi Bopara of England

Ready for action: England captain Stuart Broad (left) and Ravi Bopara

'Of the guys who've come into the side in recent times, Jos Buttler's won game after game for Somerset; (Jonny) Bairstow strikes the ball beautifully, as we've seen on the international stage; Jade Dernbach's got a brilliant yorker and a great slower ball.

'We've got guys coming into the Twenty20 team and offering a huge amount.'

Broad – back as captain after missing England's last three Twenty20s because of a shoulder injury – has been impressed too with his Nottinghamshire team-mate Samit Patel, who has been a limited-overs ever-present for England this winter.

'Samit has shown good form on this one-day tour, both with bat and ball,' he said.

'It's exciting going on to the field, knowing you have that trust in your guys to perform.

'That's what it's about – and as long as players know their roles, and what's expected of them, they have enough talent to be able to produce that on the field.'