The attacking midfielder sparkled against Man United, giving City a boost for the season and England hope for the 2026 World Cup
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After a strange down season, Phil Foden looked back to his best in the Manchester Derby | The Guardian

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Manchester City's head coach Pep Guardiola hugs Phil Foden after the Premier League soccer match between Manchester City and Manchester United in Manchester, England, Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025. (AP Photo/Dave Thompson)
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Phil Foden of Manchester City celebrates scoring the opening goal
Manchester City v Manchester United, Premier League, Football, Etihad Stadium, Manchester, UK - 14 Sept 2025
Soccer Football - Euro 2024 - Group C - Serbia v England - Arena AufSchalke, Gelsenkirchen, Germany - June 16, 2024
England's Phil Foden reacts after the match REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach
camera Phil Foden was crucial in City’s win over United in the Manchester Derby. Composite: Guardian Pictures; AP; Shutterstock; Reuters
15/09/2025

After a strange down season, Phil Foden looked back to his best in the Manchester Derby

The attacking midfielder sparkled against Man United, giving City a boost for the season and England hope for the 2026 World Cup

Jonathan Wilson Jonathan Wilson
 

One of the many mysteries of last season for Manchester City was Phil Foden. When he was a teenager, everybody knew how good he was. He had been probably the key player shortly after turning 17 as England won the Under-20 World Cup in 2017, and there had been a clamour for him to play for Manchester City long before Pep Guardiola began to use him regularly in 2020-21. For four seasons he was one of the best players in the league and then, suddenly, there was nothing – at least by the exceptionally high standards he had set.

Foden had not had a good Euros in 2024. He has never really produced his best for England, a function perhaps of him playing for a club with such a specific style of play. Take him out of that regimented environment where he knew exactly what runs to make, exactly where his teammates would be moving, and he found it hard to adapt. And England generally did not play well at that Euros, despite reaching the final; the front end of the team was a mess, lacking the balance of previous Gareth Southgate sides.

But why did Foden’s form fail to return when he got back to City? It’s not uncommon for players who have played for sides who have gone deep at summer tournaments to start the following season slowly. But Foden never regained his form. He suffered a couple of bouts of illness and an ankle injury, and although that did disrupt his season, there was no long-term ailment. He started 20 Premier League games, came off the bench on eight occasions, scored seven goals and only very rarely looked like himself. For all the new signings at City this year, one of Guardiola’s more important jobs as he looks to restore his side to greatness is to get Foden back to his best.

Foden came off the bench in the defeat to Tottenham and started for the first time this season as City beat Manchester United 3-0. It would be reckless to read too much into a performance against Ruben Amorim’s underperforming side – opposing attackers and creators have a tendency to play well against them – but there were promising signs. The partnership with Jérémy Doku, a very different sort of wide forward, is intriguing: Doku runs at players, dribbles, beats them with close technical skill; Foden drifts inside and creates chances through the quality of his passing and movement.

The opening goal on Sunday was typical of this. As Rodri released Doku on the right, Foden found space in the middle of the box – despite every United player being in their own defensive third. Again, only the fact that it was against United, who seem pathologically unable to concentrate, diminishes the achievement. When the cross came in, he then guided a smart header past a weirdly flat-footed Altay Bayindir. The broad grin in his celebration suggested just how much the goal meant, just how relieved Foden was to score his first league goal since January.

“We missed him so much,” said Guardiola. “This season, we need him so much. He moved behind the strikers in that position, he had a sense of goal, a sense of where to turn, a sense of quality to keep the ball. I like the players that play behind the strikers – most of them pass the ball and stay to look at how well they made the pass, but he’s a guy who makes a pass and goes to the penalty spot like an animal, and scores. When he receives the ball he’s angry, because he and the ball are going to score.

“We cannot forget, two seasons ago, when we won the last game against West Ham, he was the most important player of the Premier League, he was maybe the key player to win that league, with the goals, with the continuity. Last season, for injuries, for other reasons, he couldn’t be with us. This season he’s also had knocks and injuries but hopefully step by step he can get back to his best and hopefully show that in a game like today against United. It feels like a special game for him, because he played an incredible match: he’s in with the support, he can do what he’s able to do. We enjoy the happiness in his face.”

For somebody from Manchester, the derby probably does mean more. But the sense with Foden is that playing with freedom and belief again, and scoring, means a lot in itself. Foden needs to be playing well if he is to make England’s squad for next year’s World Cup. He offers a cerebral approach that sets him apart, but there is no shortage of other candidates for those creative roles.

And if City needed Foden last season, with Kevin De Bruyne sold they really need him now. It’s early days and there will be far tougher tests than Manchester United ahead, but Sunday offered reasons for optimism.

Trivia question

Aerial shot of construction work continuing on Camp Nou stadium in Barcelona, Spain, September 9, 2025.
camera Construction work is still ongoing at Camp Nou. Photograph: Albert Gea/Reuters

Barcelona have extended their planned time away from Camp Nou with renovations running behind schedule, forcing their game against Valencia to be held at the 6,000-capacity Estadi Johan Cruyff. Barcelona have not played at Camp Nou since 28 May 2023, a 3-1 win over Mallorca that was also notable for what reason?

a) Robert Lewandowski scored his 500th career goal.
b) It was the team’s last match before the Europa League final.
c) Jordi Alba, Sergio Busquets and Gerard Piqué all played their last home match at Camp Nou.
d) Ansu Fati scored twice.

On this day…

Chris Balderstone was the last person to play league soccer and championship cricket on the same day.
camera Chris Balderstone was the last person to play league soccer and championship cricket on the same day. Photograph: PA

It’s inconceivable these days as specialisation has taken hold and the soccer season has spread deep into the summer, but there was a time when it was not uncommon for professionals to play both soccer and cricket. Twelve men have played both soccer and cricket for England, the most recent of them the Gloucestershire batter Arthur Milton, who won a league title with Arsenal playing at right-half or right-wing.

Only one man, though, ever played league soccer and championship cricket on the same day: Chris Balderstone. On 15 September 1975, Balderstone played for Leicestershire in their County Championship game against Derbyshire at Chesterfield. Ending the second day 51 not out, he hopped in his car and raced 30 miles north to Doncaster, where he played in midfield for Doncaster Rovers as they drew 1-1 with Brentford in Division Three. The following morning he returned to Chesterfield where he completed his century and then took three wickets as Leicestershire wrapped up the Championship. He won two caps against the West Indies the following summer and carried on playing cricket to the age of 45, helping Leicestershire to a third Benson & Hedges Cup success in 1985.

US watch

Giovanni Reyna of Borussia Mönchengladbach controls the ball during the 1.Bundesliga match between Borussia Mönchengladbach and Werder Bremen at Borussia-Park, Mönchengladbach, Germany on September 14, 2025.
camera Gio Reyna has struggled for game time over much of the last few years with Borussia Dortmund. Photograph: NurPhoto/Getty Images

Gio Reyna started a match for the first time in a long time, but endured a brutal result as Borussia Mönchengladbach side slumped to a 4-0 defeat to Werder Bremen. Elsewhere in Germany, James Sands started and went the full 90 in St Pauli’s 2-1 win over Augsburg. Also of note: Ricardo Pepi scored twice in PSV’s 5-3 win over NEC, with fellow US international Sergiño Dest registering an assist.

In England, Tyler Adams started and went the distance in a win for Bournemouth, while Chris Richards did the same for Crystal Palace in a scoreless draw. In Italy, Weston McKennie played 79 minutes in Juventus’ thrilling 4-3 win over Inter Milan in the Derby d’Italia, while Christian Pulisic helped Milan to victory over Bologna. Yunus Musah came on as a sub to make his debut for Atalanta in a 4-1 win over Lecce.

What to watch

PSG players celebrate with the trophy after winning the Champions League final soccer match between Paris Saint-Germain and Inter Milan at the Allianz Arena in Munich, Germany, Saturday, May 31, 2025.
camera PSG are the defending Champions League winners. Photograph: Matthias Schräder/AP

(All times US Eastern time)

The Uefa Champions League is back! The action starts again on Tuesday, with Athletic Bilbao hosting Arsenal at 12.45pm (Paramount+ and TUDN), with the 3pm window featuring Juventus v Dortmund (Paramount+ and TUDN) and Tottenham v Villarreal (Paramount+). On Wednesday, the matchups of choice are legion at 3pm, including Liverpool v Atlético Madrid, Bayern Munich v Chelsea, and defending champions PSG v Atalanta. On Thursday, the games of choice at 3pm are Newcastle United v Barcelona (Paramount + and TUDN) and Manchester City v Napoli (Paramount+).

In MLS, Tuesday evening features a rematch of the feisty Leagues Cup final, with Inter Miami hosting the Seattle Sounders (albeit without a suspended Luis Suárez) (7pm, MLS Season Pass). The first of two US Open Cup semi-finals are that night at 8pm, with Nashville SC hosting Philadelphia Union (CBS Sports Network). The other semi-final, on Wednesday, pits Minnesota United against Austin FC (8.30pm, CBS Sports Network).

The weekend features big matches in the Premier League. On Saturday it’s Liverpool v Everton the Merseyside Derby (7.30am, USA Network) and Manchester United v Chelsea (12.30pm, USA Network), before Sunday’s big showdown: Arsenal v Manchester City (11.30am, network TBD).

Reading list

Khephrem Thuram of Juventus (left) and brother Marcus Thuram
camera Khephrem Thuram of Juventus (left) and brother Marcus Thuram of Inter celebrate their goals in a scintillating match that Juve won 4-3. Composite: Image Photo Agency/Getty Images

The Thuram brothers traded goals as Juventus and Inter delivered a derby that had it all, writes Nicky Bandini.

In Florian Wirtz and Nick Woltemade, two of the biggest Premier League imports are German. Writing for the Guardian, Germany legend Philipp Lahm assesses the prospects<