Plus: Sky Sports' Paul Merson says he struggles to see how things improve for Manchester United under boss Erik ten Hag and suggests something has to change at Old Trafford....
Wednesday 17 January 2024 11:52, UK
At the weekend, Kevin De Bruyne showed everyone just what Man City have been missing.
He came on at St James' Park and looked like a 20-year-old playing in an U12 league. He was head and shoulders above everyone else on the football pitch. Thierry Henry used to do the same at his peak for Arsenal in the Premier League.
Doing what he did after the length of time he was on the sidelines, it was from another planet. He wasn't playing against a team bottom of League Two in the FA Cup. He was up against international players on a big stage. He stood out like a sore thumb.
There are levels in football. De Bruyne is on the top shelf of players in the Premier League. What he did on Saturday, no-one else can do. It's just phenomenal.
It was a scary cameo for the rest of the Premier League.
What's more, City will have Erling Haaland back too in the next few weeks. They have £200m footballers coming back into what is already a star-studded squad.
Man City are now in a brilliant position.
They are two points off top spot and they haven't really got into gear yet. They've been without two of their most influential players for a substantial amount of time and they are still there or thereabouts. It tells you everything you need to know about City and the strength of the club.
I said a few weeks ago that I thought Arsenal would win the Premier League. They were flying and playing really well. However, things change quickly. The defeats against West Ham and Fulham in the league and Liverpool in the FA Cup highlighted their need for a forward.
They still have a chance, of course. But the problem they have now is you can see City going on one of their trademark runs, reeling off 10 wins on the bounce. It's relentless.
They absolutely destroyed Newcastle. The second half was absolutely relentless and we are talking about them against one of the supposed top teams. Nearly every other team struggles at St James' Park and if they do manage a positive result there, we are waxing lyrical about them.
City go there and just dominate. It was mind-blowing.
Pep Guardiola's side are easily favourites to win a fourth straight league now.
We are at the stage now where there is no room for error for any team trying to wrestle the title from City. Liverpool travel to Arsenal in a couple of weeks and a draw is no good for either side. Usually, you'd say a draw would be a good result for Liverpool at the Emirates, but not now with City in this mood.
Since a 1-0 defeat to Aston Villa in December, City have won eight of their last nine games in all competitions. It's felt like they've done that without us even knowing.
They've won their last three games in the league and now with Burnley, Brentford twice, Everton, Chelsea at home, Bournemouth, Man Utd at home before they travel to Anfield to face Liverpool, I can see them winning all those games and there's your run of 10 successive victories in the league.
We've seen this too many times from City. No-one can string wins together like they do.
I heard a stat on TV the other day about City and I nearly fell of my chair. From the 2017/18 season, in games from January until the end of the season, they average dropping 10 points a season. That's over a significant chunk of time. It's incredible.
They have had their bad results this season. That will give others hope but at this point of the season, this is when Pep gets them going and we've seen this story unfold time and time again with City. City just win, win, win and win, and win some more. That's the difference.
Erik ten Hag is still under serious pressure at Manchester United.
If you look at Tottenham and their boss Ange Postecoglou, who only joined in the summer, he's been there about 10 minutes but already his players know what he expects from them and from watching the 2-2 draw with United at Old Trafford, it looks like they know what they are trying to do. There's a plan there and everyone looks on the same page.
On the other hand, watching Man Utd, it's chalk and cheese in comparison to Spurs. At times it looks good, but more often than not there is nothing there. On Sunday against Spurs, I hardly heard Bruno Fernandes' name but he's their best player. He should be on the ball all of the time. Why can't United find solutions to get him the ball?
It's all so scruffy from United.
Ten Hag has lost nearly half of his football matches this season. I don't care if you are managing the bottom side in League Two, with form like that you'd do well to keep your job.
They are such a long way off the pace. I wasn't shocked they didn't beat Spurs on Sunday. It's just where they are as a club. The reality is they are eight points behind Spurs and Arsenal, who also have a game in hand.
It's just so stop-start. They get a win or two here or there but that's it before a couple of defeats or draws follow. It feels like Ten Hag gets the games he needs at just the right time. He gets a game where he can sneak a win and that just keeps his head above water.
The players are also so up and down. One minute they are amazing and then they are not. They are going from nine out of 10s one week to not even a five the next. Ten Hag has to find a way to get these players performing consistently, putting in seven and eights out of 10 week in week out.
The consistency is just not there.
When do you start expecting better things from them? I personally think it's gone past that. I can't really see it getting better any time soon. For me, I can see them keeping going as they are winning a game here or there to cover over the cracks before losing a game here or there.
Something has to give soon. Something has to change at Old Trafford.
The new investors have to hit the ground running.
They need change and they started that with the departure of Jadon Sancho on loan to Borussia Dortmund.
With that deal, you have to believe the manager is staying long-term and in fairness, if you get rid of Ten Hag, how many managers are out there who you could get in as a replacement? Could you tempt a Carlo Ancelotti for a season or so? It's debatable.
What United do need is stability. They've done the changing manager thing a number of times since Sir Alex Ferguson left the club. It hasn't worked.
We've seen Mikel Arteta at Arsenal backed. When many were calling for change, the Gunners gave him a chance to stamp his authority at the club and look where they are now.
It's all well and good me questioning Ten Hag and speculating how he can keep his job, but if someone else comes in I don't think United's fortunes turn around overnight.
However, the club don't have any excuses now. The players and manager can't stand behind the owners. they have to start winning football matches.