
City Xtra
·24. August 2025
Five Things Learned: Manchester City 0-2 Tottenham Hotspur (Premier League)

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·24. August 2025
Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City were handed a deflating 0-2 defeat by Thomas Frank’s Tottenham Hotspur upon their return to the Etihad Stadium on Saturday afternoon.
The home side started relatively positively, with the only issue in the early stages being the fact that Rayan Ait-Nouri was forced off due to injury with less than 25 minutes gone.
City were progressing the ball well but struggling to create anything of any real substance despite all the attacking flair on the pitch. The Blues did, however, start the brighter of the two sides, as the front-three looked energetic in the early stages, in particular Omar Marmoush.
The Egyptian had two presentable chances; in the first-half, the first came in the 10th minute after a defensive mishap by former loanee away from Manchester City in Pedro Porro, who fired a loose back pass to Vicario, which Marmoush hastily latched on to. However, the angle was incredibly tight, and the Blues’ No.7 saw his shot creep past the post.
The second effort came just before the half-hour mark following a marauding run from Erling Haaland charging through several Spurs players and slotting through a perfectly weighted ball for Marmoush, who was superbly denied by Vicario.
Unfortunately for the home side, that is largely where the positives ended, as old issues reared their ugly head for Pep Guardiola’s men. With 10 minutes plus stoppage time remaining before the interval, City were undone far too easily as Vicario launched a long ball headed on by Pape Matar Sarr to Richarlison, who squared the ball to Brennan Johnson for the Welshman to fire home. Three passes from back to front and the home side trailed via a first shot on target – a far too familiar feeling.
The situation went from bad to worse in stoppage time as a calamitous error from home debutant James Trafford put Nico in a dire position, leading to the Spaniard seeing a pass to him intercepted before João Paulinha tucked the ball into an empty net. With pretty much the last kick of the first 45, a golden opportunity to pull one back fell to Erling Haaland who placed a header over the bar from four yards.
After the break, a reaction was – you would think – compulsory for Manchester City. However, this was not the case. The home side offered little to nothing in attacking areas in the second period, completely nullified by the unbreakable defensive shape of those from North London.
Even after the substitutions, those in sky blue struggled in regard to attacking strategy and, despite having the majority of the ball, did nothing with it. The game slowly drifted away, not for a lack of effort but because there was simply no way through this well-drilled Spurs side.
In the dying embers, James Trafford somewhat atoned for his earlier mistake, producing a brilliant double save to prevent Tottenham from adding another to the scoresheet and keep the score at 0-2. Not the ideal first home fixture for this reborn City by any stretch of the imagination.
Here are Five Things We Learned from Manchester City’s first loss of the 2025/2026 campaign!
The performance on Saturday was far too reminiscent of last season’s struggles in many ways. City are far too easy to break through, especially in behind their high line and due to their progressive passing philosophy, which – when it works – works amazingly, but creates plenty of issues as well.
Being this fragile defensively simply cannot continue if we wish to compete with the likes of Liverpool and Arsenal for the title. Conceding goals is one thing, but in such a manner is when something has to change if City wish to be back on their pedestal of Champions. Admittedly, City were not helped by the error of their new No.1 but given his age and lack of experience in the top-flight, that is to be expected. However poor the error was, he does not deserve to be scapegoated for this performance and must be given time to integrate.
It is not just defensively where issues arose; when it came to the final third, even with the undeniable quality of the players on the pitch, those in sky blue looked at a loss in regard to creativity. Undoubtedly, Pep Guardiola will address this before the fixture at Brighton, but the lack of ideas was worrying, to say the least.
As much as City may be scrutinised, and rightfully so, you have to give Thomas Frank and his Tottenham team their flowers. They executed a game plan to perfection and played their opposition off the park. They were defensively sound, clinical and incredibly well organised.
Following yesterday’s game, Thomas Frank became only the third manager in history to defeat Pep Guardiola’s City in the Premier League at the Etihad with two different clubs. A true thorn in the side of the club, and the opening home fixture of this season was no different.
However, the home side did by and large play into the hands of their visitors; every hopeful long ball that came to nothing, every frustration-fuelled foul, and every time City took their time to build from the back suited Tottenham, enabling them to play at their pace and run the clock down. Exceptional game management, you must say but poor from the blues for making it that simple.
Rico Lewis is undeniably a great player technically and one of the best at operating in the infamous inverted full-back role, drifting inside to help out in the build-up.
But the problem that presents itself is the defensive aspects to his game. The CFA graduate, who is set to sign a five-year deal, really struggled and his lack of physical prowess was clearly visible as he was unable to handle the physicality and intensity of the game.
The blame cannot rest solely on him, however, as it must be remembered that Lewis – and Matheus Nunes – is not a conventional right back, so he will face adversity defensively. As well as this, although, he has featured in the first team for years he is still only 20 so will certainly develop and improve in years to come.
This issue does beg the question though: with eight days now remaining of the summer transfer window, will Hugo Viana and Pep Guardiola be content with having two natural midfielders as the right-back depth at the club? If not, they have to move quickly; if they do, this may be an area of weakness as the season progresses.
For Rayan Ait-Nouri to pick up an injury on his home debut and in just his second Premier League appearance after joining the club from Wolves is unfortunate to say the very least.
Since he deputised in blue during the Club World Cup in the United States, the Algerian has looked like a breath of fresh air down the left, offering quality in the final third and defensively, and the improvement in fluidity after adding a natural left back has been clear.
The injury appeared to be in association with his ankle, and whilst the extent is not yet known, the absence of the club’s only conventional full-back after such a positive start is a huge blow for the start of the campaign, and the sooner he can return, the better.
Yes, the performance was poor, and there were some glaring issues, but fans have a history of being very reactionary. It’s the second game of 38, four players made their home debut. It’s not going to click instantaneously; give these players and this coaching staff time.
A lot of the players who took part were not the finished article by any stretch. Statistically the average age of City’s starting XI was 24 years and 326 days; the youngest for a league match since October 2010. This is exciting, but these players will be raw and need to be given time to develop before they are judged.
So, to summarise, City were outplayed, and problems need to be addressed, but given the fact the transfer window is still open, as well as the fact that there are so many changes ongoing at the club already, be patient and trust this group as City fans have for so many years previously.
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