2023–24 Manchester City F.C. season

The 2023–24 season is the 129th season in the existence of Manchester City Football Club and their 22nd consecutive season in the top flight of English football, where they are competing as three-time defending champions. As reigning continental treble winners, Manchester City are participating in seven competitions this season, namely the Premier League, FA Cup, EFL Cup, FA Community Shield, UEFA Champions League; entering the latter for the 13th consecutive season and as defending champions for the first time; UEFA Super Cup and FIFA Club World Cup; also making their debut in the latter two tournaments.

Manchester City
2023–24 season
Manchester City players applaud the fans after the friendly match against Yokohama F. Marinos, 23 July 2023
OwnerCity Football Group
ChairmanKhaldoon Al Mubarak
ManagerPep Guardiola
StadiumEtihad Stadium
Premier League2nd
FA CupFinal
EFL CupThird round
FA Community ShieldRunners-up
UEFA Champions LeagueQuarter-finals
UEFA Super CupWinners
FIFA Club World CupWinners
Top goalscorerLeague:
Erling Haaland (20)

All:
Erling Haaland (31)
Highest home attendance53,514 v Manchester United
3 March 2024
(Premier League)
Lowest home attendance50,204 v Red Star Belgrade
19 September 2023
(Champions League)
Average home league attendance52,923
Biggest win6–1 v Bournemouth
(Home)
4 November 2023
(Premier League)

5–0 v Huddersfield Town
(Home)
7 January 2024
(FA Cup)
Biggest defeat0–1 v Newcastle United
(Away)
27 September 2023
(EFL Cup)

1–2 v Wolverhampton Wanderers
(Away)
30 September 2023
(Premier League)

0–1 v Arsenal
(Away)
8 October 2023
(Premier League)

0–1 v Aston Villa
(Away)
6 December 2023
(Premier League)

City kicked off the unprecedented season on 6 August 2023 by losing the Community Shield for the third consecutive year, this time to Arsenal. They drew 1–1 in normal time, having conceded an eleventh-minute injury time equaliser and lost the subsequent penalty shoot-out 1–4. As such, the Blues lost out on an opportunity to become only the third European men's club to win the sextuple.[1] City clinched their first trophy of the season ten days later, on 16 August, in another one-off match, overcoming Sevilla on penalties after a 1–1 draw after extra time for the club's first-ever UEFA Super Cup.[2] On 27 September, the Blues were knocked out of the League Cup in the third round by Newcastle United following a 1–0 away loss.[3] On 22 December, City defeated Fluminense 4–0 in the Club World Cup final to win the competition for the first time, becoming the first English club to hold five major domestic and international titles simultaneously.[4]

In 2024, City's title defence in the Champions League came to an end on 17 April as they were knocked out by Real Madrid in a penalty shootout after a 4–4 aggregate draw over the two legs.[5]

The season is the first since 2015–16 without German midfielder and former club captain İlkay Gündoğan, who departed to Barcelona at the end of his contract in the summer. Kyle Walker eventually replaced him as the new captain.

Kits edit

Supplier: Puma / Sponsor: Etihad Airways

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Season summary edit

Pre-season edit

In the aftermath of their historic continental treble-winning season in 2022–23, City's main squad issues ahead of the new season were whether incumbent club captain İlkay Gündoğan would sign a new contract or leave the club on a free transfer after seven successful years;[6] if Kyle Walker would be transferred ahead of his final contract year;[7] whether Aymeric Laporte would be leaving for more playing time, following a season in which he had fallen down the pecking order for central defenders;[8] and, after several years of pre-season speculation, if Bernardo Silva could attract an acceptable fee to allow him to move away from Manchester too.[9]

It was rumoured that City were in transfer talks with Mateo Kovačić from Chelsea and with Joško Gvardiol from RB Leipzig as potential replacements for Gündoğan and Laporte, respectively.[10]

On 21 June, it was announced that Gündoğan would be joining Barcelona on the expiration of his contract after all. His last action as a City player was therefore lifting the club's first Champions League trophy as team captain.[11] On the same day, it was reported that Manchester City had agreed a fee with Chelsea for the transfer of Kovačić.[12]

To further strengthen the team's midfield, City also entered a bidding race with Arsenal for West Ham's Declan Rice, a player similar in profile to Rodri. The club's first offer of £80 million guaranteed plus £10 million in add-ons was rejected by West Ham.[13][14] Man City pulled out of the race to sign Rice, after West Ham rejected Arsenal's bid of £100 million plus £5 million in add-ons, instead opting to find other players to strengthen their midfield, first being linked with Celta Vigo's Gabri Veiga.[15][16]

Kovačić's transfer was duly announced on 27 June, for a reported initial fee of £25m plus £5m in potential add-ons.[17]

On 28 July, City announced Riyad Mahrez was leaving the club after five successful years to join Al-Ahli in the Saudi Professional League for a £30 million fee. He was one of many high-profile players in their thirties attracted by lucrative contract offers to join the Saudi league that summer.[18]

The transfer of Gvardiol was confirmed on 5 August after several weeks of negotiations with Leipzig for a reported fee of €90 million (£77.5 million).[19] The club confirmed he would take the 24 shirt number for the season, last worn by John Stones during his first year at City.[20]

The Blues started their pre-season preparations some one to two weeks later than their main rivals to account for their late finish to the previous treble-winning campaign. City played three friendly warm-up games in a tour of Japan and South Korea, where they defeated Yokohama F. Marinos, a fellow CFG club, and Bayern Munich, but lost to Atlético Madrid.

Start of season edit

City suffered a defeat for the third consecutive season in their opening competitive fixture, losing the Community Shield on penalties to Arsenal after a 1–1 draw in normal time at Wembley Stadium on 6 August. Cole Palmer had scored from a wonderful curling shot in the 77th minute, but Leandro Trossard equalised in the eleventh minute of injury time when a cruel double deflection from Julián Álvarez and Manuel Akanji wrong-footed Stefan Ortega. In the subsequent penalty shoot-out, Arsenal scored all four penalties, but Kevin De Bruyne's powerful drive hit the cross-bar and Rodri's attempt was saved by Aaron Ramsdale. Losing the English equivalent of a national super cup deprived Manchester City of the opportunity to become only the third European men's club to win the sextuple.[1]

Manchester City started their Premier League campaign with a 3–0 win over Burnley at Turf Moor. Erling Haaland scored twice, and Rodri also chipped in with a goal to seal the victory.[21] Kevin De Bruyne was substituted in the first half, and Pep Guardiola later confirmed that he had sustained a hamstring injury which could keep him out for up to four months if surgery was needed.[22]

On 16 August, City played Sevilla in the 2023 UEFA Super Cup, winning on penalties after a 1–1 draw in normal time and lifting the trophy for the first time in club history.[2]

On 22 August, it was revealed that Pep Guardiola had undergone emergency back surgery and would be unavailable until recovery.[23] During this time, assistant manager Juanma Lillo took charge, winning two games against Sheffield United away and Fulham at home by the scores of 2–1 and 5–1 respectively. The latter game included Haaland's first hat-trick of the season as he became the fastest player to score 40 Premier League goals (in just 39 games), beating the previous records set by Andrew Cole and Alan Shearer.[24]

In the final days of the transfer window City brought in exciting Belgian winger Jérémy Doku from Rennes, to effectively replace Mahrez, and creative Portuguese midfielder Matheus Nunes from Wolverhampton Wanderers, both for fees in excess of £50 million.[25][26] In the other direction, Aymeric Laporte left the club as expected to join Al Nassr in the Saudi League, João Cancelo joined Barcelona for a season-long loan, and academy graduate Cole Palmer joined Chelsea for a fee in excess of £40 million.[27][28][29]

By the time of the first international break of the season on 3 September, City were the only remaining Premier League club with a 100% win record and topped the standings by a two-point margin. On 16 September, the Blues extended their winning start in the league to five games by defeating West Ham 3–1 at the London Stadium, with goals from new signing Jeremy Doku, Bernardo Silva and Erling Haaland.[30]

City's winning run came to an abrupt end at St James' Park vs Newcastle United in the EFL Cup third round, with the Blues being shut out by a reinvigorated Eddie Howe side and exiting the competition at the first hurdle.[3] This was followed by the first league defeat after six consecutive victories at Wolves, with Álvarez scoring an equalising free kick in an eventual 1–2 loss.[31]

Autumn period edit

Manchester City began October with a second consecutive league defeat, this time at Arsenal, losing 0–1 due to a late Gabriel Martinelli winner.[32] This meant the Blues had lost all three games where Rodri served a suspension for a red card he received against Nottingham Forest in September, and they dropped below unbeaten Arsenal and Tottenham in the league table. However, City's good form soon returned and they notably beat their closest rivals Manchester United 3–0 at Old Trafford in the season's first derby match and achieved the biggest winning margin so far by defeating Bournemouth 6–1 at home. The latter game included four assists and a goal from Doku, who set a new club record, equalled the Premier League record for most assists in a single match and, at the age of 21 years and 161 days, became both the youngest player in Premier League history with five goal involvements and the youngest player to assist four goals in a single game.[33][34]

A comfortable 3–0 home victory against Young Boys on 7 November ensured that title holders City would participate in the knockout stages of the Champions League for the 11th consecutive season with two group games to spare.[35]

Two league draws either side of the final autumn international break: an exciting game against Chelsea at Stamford Bridge that ended 4–4 and a 1–1 draw against Liverpool at home; left City in second place, a point behind Arsenal with a third of the season played. The Blues ended November coming back from two goals down to beat RB Leipzig 3–2 and win their Champions League group for the seventh consecutive season with a game to spare and preserve their record unbeaten streak and winning home streak in the competition.[36]

A third consecutive league draw against Tottenham at the start of December at home was followed by City's third league defeat of the season by a single goal away to an in-form Aston Villa who moved above them in the table. The champions had now not won a league game for a month and were in fourth place in the league table, six points behind leaders Arsenal.[37]

This barren run was finally ended at Luton on 10 December, with a 2–1 victory, despite the absence of goalscoring talisman Haaland due to injury.[38] The final Champions League group game against Red Star Belgrade on 13 December was a dead rubber with both sides' final positions already confirmed. Guardiola used this as an opportunity to make nine changes to the team and give debuts to a few academy players and playing time to less often selected first team players. All three City goalscorers in the subsequent 3–2 victory, Micah Hamilton, Oscar Bobb and Kalvin Phillips, scored their first senior City goals, with Hamilton scoring on his first team debut, and the victory meant City had completed a Champions League group with maximum points for the first time in their history.[39]

On 16 December, Crystal Palace were able to pull back from being two goals down to inflict City's third consecutive home league draw and fourth league draw in six games, leaving them fourth in the table and five points behind leaders Arsenal.[40] The Blues would drop to fifth and the gap to the top widened to six points by Christmas, as City's final pre-holiday game against Brentford had been postponed due to their participation in the FIFA Club World Cup.

Manchester City travelled to Jeddah in Saudi Arabia as favourites and duly returned as world champions, having beaten AFC Champions League champions Urawa Red Diamonds 3–0 in the semi-finals and Copa Libertadores champions Fluminense 4–0 in the final to lift the trophy at their first attempt.[4] They became the first English team to hold five major domestic and continental titles simultaneously, and Guardiola emerged as the first coach to win the Club World Cup with three separate clubs, having previously succeeded at Barcelona and Bayern Munich. City would be the last team to win the title in its current format as the competition was to be expanded from seven to 32 participating clubs for the 2025 edition.

Christmas and New Year edit

City came back from a goal down for the second consecutive away game to defeat Everton 3–1 on their return to domestic football on 27 December,[41] and remained undefeated over the holiday season to end 2023 third in the league standings, five points behind leaders Liverpool with a game in hand.

The Blues kicked off their FA Cup campaign with a convincing 5–0 home victory over Huddersfield Town in the third round, with two goals from Phil Foden and an assist from Kevin De Bruyne who was returning for his first appearance since suffering a hamstring injury in August. The team's final game before the mid-winter break on 13 January saw them win 3–2 at St. James' Park in an exciting encounter against Newcastle United. City came back from 1–2 down with an injury time winner from youngster Oscar Bobb and a goal and an assist from De Bruyne in a 20 minute cameo.[42]

Kalvin Phillips was loaned to West Ham for the remainder of the season after City returned from a week of warm weather training in Abu Dhabi.[43] On 26 January, Nathan Aké scored an 88th-minute winner to beat Spurs 1–0 away in the fourth round of the FA Cup and qualify for the last 16. This was the club's first goal at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, scored in City's sixth fixture there since it opened in 2019 and after 102 goal attempts.[44]

Phil Foden scored his second senior career hat-trick as the Blues won 3–1 at Brentford's Gtech Community Stadium on 5 February. The victory put Manchester City within two points of leaders Liverpool with a game in hand.[45]

A brace from Erling Haaland, marking the first time he scored since his return from a two-month injury lay-off, were enough to defeat Everton 2–0 at home in an early kick-off on 10 February. The win put City ahead in the league standings for the first time since October, albeit briefly until Liverpool won against Burnley later that day.

On resumption of the Champions League, City beat Copenhagen 3–1 away from home on 13 February in the first leg of the round of 16. De Bruyne scored and assisted, having contributed eight goal involvements since his return from injury four weeks before.

By the end of February, Manchester City had extended their unbeaten run to 18 games in all competitions, taking them to within a point of leaders Liverpool and a point ahead of third-placed Arsenal in what was turning out to be a three-way title race. The Blues ended the month with a convincing 6–2 victory at Kenilworth Road against Luton Town in the FA Cup fifth round. Erling Haaland scored five goals in a single match for the second time in his short City career, with Kevin De Bruyne assisting four of them.[46]

Season run-in edit

City were due to face a home derby and all of the other top-four sides in a crucial run of games in March and early April, which could go a long way to decide the destination of the league title. They started with a 3–1 victory against the local rivals, coming back from a goal down after a 25-yard Marcus Rashford strike with a dominant display and a brace of well-taken Phil Foden goals.[47] This was the first time in the Premier League era that City had come from behind to beat United and the first time in 143 competitive games that United had lost when leading at half-time. It was also Rodri's 59th consecutive appearance for City without experiencing defeat, a new Premier League record.[48]

On 6 March, the Champions League holders swept aside Copenhagen 6–2 on aggregate to reach the quarter-finals for the seventh successive season and become the first English club to win 10 consecutive matches in the competition, and the first side in major European competition history to score 3+ goals in nine consecutive home games, a run which started with a 5–0 win over Copenhagen back in October 2022.[49]

City drew 1–1 against Liverpool at Anfield on 10 March. The Blues had been ahead from a well-executed set piece corner that led to John Stones' first goal of the season, but Liverpool equalised via a penalty awarded after Ederson had fouled Núñez while dealing with an under hit Aké back-pass. This meant City slipped to third place, a point behind both new leaders Arsenal and Liverpool.

Two deflected goals from Bernardo Silva in the first half were enough in a comfortable 2–0 victory over Newcastle in the FA Cup quarter-finals on 16 March, taking Manchester City to the semi-finals at Wembley for a record-breaking sixth season in a row and seventh time in Guardiola's eight seasons at the club.[50]

Arsenal held City to a 0–0 draw at the Etihad on 31 March, leaving the Blues in third place. However, victories against Aston Villa at home and Crystal Palace away kept pressure on the leading two clubs. These games were also notable for including Phil Foden's second hat-trick of the season, taking him to over 20 goals for the first time in his professional career; and a brace from Kevin De Bruyne which marked his 100th goal scored for the club.[51][52][53] With Liverpool drawing at Manchester United on 7 April, City were now a point behind both Arsenal and Liverpool with seven games to go.[54]

In the first leg of their Champions League quarter-finals against Real Madrid on 9 April at the Santiago Bernabéu, City were missing both their first choice full-backs Walker and Aké due to injuries picked up in the last international break and De Bruyne spent the entire match on the bench with a bout of gastroenteritis. Madrid players had also recently benefited from a nine day rest, while City played two league matches at the start of April. In the game, Bernardo Silva opened the scoring with a low shot from a free kick after just two minutes, before Eduardo Camavinga and Rodrygo gave Real the lead with two deflected goals a minute apart. In the second half, City applied more pressure and levelled in the 66th minute through a Phil Foden strike from the edge of the area into the top corner and then went ahead five minutes later when Joško Gvardiol produced another stunning long range shot to score his first goal for the club. Federico Valverde's superb volley in the 79th rescued a draw for Real, and the match ended 3–3.

Manchester City moved back to lead the league table by two points after an eventful weekend on the following matchday. The Blues comfortably beat Luton 5–1 at home on 13 April as Guardiola rested several key players in anticipation of the upcoming second leg against Madrid. Both City's title rivals were then beaten the following day at home: Liverpool by Crystal Palace and Arsenal by Aston Villa.[55]

On 17 April, City were dramatically eliminated by Real Madrid in the reverse leg at the Etihad Stadium. An early goal from Rodrygo was cancelled out in the 76th minute by a Kevin De Bruyne strike in a game dominated by City possession and resolute defending from Madrid. With no further goals the match ended 4–4 after extra time on aggregate and duly went to penalties. Despite Luka Modrić missing Madrid's first attempt, Los Blancos ran out 4–3 winners, with Bernardo Silva's attempted panenka being easily saved and another from substitute Kovačić also saved by keeper Andriy Lunin.[5]

Three days later, the Blues were at Wembley Stadium to play their FA Cup semi-final against Chelsea. Chelsea forward Nicolas Jackson had several promising chances to score during the match but failed to convert them. An 84th minute goal from Bernardo Silva eventually proved to be the difference. City would play their closest rivals Manchester United in the final for the second consecutive season, after they had scraped past Coventry City in the other semi-final on penalties.[56][57]

First-team squad edit

As of 26 January 2024[58]
No. Player Position Nationality Date of birth (age) Signed from Date signed Fee Contract end
Goalkeepers
18 Stefan Ortega GK   (1992-11-06) 6 November 1992 (age 31)   Arminia Bielefeld 1 July 2022 Free transfer 2025
31 Ederson GK   (1993-08-17) 17 August 1993 (age 30)   Benfica 1 July 2017 £34.9m 2026
33 Scott Carson GK   (1985-09-02) 2 September 1985 (age 38) Derby County 20 July 2021 Free transfer 2024
Defenders
2 Kyle Walker (C) RB / CB   (1990-05-28) 28 May 1990 (age 33) Tottenham Hotspur 14 July 2017 £45.0m 2026
3 Rúben Dias (VC) CB   (1997-05-14) 14 May 1997 (age 26)   Benfica 29 September 2020 £62.0m[a] 2027
5 John Stones CB / RB / DM   (1994-05-28) 28 May 1994 (age 29) Everton 9 August 2016 £47.5m 2026
6 Nathan Aké CB / LB   (1995-02-18) 18 February 1995 (age 29) Bournemouth 5 August 2020 £40.0m 2027
21 Sergio Gómez LB / AM   (2000-09-04) 4 September 2000 (age 23)   Anderlecht 16 August 2022 £11.0m 2026
24 Joško Gvardiol CB / LB   (2002-01-23) 23 January 2002 (age 22)   RB Leipzig 5 August 2023 £77.5m 2028
25 Manuel Akanji CB / RB / LB / DM   (1995-07-19) 19 July 1995 (age 28)   Borussia Dortmund 1 September 2022 £15.0m 2027
82 Rico Lewis RB / DM / AM   (2004-11-21) 21 November 2004 (age 19) Academy 1 July 2022 2028
Midfielders
8 Mateo Kovačić DM / CM / AM   (1994-05-06) 6 May 1994 (age 29) Chelsea 27 June 2023 £25.0m 2027
10 Jack Grealish LW / AM / RW   (1995-09-10) 10 September 1995 (age 28) Aston Villa 5 August 2021 £100.0m 2027
11 Jérémy Doku RW / LW / AM   (2002-05-27) 27 May 2002 (age 21)   Rennes 24 August 2023 £55.5m 2028
16 Rodri (VC) DM   (1996-06-22) 22 June 1996 (age 27)   Atlético Madrid 4 July 2019 £62.8m 2027
17 Kevin De Bruyne (VC) CM / AM   (1991-06-28) 28 June 1991 (age 32)   VfL Wolfsburg 30 August 2015 £54.5m 2025
20 Bernardo Silva (VC) CM / AM / LW / RW   (1994-08-10) 10 August 1994 (age 29)   Monaco 1 July 2017 £43.5m 2026
27 Matheus Nunes CM / AM / DM / RW / LW   (1998-08-27) 27 August 1998 (age 25) Wolverhampton Wanderers 1 September 2023 £53m 2028
47 Phil Foden AM / CM / LW / RW   (2000-05-28) 28 May 2000 (age 23) Academy 1 July 2017 2027
52 Oscar Bobb RW / ST   (2003-07-12) 12 July 2003 (age 20)   Vålerenga 12 July 2019 2029
Forwards
9 Erling Haaland ST   (2000-07-21) 21 July 2000 (age 23)   Borussia Dortmund 1 July 2022 £51.2m 2027
19 Julián Álvarez ST / AM / LW / RW / SS   (2000-01-31) 31 January 2000 (age 24)   River Plate 31 January 2022 £14.1m 2028
Includes first team players and EDS players who train routinely with the first team and have made at least one league appearance.
  1. ^ City player Nicolás Otamendi was included in the deal, bringing the transfer fee paid to £50m.
Key
# – Current EDS Squad player.
† – Signed in January window.
‡ – Initially signed to Academy team.

Transfers edit

Transfers in edit

Date Pos. No. Player From Fee Team Ref.
27 June 2023 MF 8   Mateo Kovačić Chelsea £25,000,000 First team [59][60]
1 July 2023 GK   Spike Brits AFC Wimbledon Undisclosed Academy [61]
5 August 2023 DF 24   Joško Gvardiol   RB Leipzig £77,500,000 First team [20]
24 August 2023 MF 11   Jérémy Doku   Rennes £55,500,000 First team [25]
1 September 2023 MF 27   Matheus Nunes Wolverhampton Wanderers £53,000,000 First team [26]
1 September 2023 DF   Jamal Baptiste West Ham United Free Academy [62]
25 January 2024 MF   Claudio Echeverri   River Plate £12,500,000 First team [63]
Total £233,500,000

Transfers out edit

Date Pos. No. Player To Fee Team Ref.
30 June 2023 RB 99   Terrell Agyemang Middlesbrough Free transfer Academy [64]
30 June 2023 MF 8   İlkay Gündoğan   Barcelona Free transfer First team [65][11]
30 June 2023 MF 64   Rowan McDonald   Waterford End of contract Academy [65][66]
30 June 2023 DF 22   Benjamin Mendy   Lorient End of contract First team [65]
6 July 2023 GK 98   Josh McNamara Southampton Undisclosed Academy [67]
7 July 2023 FW 72   Morgan Rogers Middlesbrough Undisclosed Academy [68]
8 July 2023 GK 84   Cieran Slicker Ipswich Town Undisclosed Academy [69]
12 July 2023 MF 62   Shea Charles Southampton £10,500,000 Academy [70]
14 July 2023 MF   Yangel Herrera   Girona £4,300,000 City Football Group [71]
20 July 2023 GK 85   James Trafford Burnley £15,000,000 Academy [72]
26 July 2023 FW 58   Adedire Mebude   Westerlo £1,500,000 Academy [73]
28 July 2023 FW 26   Riyad Mahrez   Al-Ahli £30,000,000 First team [18]
3 August 2023 FW 91   Carlos Forbs   Ajax £12,000,000 Academy [74]
15 August 2023 MF   Jack Fletcher Manchester United £625,000 Academy [75]
15 August 2023 MF   Tyler Fletcher Manchester United £625,000 Academy [75]
24 August 2023 DF 14   Aymeric Laporte   Al Nassr £23,600,000 First team [27]
1 September 2023 MF 80   Cole Palmer Chelsea £42,500,000 First team [29]
1 September 2023 GK 63   Mikki van Sas   Feyenoord Undisclosed Academy [76]
1 September 2023 FW   Daniel Ogwuru Norwich City Undisclosed Academy [77]
4 January 2024 GK 13   Zack Steffen   Colorado Rapids Undisclosed First team [78]
1 February 2024 MF   Alfie Harrison Newcastle United Undisclosed Academy [79]
Total £141,650,000

Loans out edit

Date Pos. No. Player Loaned to On loan until Team Ref.
2 July 2023 FW 48   Liam Delap Hull City End of season Academy [80]
11 July 2023 MF 50   Kian Breckin Wycombe Wanderers 4 January 2024[a] Academy [81][82]
14 July 2023 DF 39   Yan Couto   Girona End of season City Football Group [83]
14 July 2023 DF 86   Callum Doyle Leicester City End of season Academy [84]
21 July 2023 DF   Issa Kaboré Luton Town End of season City Football Group [85]
21 July 2023 DF 97   Josh Wilson-Esbrand   Reims 1 February 2024[b] First team [86]
1 August 2023 DF 94   Finley Burns Stevenage End of season Academy [87]
7 August 2023 MF 93   Alex Robertson Portsmouth End of season Academy [88]
8 August 2023 FW   Filip Stevanović   Waalwijk End of season City Football Group [89]
8 August 2023 DF   Nahuel Ferraresi   São Paulo 31 December 2023 City Football Group [90]
23 August 2023 MF 32   Máximo Perrone   Las Palmas End of season First team [91]
26 August 2023 DF 79   Luke Mbete   Den Bosch End of season Academy [92]
29 August 2023 DF 70   Jadel Katongo Peterborough United End of season Academy [93]
1 September 2023 DF 12   Taylor Harwood-Bellis Southampton End of season Academy [94]
1 September 2023 MF 69   Tommy Doyle Wolverhampton Wanderers End of season Academy [95]
1 September 2023 MF 87   James McAtee Sheffield United End of season First team [96]
1 September 2023 DF 7   João Cancelo   Barcelona End of season First team [28]
1 September 2023 FW   Slobodan Tedić Charlton Athletic 5 January 2024[c] City Football Group [97][98]
6 September 2023 DF   Jamal Baptiste   Lommel 31 December 2023 Academy [62]
5 January 2024 MF 71   Lewis Fiorini Charlton Athletic End of season Academy [98]
25 January 2024 MF   Claudio Echeverri   River Plate 31 December 2024 First team [63]
26 January 2024 MF 4   Kalvin Phillips West Ham United End of season First team [43]
1 February 2024 DF 97   Josh Wilson-Esbrand Cardiff City End of season First team [99]
12 March 2024 MF 96   Ben Knight Stockport County End of season Academy [100]
  1. ^ On 4 January, Breckin was recalled from his season-long loan at Wycombe early.
  2. ^ On 1 February, Wilson-Esbrand was recalled from his season-long loan at Reims early.
  3. ^ On 5 January, Tedic was recalled from his season-long loan at Charlton Athletic early.

New contracts edit

Date Pos. No. Player Contract until Team Ref.
29 July 2023 DF 6   Nathan Aké 2027 First team [101]
15 August 2023 DF 82   Rico Lewis 2028 First team [102]
23 August 2023 MF 20   Bernardo Silva 2026 First team [103]
1 September 2023 DF 12   Taylor Harwood-Bellis 2025 Academy [104]
14 September 2023 DF 2   Kyle Walker 2026 First team [105]
26 February 2024 MF 52   Oscar Bobb 2029 First team [106]

Pre-season and friendlies edit

On 20 April 2023, Manchester City announced a tour of South Korea as part of the pre-season preparations in July, where they would take on Atlético Madrid in the Coupang Play Series. This tour was the first time City visited South Korea since 1976.[107] The club later announced that two friendlies against Yokohama F. Marinos, a fellow CFG club, and Bayern Munich, who City faced a year ago in the United States, would take place in Tokyo before the team traveled to South Korea.[108]

23 July 2023 J.League World Challenge Yokohama F. Marinos   3–5   Manchester City Tokyo, Japan
19:00 JST
Report
Stadium: Japan National Stadium
Attendance: 61,618
Referee: Hiroki Kasahara (Japan)
26 July 2023 Friendly Bayern Munich   1–2   Manchester City Tokyo, Japan
19:30 JST
Report
Stadium: Japan National Stadium
Attendance: 65,049
Referee: Jumpei Iida (Japan)
30 July 2023 Coupang Play Series Manchester City   1–2   Atlético Madrid Mapo, South Korea
20:40 KST
Report
Stadium: Seoul World Cup Stadium
Attendance: 64,185
Note: The match was delayed by 40 minutes due to heavy rain.

Competitions edit

Overall record edit

Competition First match Last match Starting round Final position Record
Pld W D L GF GA GD Win %
Premier League 11 August 2023 19 May 2024 Matchday 1 33 23 7 3 80 32 +48 069.70
FA Cup 7 January 2024 25 May 2024 Third round 5 5 0 0 15 2 +13 100.00
EFL Cup 27 September 2023 Third round Third round 1 0 0 1 0 1 −1 000.00
FA Community Shield 6 August 2023 Final Runners-up 1 0 1 0 1 1 +0 000.00
UEFA Champions League 19 September 2023 17 April 2024 Group stage Quarter-finals 10 8 2 0 28 13 +15 080.00
UEFA Super Cup 16 August 2023 Final Winners 1 0 1 0 1 1 +0 000.00
FIFA Club World Cup 19 December 2023 22 December 2023 Semi-finals Winners 2 2 0 0 7 0 +7 100.00
Total 53 38 11 4 132 50 +82 071.70

Last updated: 25 April 2024
Source: Soccerway

Premier League edit

League table edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Arsenal (Q) 35 25 5 5 85 28 +57 80 Qualification for the Champions League league phase
2 Manchester City (X) 33 23 7 3 80 32 +48 76
3 Liverpool (X) 35 22 9 4 77 36 +41 75
4 Aston Villa (X) 35 20 7 8 73 52 +21 67
5 Tottenham Hotspur 33 18 6 9 67 52 +15 60 Qualification for the Europa League league phase[a]
Updated to match(es) played on 28 April 2024 (2 of 3 matches played). Source: Premier League
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored; 4) If the champions, relegated teams or qualified teams for UEFA competitions cannot be determined by rules 1 to 3, rules 4.1 to 4.3 are applied – 4.1) Points gained in head-to-head record between such teams; 4.2) Away goals scored in head-to-head record between such teams; 4.3) Play-offs[109]
(Q) Qualified for phase indicated; (X) Assured of at least Europa League league stage
Notes:
  1. ^ The winners of the 2023–24 FA Cup (Manchester City or Manchester United) also qualify for the Europa League league stage. If the cup winners qualify for the Champions League or Europa League via league position, the spot given to the cup winners will pass to the highest-placed team below the Europa League qualifying position.


Results summary edit

Overall Home Away
Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts W D L GF GA GD W D L GF GA GD
33 23 7 3 80 32  +48 76 12 5 0 43 14  +29 11 2 3 37 18  +19

Last updated: 25 April 2024.
Source: Soccerway

Results by matchday edit

Round1234567891011121314151617192021222324251812627283031323329235363734338
GroundAHAHAHAAHAHAHHAAHAHAHAHHHAHAHHAHAAHAAH
ResultWWWWWWLLWWWDDDLWDWWWWWWDWWWDDWWWW
Position321111132311234444322223222333312
Points369121518181821242728293030333437404346495253565962636467707376
Updated to match(es) played on 25 April 2024. Source: Premier League
A = Away; H = Home; W = Win; D = Draw; L = Loss; P = Postponed
Notes:
  • Positions show the situation at the end of the corresponding Game Weeks (GW), not the position at the conclusion of matches or game days.

1 Matchday 18 (vs Brentford) was postponed to 20 February 2024 due to Manchester City's participation in the FIFA Club World Cup.
2 Matchday 29 (vs Brighton and Hove Albion) was postponed to 24 April 2024 to accommodate Manchester City's FA Cup quarter-final fixture against Newcastle.
3 Matchday 34 (vs Tottenham Hotspur) was postponed to 14 May 2024 to accommodate Manchester City's FA Cup semi-final fixture against Chelsea.

Matches edit

The league fixtures were released on 15 June 2023.[110]

  Win   Draw   Loss

11 August 2023 1 Burnley 0–3 Manchester City Burnley
20:00 BST
Report
Stadium: Turf Moor
Attendance: 21,572
Referee: Craig Pawson
Note: Live on Sky Sports
19 August 2023 2 Manchester City 1–0 Newcastle United Manchester
20:00 BST
Report
Stadium: Etihad Stadium
Attendance: 53,080
Referee: Robert Jones
27 August 2023 3 Sheffield United 1–2 Manchester City Sheffield
14:00 BST
Report
Stadium: Bramall Lane
Attendance: 31,336
Referee: Jarred Gillett
2 September 2023 4 Manchester City 5–1 Fulham Manchester
15:00 BST
Report
Stadium: Etihad Stadium
Attendance: 52,899
Referee: Michael Oliver
16 September 2023 5 West Ham United 1–3 Manchester City Stratford
15:00 BST
Report
Stadium: London Stadium
Attendance: 62,475
Referee: Andrew Madley
23 September 2023 6 Manchester City 2–0 Nottingham Forest Manchester
15:00 BST
Report
Stadium: Etihad Stadium
Attendance: 53,413
Referee: Anthony Taylor
30 September 2023 7 Wolverhampton Wanderers 2–1 Manchester City Wolverhampton
15:00 BST
Report
Stadium: Molineux Stadium
Attendance: 31,415
Referee: Craig Pawson
8 October 2023 8 Arsenal 1–0 Manchester City Holloway
16:30 BST
Report
Stadium: Emirates Stadium
Attendance: 60,233
Referee: Michael Oliver
21 October 2023 9 Manchester City 2–1 Brighton & Hove Albion Manchester
15:00 BST
Report
Stadium: Etihad Stadium
Attendance: 53,466
Referee: Robert Jones
29 October 2023 10 Manchester United 0–3 Manchester City Manchester
15:30 GMT
Report
Stadium: Old Trafford
Attendance: 73,502
Referee: Paul Tierney
4 November 2023 11 Manchester City 6–1 Bournemouth Manchester
15:00 GMT
Report
Stadium: Etihad Stadium
Attendance: 53,358
Referee: Craig Pawson
12 November 2023 12 Chelsea 4–4 Manchester City Fulham
16:30 GMT
Report
Stadium: Stamford Bridge
Attendance: 39,532
Referee: Anthony Taylor
25 November 2023 13 Manchester City 1–1 Liverpool Manchester
12:30 GMT
Report
Stadium: Etihad Stadium
Attendance: 53,289
Referee: Chris Kavanagh
3 December 2023 14 Manchester City 3–3 Tottenham Hotspur Manchester
16:30 GMT
Report
Stadium: Etihad Stadium
Attendance: 53,473
Referee: Simon Hooper
6 December 2023 15 Aston Villa 1–0 Manchester City Aston
20:15 GMT
Report
Stadium: Villa Park
Attendance: 41,421
Referee: John Brooks
Note: Live on Amazon Prime Video
10 December 2023 16 Luton Town 1–2 Manchester City Luton
14:00 GMT
Report
Stadium: Kenilworth Road
Attendance: 11,047
Referee: Tim Robinson
Note: Live on Sky Sports
16 December 2023 17 Manchester City 2–2 Crystal Palace Manchester
15:00 GMT
Report
Stadium: Etihad Stadium
Attendance: 53,112
Referee: Paul Tierney
27 December 2023 19 Everton 1–3 Manchester City Liverpool
20:15 GMT
Report
Stadium: Goodison Park
Attendance: 39,327
Referee: John Brooks
30 December 2023 20 Manchester City 2–0 Sheffield United Manchester
15:00 GMT
Report
Stadium: Etihad Stadium
Attendance: 53,108
Referee: David Coote
13 January 2024 21 Newcastle United 2–3 Manchester City Newcastle upon Tyne
17:30 GMT
Report
Stadium: St James' Park
Attendance: 52,190
Referee: Chris Kavanagh
31 January 2024 22 Manchester City 3–1 Burnley Manchester
19:30 GMT
Report
Stadium: Etihad Stadium
Attendance: 53,099
Referee: Samuel Barrott
5 February 2024 23 Brentford 1–3 Manchester City Brentford
20:00 GMT
Report
Stadium: Brentford Community Stadium
Attendance: 17,096
Referee: Jarred Gillett
10 February 2024 24 Manchester City 2–0 Everton Manchester
12:30 GMT
Report
Stadium: Etihad Stadium
Attendance: 53,469
Referee: John Brooks
17 February 2024 25 Manchester City 1–1 Chelsea Manchester
17:30 GMT
Report
Stadium: Etihad Stadium
Attendance: 53,509
Referee: Andrew Madley
20 February 2024 18 Manchester City 1–0 Brentford Manchester
19:30 GMT
Report
Stadium: Etihad Stadium
Attendance: 52,137
Referee: Darren England
Note: The match was rescheduled due to Manchester City's participation in the FIFA Club World Cup.
24 February 2024 26 Bournemouth 0–1 Manchester City Bournemouth
17:30 GMT
Report
Stadium: Dean Court
Attendance: 11,184
Referee: Jarred Gillett
3 March 2024 27 Manchester City 3–1 Manchester United Manchester
15:30 GMT
Report
Stadium: Etihad Stadium
Attendance: 53,521
Referee: Andrew Madley
Note: The match was originally scheduled for 2 March 2024 but later was moved back for live Sky Sports coverage.[111]
10 March 2024 28 Liverpool 1–1 Manchester City Liverpool
15:45 GMT
Report
Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 59,947
Referee: Michael Oliver
Note: The match was originally scheduled for 9 March 2024 but was later pushed back for live Sky Sports coverage.[112]
31 March 2024 30 Manchester City 0–0 Arsenal Manchester
16:30 BST Report
Stadium: Etihad Stadium
Attendance: 53,422
Referee: Anthony Taylor
Note: The match was originally scheduled for 30 March 2024 but was later pushed back for live Sky Sports coverage.[112]
3 April 2024 31 Manchester City 4–1 Aston Villa Manchester
20:15 BST
Report
Stadium: Etihad Stadium
Attendance: 53,422
Referee: Darren England
6 April 2024 32 Crystal Palace 2–4 Manchester City Selhurst
12:30 BST
Report
Stadium: Selhurst Park
Attendance: 25,132
Referee: Paul Tierney
Note: Fixture was initially scheduled for a 15:00 kick-off, but was moved for live TNT Sports broadcast.[113]
13 April 2024 33 Manchester City 5–1 Luton Town Manchester
15:00 BST
Report
Stadium: Etihad Stadium
Attendance: 53,449
Referee: John Brooks
25 April 2024 29 Brighton & Hove Albion 0–4 Manchester City Falmer
20:00 BST
Report
Stadium: Falmer Stadium
Attendance: 31,596
Referee: Jarred Gillett
Note: Originally scheduled for 17 March, the fixture was postponed due to Manchester City's participation in the FA Cup quarter-finals.
28 April 2024 35 Nottingham Forest v Manchester City West Bridgford
16:30 BST Report Stadium: City Ground
Referee: Simon Hooper
4 May 2024 36 Manchester City v Wolverhampton Wanderers Manchester
17:30 BST Report Stadium: Etihad Stadium
Note: Fixture was initially scheduled for a 15:00 kick-off, but was moved for live Sky Sports broadcast.[114]
11 May 2024 37 Fulham v Manchester City Fulham
12:30 BST Report Stadium: Craven Cottage
14 May 2024 34 Tottenham Hotspur v Manchester City Tottenham
20:00 BST Report Stadium: Tottenham Hotspur Stadium
Note: Originally scheduled for 20 April, the fixture was postponed due to Manchester City's participation in the FA Cup semi-finals.
19 May 2024 38 Manchester City v West Ham United Manchester
16:00 BST Report Stadium: Etihad Stadium

FA Cup edit

As a Premier League team, Manchester City entered the FA Cup in the third round proper, and were drawn at home to EFL Championship side Huddersfield Town.[115] In the fourth round, City were drawn away to fellow Premier League side Tottenham Hotspur.[116][117] In the fifth round, they were again drawn away to a fellow Premier League side in Luton Town.[118][119] In the quarter-finals, the Blues were drawn at home to fellow Premier League side Newcastle United. In the semi-finals at Wembley Stadium, City were paired with Chelsea, with a potential Manchester derby and rematch of last year's final at stake, which eventually proved to be the case.

7 January 2024 Third round Manchester City 5–0 Huddersfield Town Manchester
14:00 GMT
Report
Stadium: Etihad Stadium
Attendance: 51,939
Referee: Michael Salisbury
26 January 2024 Fourth round Tottenham Hotspur 0–1 Manchester City Tottenham
20:00 GMT
Report
Stadium: Tottenham Hotspur Stadium
Attendance: 60,872
Referee: Paul Tierney
27 February 2024 Fifth round Luton Town 2–6 Manchester City Luton
20:00 GMT
Report
Stadium: Kenilworth Road
Attendance: 11,163
Referee: Anthony Taylor
16 March 2024 Quarter-finals Manchester City 2–0 Newcastle United Manchester
17:30 GMT
Report
Stadium: Etihad Stadium
Attendance: 52,126
Referee: Simon Hooper
20 April 2024 Semi-finals Manchester City 1–0 Chelsea London
17:15 BST
Report
Stadium: Wembley Stadium
Attendance: 80,902
Referee: Michael Oliver
25 May 2024 Final Manchester City v Manchester United London
15:00 BST Stadium: Wembley Stadium

EFL Cup edit

As a Premier League team involved in European competition, Manchester City entered the EFL Cup in the third round, and were drawn away to fellow Premier League side Newcastle United.[120]

27 September 2023 Third round Newcastle United 1–0 Manchester City Newcastle upon Tyne
20:00 BST
Report
Stadium: St James' Park
Attendance: 51,692
Referee: Chris Kavanagh

FA Community Shield edit

As the previous season's Premier League and FA Cup winners, Manchester City faced league runners-up Arsenal in the traditional season curtain raiser.

6 August 2023 Final Arsenal 1–1
(4–1 p)
Manchester City London
16:00 BST
Report
Stadium: Wembley Stadium
Attendance: 81,145
Referee: Stuart Attwell
Penalties

UEFA Champions League edit

Group stage edit

The draw for the group stage took place in Monaco on 31 August 2023.[121]

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification MCI RBL YB ZVE
1   Manchester City 6 6 0 0 18 7 +11 18 Advance to knockout phase 3–2 3–0 3–1
2   RB Leipzig 6 4 0 2 13 10 +3 12 1–3 2–1 3–1
3   Young Boys 6 1 1 4 7 13 −6 4 Transfer to Europa League 1–3 1–3 2–0
4   Red Star Belgrade 6 0 1 5 7 15 −8 1 2–3 1–2 2–2
Source: UEFA
Rules for classification: Group stage tiebreakers
19 September 2023 1 Manchester City   3–1   Red Star Belgrade Manchester
20:00 BST
Report
Stadium: City of Manchester Stadium
Attendance: 50,204
Referee: João Pinheiro (Portugal)
4 October 2023 2 RB Leipzig   1–3   Manchester City Leipzig, Germany
21:00 CEST
Report
Stadium: Red Bull Arena
Attendance: 45,228
Referee: Artur Soares Dias (Portugal)
25 October 2023 3 Young Boys   1–3   Manchester City Bern, Switzerland
21:00 CEST
Report
Stadium: Wankdorf
Attendance: 31,500
Referee: Morten Krogh (Denmark)
7 November 2023 4 Manchester City   3–0   Young Boys Manchester
20:00 GMT
Report
Stadium: City of Manchester Stadium
Attendance: 51,049
Referee: Erik Lambrechts (Belgium)
28 November 2023 5 Manchester City   3–2   RB Leipzig Manchester
20:00 GMT
Report
Stadium: City of Manchester Stadium
Attendance: 51,402
Referee: Glenn Nyberg (Sweden)
13 December 2023 6 Red Star Belgrade   2–3   Manchester City Belgrade, Serbia
18:45 CET
Report
Stadium: Rajko Mitić Stadium
Attendance: 49,443
Referee: Aliyar Aghayev (Azerbaijan)

Knockout phase edit

Round of 16 edit

The draw for the round of 16 took place in Nyon, Switzerland, on 18 December 2023.[122]

13 February 2024 First leg Copenhagen   1–3   Manchester City Copenhagen, Denmark
21:00 CET
Report
Stadium: Parken Stadium
Attendance: 35,853[123]
Referee: José María Sánchez Martínez (Spain)
6 March 2024 Second leg Manchester City   3–1
(6–2 agg.)
  Copenhagen Manchester
20:00 GMT
Report
Stadium: City of Manchester Stadium
Attendance: 51,531
Referee: Espen Eskås (Norway)
Quarter-finals edit

The draw for the quarter-finals and semi-finals took place in Nyon, Switzerland, on 15 March 2024.[124]

9 April 2024 First leg Real Madrid   3–3   Manchester City Madrid, Spain
21:00 CEST
Report
Stadium: Santiago Bernabéu
Attendance: 76,680
Referee: François Letexier (France)
17 April 2024 Second leg Manchester City   1–1 (a.e.t.)
(4–4 agg.)
(3–4 p)
  Real Madrid Manchester
20:00 BST
Report
Stadium: City of Manchester Stadium
Attendance: 52,306
Referee: Daniele Orsato (Italy)
Penalties

UEFA Super Cup edit

As the previous season's UEFA Champions League winners, Manchester City faced the reigning UEFA Europa League winners Sevilla.

16 August 2023 Final Manchester City   1–1
(5–4 p)
  Sevilla Piraeus, Greece
22:00 EEST
Report
Stadium: Karaiskakis Stadium
Attendance: 29,207
Referee: François Letexier (France)
Penalties

FIFA Club World Cup edit

Manchester City entered the tournament in the semi-finals as the European representative, having been drawn against the winner of the quarter-final match between Club León and Urawa Red Diamonds.[125]

19 December 2023 Semi-finals Urawa Red Diamonds   0–3   Manchester City Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
21:00 SAST Report
Stadium: King Abdullah Sports City
Attendance: 40,127
Referee: Mohammed Al Hoish (Saudi Arabia)
22 December 2023 Final Manchester City   4–0   Fluminense Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
21:00 SAST
Report
Stadium: King Abdullah Sports City
Attendance: 52,601
Referee: Szymon Marciniak (Poland)

Statistics edit

As of 25 April 2024

Overall edit

Appearances ( ) numbers are for appearances in competitive games only, including substitute appearances.
Red card numbers denote: numbers in parentheses represent red cards overturned for wrongful dismissal.
Source for all stats:[126]

No. Player Pos. Premier League FA Cup EFL Cup UEFA Champions League Other competitions[a] Total
                                               
2   Kyle Walker DF 27 2 4 6 4 40 2
3   Rúben Dias DF 26 4 1 7 2 2 41 3
5   John Stones DF 15 1 2 2 6 3 25 1 2
6   Nathan Aké DF 25 2 3 1 1 7 3 38 3
8   Mateo Kovačić MF 25 1 3 4 1 1 1 6 4 1 39 3 4
9   Erling Haaland FW 26 20 1 2 5 9 6 2 37 31 1
10   Jack Grealish MF 18 3 7 3 1 8 1 4 34 3 8
11   Jérémy Doku MF 24 3 3 5 1 1 1 7 1 37 5 4
16   Rodri MF 29 7 8 1 3 8 1 2 4 44 8 10 1
17   Kevin De Bruyne MF 13 4 2 4 1 2 2 1 19 6 3
18   Stefan Ortega GK 6 5 1 3 1 13
19   Julián Álvarez FW 31 9 2 5 1 1 1 7 5 4 2 1 48 17 3
20   Bernardo Silva MF 28 6 7 4 3 8 2 1 3 1 42 12 8
21   Sergio Gómez DF 6 2 1 5 1 15
24   Joško Gvardiol DF 23 1 3 3 1 1 6 1 1 3 36 2 5
25   Manuel Akanji DF 25 2 2 1 4 1 1 7 2 2 4 1 39 4 6 1
27   Matheus Nunes MF 15 3 1 8 2 1 28 1
31   Ederson GK 29 4 7 3 39 4
33   Scott Carson GK
47   Phil Foden MF 32 16 1 4 2 1 1 8 5 4 1 49 24 2
52   Oscar Bobb MF 12 1 5 1 4 1 2 24 2
56   Jacob Wright MF 1 1 2
76   Mahamadou Susoho MF 1 1
82   Rico Lewis DF 15 2 1 2 1 7 1 25 2 1
92   Micah Hamilton FW 1 2 1 3 1
Loan   Kalvin Phillips MF 4 1 1 3 1 1 2 9 1 2
Loan   James McAtee MF 1 1
Sold   Aymeric Laporte DF 1 1
Sold   Cole Palmer MF 1 2 2 3 2
Own goals 2 1 2 5
Totals 80 47 2 15 7 0 0 2 0 28 10 0 9 3 0 132 69 2

Goalscorers edit

Includes all competitive matches. The list is sorted alphabetically by surname when total goals are equal.[126]

Rank No. Pos. Player Premier League FA Cup EFL Cup FA Community Shield UEFA Champions League UEFA Super Cup FIFA Club World Cup Total
1 9 FW   Erling Haaland 20 5 0 0 6 0 0 31
2 47 MF   Phil Foden 16 2 0 0 5 0 1 24
3 19 FW   Julián Álvarez 9 1 0 0 5 0 2 17
4 20 MF   Bernardo Silva 6 3 0 0 2 0 1 12
5 16 MF   Rodri 7 0 0 0 1 0 0 8
6 17 MF   Kevin De Bruyne 4 0 0 0 2 0 0 6
7 11 FW   Jérémy Doku 3 1 0 0 1 0 0 5
8 25 DF   Manuel Akanji 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 4
9 6 DF   Nathan Aké 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 3
10 MF   Jack Grealish 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
8 MF   Mateo Kovačić 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 3
12 52 MF   Oscar Bobb 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 2
24 DF   Joško Gvardiol 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 2
82 MF   Rico Lewis 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
Sold MF   Cole Palmer 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 2
16 92 MF   Micah Hamilton 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1
Loan MF   Kalvin Phillips 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1
5 DF   John Stones 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
Own goals 2 1 0 0 0 0 2 5
Totals 80 15 0 1 28 1 7 132

Assists edit

Includes all competitive matches. The list is sorted alphabetically by surname when total assists are equal.[126]

Rank No. Pos. Player Premier League FA Cup EFL Cup FA Community Shield UEFA Champions League UEFA Super Cup FIFA Club World Cup Total
1 17 MF   Kevin De Bruyne 6 5 0 1 2 0 0 14
2 19 FW   Julián Álvarez 9 1 0 0 2 0 1 13
3 16 MF   Rodri 7 1 0 0 2 1 0 11
4 47 MF   Phil Foden 7 0 0 0 3 0 0 10
5 11 MF   Jérémy Doku 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 8
6 9 FW   Erling Haaland 5 0 0 0 1 0 0 6
20 MF   Bernardo Silva 5 1 0 0 0 0 0 6
7 2 DF   Kyle Walker 4 0 0 0 0 0 1 5
8 82 DF   Rico Lewis 0 1 0 0 3 0 0 4
27 MF   Matheus Nunes 2 0 0 0 1 0 1 4
10 10 MF   Jack Grealish 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 3
12 6 DF   Nathan Aké 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
24 DF   Joško Gvardiol 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 2
5 DF   John Stones 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 2
15 52 MF   Oscar Bobb 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
3 DF   Rúben Dias 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1
21 DF   Sergio Gómez 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
8 MF   Mateo Kovačić 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1
Totals 59 12 0 1 19 1 3 95

Disciplinary record edit

Includes all competitive matches. The list is sorted alphabetically by surname when total cards are equal.[126]

Rank No. Pos. Player Premier League FA Cup EFL Cup FA Community Shield UEFA Champions League UEFA Super Cup FIFA Club World Cup Total
                                                               
1 16 MF   Rodri 8 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 1
2 10 MF   Jack Grealish 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 0
20 MF   Bernardo Silva 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 0
4 25 DF   Manuel Akanji 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 6 1 0
5 24 DF   Joško Gvardiol 3 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 0
6 19 FW   Julián Álvarez 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0
11 MF   Jérémy Doku 3 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0
31 GK   Ederson 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0
8 MF   Mateo Kovačić 3 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0
10 17 MF   Kevin De Bruyne 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0
3 DF   Ruben Dias 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0
12 47 MF   Phil Foden 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0
Loan MF   Kalvin Phillips 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0
5 DF   John Stones 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0
2 DF   Kyle Walker 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0
16 9 FW   Erling Haaland 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0
82 DF   Rico Lewis 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0
27 MF   Matheus Nunes 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0
Total 47 1 1 7 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 69 1 1

Hat-tricks edit

Player Against Result Date Competition Ref.
  Erling Haaland Fulham (H) 5–1 2 September 2023 Premier League [24]
  Phil Foden Brentford (A) 3–1 5 February 2024 Premier League [45]
  Erling Haaland5 Luton Town (A) 6–2 27 February 2024 FA Cup [127]
  Phil Foden Aston Villa (H) 4–1 3 April 2024 Premier League [128]
5 – denotes player scored five goals

Clean sheets edit

The list is sorted by shirt number when total clean sheets are equal. Numbers in parentheses represent games where both goalkeepers participated and both kept a clean sheet; the number in parentheses is awarded to the goalkeeper who was substituted on, whilst a full clean sheet is awarded to the goalkeeper who was on the field at the start of play.

Clean sheets
No. Player Games Played Goals Against Premier League FA Cup EFL Cup FA Community Shield UEFA Champions League UEFA Super Cup FIFA Club World Cup Total
31   Ederson 39 33 9 0 0 0 1 0 2 12
18   Stefan Ortega 14 (2) 17 1 4 0 0 0 0 0 5
33   Scott Carson 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 50 10 4 0 0 1 0 2 17

Awards edit

Etihad Player of the Month edit

Awarded by an online vote of supporters on the official Manchester City F.C. website.

Month Player Ref.
August   Rodri [129]
September   Julián Álvarez [130]
October   Erling Haaland [131]
November   Jérémy Doku [132]
December   Phil Foden [133]
January   Kevin De Bruyne [134]
February   Phil Foden [135]
March   Rodri [136]

FIFA Club World Cup awards edit

Award Player Ref.
Golden Ball   Rodri [137]
Silver Ball   Kyle Walker

Notes edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Arsenal beat Man City in Community Shield shootout". BBC Sport. Retrieved 6 August 2023.
  2. ^ a b "Man City beat Sevilla to Lift the First European Trophy of the 2023-24 season". 16 August 2023. Retrieved 16 August 2023.
  3. ^ a b Peter Smith (28 September 2023). "Newcastle 1-0 Man City: Alexander Isak strikes during excellent second-half display from Magpies in Carabao Cup third round". Sky Sports. Retrieved 6 October 2023.
  4. ^ a b "Man City make history with Club World Cup win". BBC Sport. 22 December 2023. Retrieved 24 December 2023.
  5. ^ a b "Man City knocked out of Champions League by Real Madrid". BBC Sport. Retrieved 21 April 2024.
  6. ^ "Man City Star's Future in Balance As Barcelona Turn Up The Heat". Eplindex. Retrieved 17 June 2023.
  7. ^ Bray, Joe (17 June 2023). "Walker transfer could change Guardiola's plan for Lewis at Man City". Manchester Evening News. Retrieved 17 June 2023.
  8. ^ Brennan, Feargal (16 June 2023). "Barcelona target Aymeric Laporte hints at Manchester City exit". Football España. Retrieved 17 June 2023.
  9. ^ Mark White (19 June 2023). "Manchester City star Bernardo Silva in talks over Saudi Arabia offer: report". FourFourTwo. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  10. ^ Pettigrove, Jason (17 June 2023). "Fabrizio Romano on the difficulties Man City face in pursuit of Gvardiol and other potential moves ahead this summer". CaughtOffside. Retrieved 17 June 2023.
  11. ^ a b "Man City's Gundogan to join Barcelona on free". BBC Sport. Retrieved 26 June 2023.
  12. ^ "Man City agree £30m deal for Chelsea's Kovacic". BBC Sport. Retrieved 23 June 2023.
  13. ^ David Ornstein (27 June 2023). "Manchester City make formal offer for Declan Rice". The Athletic. Retrieved 27 June 2023.
  14. ^ David Ornstein (27 June 2023). "West Ham reject Manchester City's offer for Declan Rice". The Athletic. Retrieved 27 June 2023.
  15. ^ "Man City out of Declan Rice transfer race as Arsenal negotiate with West Ham". The Athletic. Retrieved 28 June 2023.
  16. ^ "Manchester City have entered the race for Spanish talent Gabri Veiga after pulling out of Declan Rice deal". Fabrizio Romano. Retrieved 28 June 2023.
  17. ^ Rob Pollard (27 June 2023). "City Complete Kovacic Signing". Manchester City F.C. Retrieved 27 June 2023.
  18. ^ a b "Mahrez joins Al-Ahli". Manchester City. 28 July 2023. Retrieved 28 July 2023.
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