Kylian Mbappe stuns Man City as pair of January signings endure shocker with Ruben Dias

Kylian Mbappe stuns Man City as pair of January signings endure shocker with Ruben Dias

The Real Madrid vs Manchester City rivalry was great while it lasted, but Kylian Mbappe is back and Pep Guardiola’s side are done.

“He’s like a mini-Rodri,” Pep Guardiola said after Nico Gonzalez’s commanding performance in the 4-0 win over Newcastle, in which he became the first Manchester City player to attempt 100 or more passes, complete a 95 per cent pass accuracy, and complete ten or more passes into the final third since Rodri at the end of last season.

Guardiola did also caution that Gonzalez is “far away in some things” compared to Rodri, and those things were very apparent at the Bernabeu.

Moments after allowing Jude Bellingham a one-on-one pop at the criminally isolated Abdukodir Khusanov on the left by barely jogging to keep up with the Real Madrid star, he flicked a bouncing ball to no-one under no pressure in midfield. He couldn’t have looked less like the man whose absence he’s supposed to be mitigating.

Poor Khusanov. He was playing in the Belarusian first division 18 months ago and was left to fend for himself against Vincius Junior, arguably the best dribbler in world football, and often Kylian Mbappe, the other guy vying for that crown, who smelled blood and drifted towards the side in which he’s made fools of the very best in the past to have his way with the 20-year-old. It felt almost cruel at times.

Inexperience is a handy caveat for him, and Gonzalez to a lesser extent, but Ruben Dias has no such excuse after losing the flight of the ball in the fourth minute to gift Madrid and Mbappe the opener.

He might blame the lack of pressure on Raul Asencio as the young defender looked up and pumped a ball long, the high line which granted the famously rapid Mbappe an absurd amount of space to run into, or a lack of match sharpness in a season beset by injuries.

But Dias was once among the very best defenders in world football, and at no point this season has he proven himself worthy of the widespread opinion that he’s been as big a miss as Rodri when he’s been out of the team.

It was a fine finish from Mbappe that he would likely have fluffed in an early-season bedding-in period at Madrid.

His 25th of the season was followed later in the half by his 26th, as Madrid eased through City’s midfield, with the also brilliant Rodrygo finding Mbappe through Khusanov’s legs before the striker sent Josko Gvardiol for what the kids call a hotdog before sweeping the ball into the side-netting.

MORE MAN CITY COVERAGE ON F365…
👉 Man City FFP: ’60 to 100-point deduction’ after ‘corporate fraud’ touted by football finance expert
👉 Man City: ‘El Cyborg in talks’ over £124m transfer with City to ‘spend big’ on five colossal signings
👉 Man City suffer team news blow as Real Madrid reveal key figure will return: ‘Everything is at stake’

His 27th arrived midway through the second half, shortly after he was brilliantly denied a tap-in by Ederson, as he cut in and passed the ball into the bottom corner from the edge of the box.

Consider him bedded. Consider the best footballer in the world back to his best. Consider Real Madrid Champions League favourites again. They’re going to take some stopping.

The “lack of urgency” from Guardiola’s side was laboured over on commentary, with Steve McManaman particularly baffled by City failing to lay a glove on their opponents. But it needs no explanation beyond Real Madrid having better players in every single position on the pitch.

The need for a significant City rebuild has been well-documented this season, but after a game in which they were embarrassed by the side they drew with in the Bernaebeu less than a year ago before losing to them on penalties at the Etihad, the road back has never felt longer.

These two sides have given us some outstanding entertainment over the last five years, with two knockout-tie wins apiece, but the Real Madrid vs Manchester City rivalry as we’ve known it has come to a bleak and unsatisfying end, with the one European giant set for further glory as they get firmly into their stride while the other can barely still claim the moniker.

OR

Scroll to Top