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Manchester City investigate after Aston Villa keeper Robin Olsen assaulted during pitch invasion at the Etihad Stadium

Manchester City have launched an investigation after Aston Villa's goalkeeper was assaulted during a pitch invasion - with Sky pundits Gary Neville and Roy Keane calling the perpetrators "idiots" and "scumbags".

It happened as fans flooded onto the Etihad pitch after City clinched the Premier League title with a remarkable comeback.

Video shows Robin Olsen being touched or slapped on the back of the head by one fan and pushed by another, before a third man apparently hits him in the face - though it is unclear if it was intentional.

Olsen is "completely fine" but did take a "bang on the back of the head," said Aston Villa - who regard the matter as closed and will not be making a complaint.

It follows other recent pitch invasion incidents, including a fan who was jailed for headbutting Sheffield United's Billy Sharp, and Crystal Palace manager Patrick Vieira being involved in an altercation with an Everton supporter.

Former Manchester United stars Neville and Keane said it was deeply concerning.

"Running on the pitch is obviously delirious - they've won the league - so I get that," said Neville.

"But attacking the opposition players on the pitch, where has this come from? Why is it happening?... It's absolutely ridiculous."

Keane, who played alongside Neville at Manchester United, called it a "disgrace" and suggested someone could even "do something silly like stab a player".

"A player or a manager is going to be seriously injured," he said.

Manchester City said it wanted to "sincerely apologise" to Olsen.

"The Club has launched an immediate investigation and once identified, the individual responsible will be issued with an indefinite stadium ban," it said in a statement.

The FA will also be investigating and said it was "very concerned about the rise in anti-social behaviour from fans as we reach the end of the season".

"Clubs play a vital role in addressing this issue and they need to prevent pitch invasions from occurring, as well as taking their own action against those that break the rules and the law," it said.

"The FA will be seeking to do all that it can to work with clubs as well as addressing the issues from a disciplinary perspective."