Pep Guardiola expresses growing confidence that Manchester City can sustain performance across full 90-minute matches, based on their recent showings.
Overcoming Persistent Second-Half Issues
Manchester City has faced challenges maintaining leads in the second half throughout the season, resulting in lost points in both the Premier League and Champions League. The early months of 2026 proved especially tough, with Chelsea and Brighton rallying for draws at the Etihad Stadium, and Tottenham Hotspur salvaging a point from a 2-0 deficit at home.
Guardiola first noted concerns after the opening-day victory over Wolves, followed by a loss to Brighton despite leading after 60 minutes. More recently, City conceded points at home to Nottingham Forest but displayed improved resilience in that second half, despite shipping two goals while scoring one.
Recent Signs of Progress
Defensive solidity shone through in a clean sheet against Leeds United at Elland Road. City also netted twice against Newcastle United in the FA Cup fifth round at St James’ Park, securing progression. These efforts convince Guardiola that the squad now possesses the depth to avoid halftime fades.
“We fought hard, and I’m pleased because in the last three games, our second halves matched the first halves’ intensity,” Guardiola stated. “All season, we’ve dropped points after the break—otherwise, we’d be in a stellar Premier League position. We lacked sufficient options and available players for changes, but Nico Gonzalez filled the gap superbly in Rodri’s absence, and his partnership with Nico O’Reilly excelled in physicality and ball control.”
Tactical Flexibility Boosted by Returns
For the Newcastle triumph, Guardiola rotated 10 players, handing first starts post-injury to wingers Savinho and Jeremy Doku. Without wide options, City adapted to a compact 4-2-2-2 setup, yielding strong results. Wingers’ return expands tactical choices, aiding sustained form—now 11 matches unbeaten since the Bodo/Glimt defeat, where absent width hurt.
“We gained valuable lessons playing without them; results were solid in that shape, but lacking wingers complicated matters,” Guardiola added. “Teams like Bodo/Glimt and Newcastle defend narrowly, forcing play wide to exploit turns and behind-the-lines runs. Matheus thrived in pockets, with Tijjani and Omar making key movements between lines where space is scarce.”
Savinho missed over two months, Doku a lengthy spell, Omar and Antoine offered partial cover, but others lacked true winger traits. Oscar Bobb’s injuries limited options, making the wingers’ contributions pivotal against Newcastle.

