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Manchester City vs Feyenoord: Champions League – live | Champions League


Manchester City vs Feyenoord: Champions League – live | Champions League

Important events

13 mins: Grealish gets a chance. Wellenreuther had decided to play out of the goal, the ball was retrieved and played in. The shot rains away – past Foden. A lot of enthusiasm, a lot of possession, it will come, but it’s not coming yet.

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11 mins: Foden appears to be on the left where you might expect Grealish to be. This time his ball lands at Haaland, who can only nudge the ball.

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10 minutes: The first chance, a header from Haaland, is shot down and Wellenreuther saves well. Foden’s cross initially missed a rather statuesque Haaland.

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8 minutes: Jack Grealish tries to get involved; So far he has only played a supporting role – and that for long stretches of the season. City keeps the ball. And keep it and keep it.

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7 minutes: Does a lack of tactical fouls cost City something? Someone might have the stats. Maybe those old legs have trouble keeping up with fast opponents. Saying goodbye this evening was also a bit difficult.

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6 minutes: Gündogan plays the central role, the Rodri position. Nunes is trying to force his way through – he’s in the ball carrier role tonight. Feyenoord sits deep. And try to send away Carranza, who just committed a tactical foul.

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4 minutes: City does what you would expect from City: lots of passes, dominating possession. However, they did that in all the games they lost. Rico Lewis takes a hit from two defenders at the same time. But he’s fine.

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3 minutes: Bernardo Silva – the captain – twists and turns. Haaland wants it, Gündogan gets it and his shot is blocked. Foden doesn’t do much from the corner.

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Let’s go to Manchester

1 minute: Feyenoord gets off to a quick start and the City fans cheer as Manuel Akanji clears the danger. The Feyenoord fans are making noise. De Kuip is, in my opinion, one of the best places to watch football and they have brought some of that to Manchester.

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So the players shake hands and kick-off soon begins. The Etihad is said to be underutilized.

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Updated at

At the Etihad they put on another light show, although not like the one for Rodri.

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By the way, Niall McVeigh provides updates on the remaining games from his chair.

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News from elsewhere relevant to the city: Julian Alvarez – do you remember him? – scored twice for Atletico at Sparta Prague. They replaced him with… Savinho?

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Krishna contacts: “Hello John (or is it Scott under a new pseudonym?)

“Lose to Spurs. Then you lose to Arne’s successor. And finally lose to Arne himself. Certainly Pep wouldn’t like such orderly things, a narrow win today followed by a draw at the weekend is my prediction.”

Yes, it’s John. Representing the great man.

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Updated at

The headlines: De Bruyne is still on the benchand Gimenez too. Walker fell, as did Savinho.

In: Nathan Ake, Matheus Nunes and Jack Grealish. Missing: Walker, Savinho and John Stones, who is not in the squad at all.

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The teams are there

Man City: Ederson, Lewis, Akanji, Ake, Gvardiol, Silva, Gundogan, Matheus Luiz, Foden, Haaland, Grealish. Subs: Ortega, Carson, Walker, Dias, De Bruyne, Savio, Wright, Simpson-Pusey, O’Reilly, McAtee, Wilson-Esbrand.

Feyenoord: Wellenreuther, Nieuwkoop, Trauner, Hancko, Smal, Hwang, Milambo, Timber, Hadj Moussa, Carranza, Igor Paixao. Subs: Bijlow, Ka, Beelen, Zerrouki, Gonzalez, Ivanusec, Mitchell, Zechel, Gimenez, Lotomba, Redmond.

Referee: Radu Petrescu (Romania)

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As always, Jonathan Wilson has been thinking hard about this unexpected malaise.

And yet something is different. According to Opta, City have had the third-easiest run of games of any club since the start of this Premier League season, but if they lose at Anfield next week (and Liverpool are the team Guardiola has lost to the second most times) they will be 11th points behind the leaders. The aura is gone; Enemies sense blood in the water. It’s like Chelsea in the 2015/16 season, or Manchester United under David Moyes, or Liverpool in the early 1990s. The sides no longer face each other with the sole aim of avoiding embarrassment; They believe there is a chance of a remarkable result.

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The city isn’t old, okay? At least not according to Pep.

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Missing for city: Oscar Bobb, Ruben Dias, Mateo Kovacic and of course Rodri.

The fact that the rest looks tired is also a big problem.

For Feyenoord: Santiago Gimenez will be missed heavily and he is questionable with a hamstring injury.

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Brian Priske, the Feyenoord coach, Arne Slot’s successor at City: “For me they are still one of the best teams in the world, a world-class team. We’ve seen a lot of their games and for example at the weekend against Spurs they were really unlucky. We know that we have to play a perfect game to get a positive result, especially in defense.

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More pizzazz: “In this situation we need to be more direct in our principles. Don’t change much, rather less than ever before. One day we will win a game and our heads will be clear. I hope it will be (against Feyenoord), if not Sunday (against Liverpool). But the desire is there to change it and we will try.”

Does that mean they’re leaving directly?

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And Kevin De Bruyne: “It was a bit chaotic. I have seen so many people being passed around in the medical field. Seeing who’s playing, who’s not, people who weren’t supposed to play but did because of injury; We were all over the place in these games. Everyone is down, but we have to keep going.”

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Some quotes from Pep from his press conference: “I still have the feeling that we will still do very good things this season. I’m not giving up and I have a feeling we’ll be there. We congratulate the team that takes our crown because they deserve it, not because we gave it to them. (When) you’re defending a legacy, a tradition or an achievement, it’s so difficult to deal with.”

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preamble

It couldn’t be six in a row, could it? Surely this is the evening when the rot stops and Manchester City finds its footing again. Feyenoord is only fourth in the Eredivisie and 21st in the Champions League. You couldn’t, right? It’s at the Etihad, but it’s also new territory for Pep Guardiola. Will he ask his team to be stricter and rely on percentages? Although this is not the usual way, it is the orthodox way out of such fluctuations. But then again, there’s nothing ordinary about Pep or City.

Join me for kick-off at 20:00 GMT.

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