Manchester City striker Sergio Agüero, whose own personal campaign has been disrupted by a number of unfortunate injuries in close proximity of each other, has warned the Citizens' title rivals - saying that goals are now beginning to flow within the side, and they're prepared to fight until the last point to retain the Premier League trophy in 2016. 

Sergio netted a brace during City's convincing victory over Crystal Palace at home last weekend, and he's hoping for more of the same when they make the trip down to east London with Slaven Bilic's West Ham side eager to complete the double over the title challengers - after a narrow win at the Ethiad before the turn of the calendar year.

Aguero in a tussle with Joel Ward for possession, against Palace last week | Image: Getty
Aguero in a tussle with Joel Ward for possession, against Palace last week | Image: Getty

Agüero eager for Citizens to maintain consistency

As quoted by the club's official website, Aguero said that he's "feeling better physically" and as his fitness is improving, it's a great sign of things to come in future.

On tomorrow's opponents, he admitted that the Hammers are "particularly hard to beat at home", so it'll be a tough fixture for both sides.

Hammers a tough test - can they handle it?

However, he described it as "very important" to maintain a good run of form - dropping minimal points where possible, as the likes of Arsenal and Leicester continue to set the pace at the top of the table.

Sergio himself, has scored 10 League goals this term, and 13 in all competitions, with three assists too. The club's talisman in attack, it's evident to see how City's attacking options suffer without his creative genius up-top - the ability to change games out of seemingly nothing within an instant, makes him a world-class player that any defender would be worried about dealing with.

Leicester host Stoke in one of tomorrow's 3pm kick-off's, whilst Arsenal entertain London rivals Chelsea on Sunday - every point is crucial in an unpredictable title race, with the coming month or two set to differentiate the real challengers from the pretenders.