Manchester City play Juventus in the UEFA Champions League

On Wednesday night, Juventus will play an injured Manchester City in the Champions League, bringing together two underperforming teams in Turin
Manchester City

(Football news) Almost side by side in the league-phase standings, Juve have regularly failed to turn one point into three this season, while City are enduring a crisis of confidence.

Sparking talk of an ending era, Manchester City’s remarkable 3-3 draw with Feyenoord last time out in the Champions League saw them squander a three-goal lead with less than 20 minutes to play on home turf.

Following their 4-1 loss to Sporting CP in Lisbon, that result continued a downward trend stretching back several weeks, and the reigning Premier League champions are enduring by far their worst run of form since Pep Guardiola took charge.

Not only have City shipped seven goals in their last two European games—having kept a clean sheet in all of their first three this term—but taking just one point from those outings has left them with eight on the board, only good enough for a playoff place as things stand.

Winners in 2023, they have reached the knockout stages in each of the last 11 seasons, topping their group for seven years straight; now, Guardiola’s chief concern is ensuring his faltering squad does not slip out of the top 24.

Facing another domestic defeat at the weekend, City twice came from behind to salvage a 2-2 draw away with Premier League strugglers Crystal Palace, as Rico Lewis levelled matters for a second time at Selhurst Park before getting himself sent off.

The Citizens therefore head to Italy having won just one of their last nine games across all competitions, and they will aim to avoid setting an unwanted club record on Wednesday night.

City’s current five-match winless run against Juventus is their joint-longest against any opponent in UEFA competition, though this is the first time they have faced the Bianconeri during Guardiola’s reign.

After losing the clubs’ very first meeting back in 1976, Juventus have since stayed unbeaten against their next visitors, winning three times and drawing twice.

Like Manchester City, though, Juve are occupying an insecure place in this season’s Champions League standings, having won both of their first two games before picking up just a couple of points from the next three.

After their first—and still only—death of the 2024-25 campaign against Stuttgart, Thiago Motta’s men went on to play out stalemates with Lille and Aston Villa last month.

Yet another draw last weekend—their 19th in the league since the start of the year—also saw the two-time European champions fall further off the pace in the Serie A title race, and they are now seven points shy of the top spot.

In fact, they were quite fortunate to avoid a first top-flight loss on Saturday evening, when they had to fight back from two goals down to draw at home to Bologna: Teun Koopmeiners reduced the deficit before substitute Samuel Mbangula netted a 92nd-minute equaliser.

That made it four straight draws across all competitions and seven in the last nine; yet, the Turin giants can still boast Serie A’s best defensive record, with just 10 goals conceded and 10 clean sheets from 15 games so far.

Also read: Manchester United are happy to cashing in on Real Madrid linked player

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