Completely agreed. I don't think we're up to winning the league this season, but I'm not saying that in a defeatist way. Arsenal are just solid as fuck at the moment - they've built a great side, and we're the only side capable of catching them, but we're still recovering/in transition from 24/25.One defeat and wet fannies are out in force.
Get a grip for Christ’s sake.
It’s not our God given right to win every game.
Today Pep got the team selection wrong. He didn’t do it on purpose. We still have players out injured and he’s trying to keep the players in the squad happy by giving them all gametime. As a result first half was a shit show.
There’s no way he would have started without a holding midfielder if he had a fully fit one available and once Nico came on we did look more stable.
Many teams have struggled away at Villa and we have done so in the past and gone on to win the league.
It’s still October. No need to panic yet.
Aside from that, there are lots of encouraging signs - yet one loss to Villa has some fans acting like the last 6-8 weeks never happened. 1 loss in 10 during a bumpy bit of the season (international breaks), finding new ways to play, new players are already very important to how we perform (Donnarumma, Khusanov, Gonzalez, O'Reilly).
The bigger picture is all looking broadly positive.
I said it repeatedly over the summer and I'll say it again: this season is not about challenging for the Premier League title. Sure, by all means try to win it, but for me the main targets are City getting about 75-80 points on the board, getting the good vibes back at the club, and going as far as we can in all the cups.
Last season reminded me a lot of 15-16, the last year under Pellegrini. An ageing and tired team that was badly in need of changes, miserable runs of form all season, with urgent improvement needed in the squad. The only difference between 2016 and 2025 was that we won a Wembley cup final on penalties instead of losing.
So it's fair enough to expect this year to be like 16-17, Pep's first season. A team in transition, learning new ways to play, lots of new faces adjusting to life in England. We'll have bad days while the team adjusts to all the changes going on, and we might go empty-handed again in May, but we'll quietly be building a solid foundation.
If you'd come to any City fan in January 2017 - after we lost 4-0 at Goodison Park - and said that we'd win 18 PL games in a row before the end of the year, they'd have laughed their head off. They'd have laughed even harder if you'd told them we'd beat almost all before us and finish the season with 100 points in less than 18 months time.
I'm not saying our current lads are Centurions in waiting (the PL is too good for that to happen right now), but we're a couple of specialist additions away from seriously challenging. We sacrificed a rebuild in 2023 to win that fourth title in 2024 and it was worth it to have that record. Now we're finally under way with that rebuild, just delayed.
Donnarumma
[RB?] Dias Gvardiol O'Reilly
Rodri Gonzalez
[RW?] Foden Cherki
Haaland
Trafford
Nunes Khusanov Ake Ait-Nouri
Kovacic Reijnders
Doku [CM - Mukasa?] Marmoush
[CF]
The signs are promising. In terms of equivalent fixtures from last season, we're up by 8 points (United L to W, Arsenal L to D, Brentford D to W, Everton D to W). Even in the games we've lost and haven't improved on in terms of points (Spurs, Brighton, Villa) our goal difference is up by +2. We are absolutely better than we were last season.
And we copy our results from 24-25 for the rest of this season exactly, we'll finish on 79 points, which, funnily enough, is what we finished on at the end of Pep's first season. This year is just about building foundations for the future, and I feel bad for people who haven't spotted this already - I'm just enjoying this part of the ride.
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