Manchester United will play Manchester City in the Premier League

This weekend's Premier League action features two fallen Mancunian giants as Manchester City and Manchester United resume their rivalry at the Etihad Stadium in Sunday's Manchester derby
Manchester

(Football news) While Red Devils boss Ruben Amorim will be experiencing his first taste of derby day since taking charge of the 20-time English champions, he has already masterminded one slaughter of the Citizens in 2024-25.

Going as far as to question himself after Man City’s latest chastening evening on the continent, as Dusan Vlahovic and Weston McKennie propelled Juventus to a 2-0 triumph over the English champions on Turin turf, Pep Guardiola is not walking in a winter wonderland whatsoever.

A corner had seemingly been turned when Nottingham Forest rocked up to the Etihad and left battered and bruised after a 3-0 defeat, but City reverted to weak ways in the Premier League at Crystal Palace’s Selhurst Park home, where they had to come from behind twice just to snatch a share of the spoils.

Now reeling from their seventh defeat in 10 matches in all competitions—form that could justifiably lead to the sacking of most managers not named Guardiola—Manchetser City are only just clinging onto a top-four place in the Premier League table and are eight points behind leaders Liverpool at the time of writing.

Results going against them on Saturday could bump City out of the Champions League berths before the derby, but if there is any crumb of comfort for the Citizens faithful to cling onto, it is the fact that their stuttering side have scored three goals in back-to-back home games against Feyenoord and Forest.

However, Nuno Espirito Santo’s team are the only side City have kept a clean sheet against during their pitiful 10-game run; each of the other nine matches has seen Guardiola’s men ship at least two goals, including four to an Amorim-inspired Sporting Lisbon before the Portuguese answered the Old Trafford call.

While City’s Scandinavian sensation Erling Haaland had no answer to Juve’s defensive might in the Champions League, Manchester United’s Nordic marksman Rasmus Hojlund provided the dash of inspiration necessary to get his teammates, and Andre Onana in particular, out of jail against Viktoria Plzen.

Man United’s number one was culpable for Matej Vydra’s opening goal in the Europa League affair, but Hojlund’s brace off the bench saw Amorim join an exclusive club of Manchester United managers; only Sir Matt Busby and Sir Alex Ferguson also won both of their first two continental games in charge of the club.

Victory in Europe was the ideal tonic to back-to-back Premier League losses to Arsenal and, surprisingly, Nottingham Forest, who also capitalised on horror moments from Onana and his defence last weekend to leave the Red Devils in an unlucky 13th place in the table.

As scepticism and criticism of Sir Jim Ratcliffe’s involvement heighten amid behind-the-scenes turmoil, Amorim could do worse than replicate his astonishing 4-1 slaughter of City with Sporting, but the road omens are not promising for Manchester United.

Indeed, the Red Devils have failed to win any of their last five Premier League matches on the road, have only beaten Southampton away from home in the top flight this term, and boast just two successes from their last 13 league games on rival territory.

Manchester City have also conquered their formerly noisy neighbours in each of their last three meetings at the Etihad, and should Guardiola’s men give themselves a shot in the arm with derby delight on Sunday, Amorim would have suffered three straight top-flight losses for the first time in his fledgling managerial career.

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