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FA Cup Victory A Rebuild Catalyst For Man City, Not A Season Savior

Guardiola: FA Cup Trophy Not First Choice But We Want To Win

For Pep Guardiola and Manchester City, a year they hope will be quickly forgotten comes full circle at Wembley on Saturday.

It was in north London 12 months ago, in a 2-1 defeat to Manchester United in the FA Cup final, that Guardiola saw the first small signs of potential trouble ahead. At the time, he put the surprise result down to his own tactical mistakes; since then, though, what looked like an isolated incident has grown into City’s worst season for nearly a decade.

Guardiola and his players will return to Wembley to face Crystal Palace in another FA Cup final (stream LIVE on Saturday, 11:20 a.m. ET, ESPN+). And just as the defeat to United triggered a steep decline, there’s hope that lifting the trophy can ignite a climb back to the top of English and European soccer.

“We haven’t been there fighting in the Premier League or the Champions League, and that’s not good enough for a club like City,” Erling Haaland said in an interview with ESPN. “We have to finish strong in the Premier League and win the FA Cup. Then we have to start focusing on next season straight away.”

Guardiola has been clear that beating Palace won’t save their season — the bar has been set too high for that — but maybe it can provide some momentum ahead of the 2025-26 campaign and the fight to wrestle the Premier League title back from Liverpool.

Guardiola has, in part, changed his mind about what went wrong against United a year ago. Immediately afterward, he blamed the shock defeat to Erik ten Hag’s struggling team on a poor game plan. He still thinks he made mistakes — particularly his instructions about where to attack United — but he has also come to think, for the first time in City’s reign, that maybe the focus wasn’t quite there.

Asked to reflect on it months later, he suggested everyone was “hungover” following the celebrations to mark a record fourth successive Premier League title. He wasn’t being literal, of course, but having rewatched the game, there was a sense that his players had been too passive in the first half.

With the noise around United and Ten Hag’s future, it was almost like City believed they only had to turn up to win. The second half was better, but by then, they were already 2-0 down, and it was too late.

Guardiola faced plenty of questions about his players’ motivation after winning the treble in 2023, though they were answered emphatically by winning the title again the following season.

The sense that, perhaps, the desire was slipping away caught Guardiola by surprise. He has been keen not to talk about it too much this season, instead offering up other reasons, such as damaging injuries and his own failings, though it has been raised by more than one player.

“We haven’t had fully the hunger inside of us,” Haaland said. “I haven’t been good enough. I haven’t helped the team enough. In the end, we haven’t been good enough.”

This sentiment followed on from something Ilkay Gündogan told ESPN last month.

“I feel like in a lot of games from our side maybe we gave sometimes a bit too much importance to tactics and didn’t really pay attention much on behavior; behaviors of ourselves,” the German midfielder said.

“Having that determination, that desire, aggressivity. Like simple things that are part of the game, but maybe sometimes you just think too much about positioning yourself or whatever. You might forget the other things that are kind of normal, or that should be normal at least.”

For City, it has been part of a perfect storm. As much as everything fell into place during title wins in 2021, 2022, 2023 and 2024, various factors have contributed to the downturn in results.

Big injuries to key players like Rodri have had an obvious effect. Besides the Ballon d’Or-winning Spanish midfielder, a whole team of players — Ederson, John Stones, Nathan Aké, Rúben Dias, Manuel Akanji, Kevin De Bruyne, Jack Grealish, Oscar Bobb, Jérémy Doku and Haaland — have missed at least nine games each. In Rodri’s case, it has been seven months.

Guardiola has admitted he overestimated the ability of aging stars such as Kyle Walker, Bernardo Silva, Gündogan, Ederson and De Bruyne to maintain their performance levels.

Julián Álvarez, a willing runner who averaged a goal every three games, went to Atletico Madrid and wasn’t replaced. Phil Foden, the reigning PFA Premier League player of the year, returned from the Euros tired and still hasn’t regained his rhythm. His start against Southampton on Saturday was his first for more than a month, though he could be back to the bench against Palace.

“If you see the numbers of many players who have been here for four, five, six years, in terms of goals and assists, this year [the drop has been] incredible,” Guardiola said. “It’s all of them. Not one. One would be easy, but it’s all of them. That’s why we are struggling to create and win games.”

Guardiola has hinted he now believes he stuck with his tried and trusted players for too long. Youngsters such as Nico O’Reilly and James McAtee have been given more responsibility in recent weeks, and it has coincided with better performances.

A change to Guardiola’s tactical plan has helped. A midfield box with two deep-lying midfielders, and two inside forwards with split strikers ahead of them, has given City more control in games. It’s something they’ve lacked since Rodri’s season-ending injury in September.

There has also been a return of the fight and desire that characterized the best City teams. Gündogan told ESPN in April that he has noticed a change in mentality since a hard-fought win over Bournemouth at the Vitality Stadium in the FA Cup at the end of March. They haven’t lost since.

“The way we behave there away at their place, especially after also conceding the first one, I think it was just unbelievable,” said Gündogan.

“People tend, especially in our society and also in football society right now, they tend to credit more a beautiful goal, a beautiful assist or beautiful actions by a single player. They don’t credit anymore so much working for the team, having the right mentality and to be there, fighting for each other, staying close to each other and doing everything together.

“So sometimes you maybe drift tend to drift apart a bit from these things. But honestly, I have to say that since the international break now in March, since we came back together, I see an improvement also in that area.”

Despite an unbeaten run of 10 games, Guardiola will be wary of a Palace side that earned a 2-2 draw at Selhurst Park in December and was 2-0 up at the Etihad Stadium in April before losing 5-2. Oliver Glasner’s team was terrific in their FA Cup semifinal against Aston Villa, and in the past month, Palace have drawn with Arsenal and Nottingham Forest and beaten Tottenham Hotspur. Eberechi Eze, who has been heavily scouted by City in the past, has scored eight goals in his past 11 games for club and country.

Glasner, Eze and Palace will head to Wembley confident they can inflict another damaging defeat on a City team that has had to deal with plenty this season. For Guardiola and his players, there’s the opportunity to take another step on the road to recovery.

Espn.co.uk

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Premier League

‘Frustrated And Angry’ – Ruben Amorim Lets Rip At Man Utd After Throwing Away Lead Against West Ham

'I'm Frustrated' - Amorim Laments As Man Utd Lose Again

Manchester United had a golden opportunity to climb into the Premier League’s top five — but instead, they left Old Trafford with more frustration, more questions, and a visibly angry Ruben Amorim.

Diogo Dalot’s second-half strike should have been the start of a comfortable win. Instead, it became another night where United looked unsure, unfocused, and unable to kill off an opponent fighting for survival.

And Amorim?
He did not hide his feelings one bit.


United Drop Points… Again

United were coming off a shock defeat to 10-man Everton, and this was supposed to be the perfect response. Facing 18th-placed West Ham — a team with just one away win all season — many expected a bounce-back.

But things didn’t go as planned.

The Red Devils struggled to create clear chances, Bruno Fernandes couldn’t pull the strings, and 19-year-old Ayden Heaven looked shaky in his first Premier League start before being taken off at half-time.

West Ham stayed patient, stayed organised, and took their chance when it came.
Soungoutou Magassa pounced late in the game, smashing home from a corner to make it 1-1.

Old Trafford went silent.
Amorim, however, did not.


Amorim: “We Should Have Closed The Game Out”

The United manager could not hide his disappointment after the match.

“We lost control after the first goal,” he said. “We stopped winning second balls. We defended too far from our goal. We had the game under control and we didn’t win. That is frustrating and that is why I am angry.”

He went further on BBC Match of the Day:
“We should have closed the game with the ball. The game was there to win. We had our moments but we lost control. After the goal, we were sloppy. It’s really frustrating.”

For a manager who prides himself on structure, the collapse in control clearly hit a nerve.


The Heaven-Yoro Decision

Amorim raised eyebrows by starting Ayden Heaven and dropping Leny Yoro. But after Heaven collected an early yellow card and struggled against Callum Wilson, the manager had no choice but to make a switch.

“Of course it was the yellow card,” Amorim explained. “One more foul and it could be another yellow. We also needed him for set pieces. We have to be smarter.”

It was a risky gamble that didn’t pay off — but it wasn’t the main reason United failed to take all three points.


Dalot: “The Game Was Ours To Win”

Dalot, who scored United’s goal, echoed his manager’s frustration.

“We cannot get anxious after scoring,” he said. “We became sloppy with the ball. We knew West Ham would look for counters and set pieces, and it was more our fault than anything they did.”

United have now taken just two points from their last three Premier League games at Old Trafford — and the pressure continues to grow.


Sports Market International Verdict

This is the kind of match top-five teams win without stress. But instead, Manchester United once again handed the momentum back to a relegation-fighting opponent.

From missed chances to lack of control to late lapses, the problems are becoming predictable — and the excuses are becoming fewer.

If the Red Devils want to climb back into the elite category, these are the games they simply must win.


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Premier League

Man Utd Are Spiralling – And Only Have Themselves To Blame For Predictable WSL Struggles

Manchester United Women looking dejected during a WSL match

At the start of the season, everything looked like a fairytale for Manchester United Women. They were unbeaten in their first seven WSL games, they were in the Women’s Champions League proper for the first time ever, and momentum was firmly on their side.

Fast-forward a few weeks, and suddenly the Red Devils are battling to stop a worrying slide — with three defeats in four games knocking the confidence out of a team that once looked ready to challenge the very best.

But here’s the truth:
United’s struggles were predictable — and the club only has itself to blame.


A Bright Start Masked a Big Problem

That early-season high was impressive, no doubt. United were dealing with a crisis-level injury list, with 10 senior players unavailable before October. Marc Skinner often had only two senior outfield players on the bench, yet somehow managed to guide the team through Champions League qualifiers, secure three wins in the league phase, and remain unbeaten in the WSL.

It was admirable.
It was brave.
It was also unsustainable.


Depth? What Depth?

Their recent 3-0 demolition in the Manchester derby exposed the obvious: United simply do not have the squad depth to compete on two major fronts.

Even though City have injury concerns of their own, they still looked fresher, sharper and more prepared. The difference?
No Champions League schedule dragging them through two games a week.

It’s not just United suffering, either. Arsenal, another Champions League side, are facing similar challenges. The reality across Europe is clear:
Small squads struggle. Big squads survive. Elite squads thrive.

Barcelona can get away with using the same number of players as United because their starting XI is stacked with world-class talent. United? Not quite.


When You Can’t Train, You Can’t Improve

The problem goes beyond injuries and rotation.

As Skinner said earlier in the season:
“You can’t coach much.”

With games coming fast and recovery time eating into training sessions, there’s less time to fix tactical issues or build new patterns of play. Everything becomes reactive instead of proactive.

This isn’t noticeable when the team is winning — but the moment form dips, it becomes a mountain to climb.

United’s current rut isn’t caused by one bad performance.
It’s the result of weeks and months without the space needed to improve.


So, What Now For Man Utd Women?

The Red Devils are now seven points off the pace in the WSL and desperately need strong results in their final Champions League matches to advance.

Skinner will continue to demand more.
The players will continue to fight.
But unless United finally build a squad designed for both domestic and European battles, seasons like this will repeat themselves.

The spiral didn’t come from nowhere — it came from predictable, avoidable cracks that are now impossible to ignore.


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Roy Keane Blasts ‘Frightened’ Manchester United After West Ham Draw

Roy Keane reacting angrily during a football analysis session

Manchester United thought they had the job wrapped up at Old Trafford… until they didn’t.

Diogo Dalot’s tidy finish just before the hour mark looked like the moment that would push the Red Devils to a much-needed victory. But in classic 2025 Manchester United fashion, control slipped, intensity dipped, and West Ham pounced.

And of course—when things go wrong—Roy Keane is never far from the verbal action.


“They Weren’t Nasty Enough!” – Keane Fires Shots

After the 1-1 draw, Keane wasted zero time calling out what he sees as the real issue at United: timidity.

According to him, United “took their foot off the gas” right after scoring. Against a team in the bottom three, he expected more authority, more aggression, and definitely more hunger.

Instead, what he saw was a team “almost frightened” of finishing the job.

He slammed the players for hiding when pressure kicked in, criticized their lack of killer instinct, and even called out the relaxed body language during substitutions.

In typical Keane fashion, the message was simple:
United should never be this soft.


Amorim Also Frustrated: “The Game Was Ours To Win”

Manager Ruben Amorim didn’t sugarcoat anything either.

While he didn’t go full-Keane, he admitted:

  • United lost control after scoring

  • They failed to win second balls

  • They should have killed the match earlier

  • The inconsistency is becoming a real problem

For a team chasing European places, three draws in five games simply isn’t good enough.


West Ham Deserved Their Point

To be fair, West Ham didn’t just sit back and wait. They fought, pressed, countered, and eventually got their reward when Soungoutou Magassa slotted home the 83rd-minute equaliser.

United had late chances, but the story of their season resurfaced again:
moments created, moments wasted.


Where Do United Go From Here?

Sitting eighth on the table, United’s inconsistency continues to be their biggest opponent. Keane believes the team lacks bite. Amorim believes the team lacks control.

Fans believe the team lacks… well, everything except drama.

What’s clear is this: until United find their identity and intensity, nights like this will keep happening.


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