How Phil Foden rescued a result Man City hardly deserved — Independent 29/11/25
Manchester City 3-2 Leeds United: Daniel Farke had Pep Guardiola on the rack with a storming comeback, until Foden’s late winner
Richard Jolly
at the Etihad
If Phil Foden’s brace was separated by 90 minutes, there was
more than just time between the goals that bookended a crazy game. The emotions
fluctuated, the balance of power shifted. Manchester City assumed a position of
complete dominance. Leeds United mounted a stirring, stunning comeback. And, at
the end, the situation was as it had been after one minute: one goal between
them and Foden the match-winner.
Yet the victors showcased frailties and the losers seemed to
emerge stronger than they were beforehand. It was that kind of illogical
occasion. For City, the loss of control in the second half ought to be
worrying. At home, against a promoted team, with a comfortable lead, they
surrendered their advantage. For Leeds, Daniel Farke’s game-changing
substitution was a reason not to dispense with a Championship-winning manager.
Farke had Pep Guardiola on the rack.
For City, this came perilously close to being a wretched
week. Defeated by Newcastle, beaten by Bayer Leverkusen, Guardiola’s gamble of
resting 10 players in the Champions League first looked unnecessary as they
outclassed Leeds before the break and then appeared doubly unsuccessful as
those fresher legs were unable to stop an unexpected onslaught. Eventually,
Foden served as City’s rescuer. Whether or not they deserved to win, he did.
“The quality of Phil again,” said Guardiola, gratefully. “We are not a team to
win this type of game a lot.” It was, he felt, the kind of victory his
assistant Pep Lijnders experienced more often when he was by Jurgen Klopp’s
side at Liverpool.
“It's up there as one of the wildest games,” Foden said. He
decided it. The board had just gone up to indicate there would be 10 minutes of
additional time. If that had a deflating impact on Leeds, so did what
transpired within seconds. Foden placed a shot in the bottom corner, bypassing
everyone in a packed penalty area. “One moment of magic through many legs was a
decisive moment for them,” rued Farke.
Foden felt the coolest man in a distinctly febrile
atmosphere. The senior citizens were affected. Gianluigi Donnarumma had picked
up his latest caution for dissent. Bernardo Silva, already booked, had dived in
the penalty area.
But Foden provided twin terrific finishes. Leeds conceded in
the first and 91st minutes, Foden breaking the deadlock in 59 seconds with a
right-footed volley, hooked in from Matheus Nunes’ cross. It required a
brilliant block from Jayden Bogle and a terrific save by Lucas Perri to deny
him a second. It instead came much later. The common denominator, though, was
Foden’s ability to glide into space and emerge unchecked.
It proved timely. Belatedly, Foden has displaced Maxime
Esteve as City’s second-top scorer in the Premier League. Which, as the
Frenchman is a Burnley defender, is an indictment of everyone other than Erling
Haaland. Foden had not scored in the top flight since the Manchester derby. A
drought was ended when City required individual inspiration.
It did not come from the usual suspect. This was Haaland’s
day. As he drew a third blank in a week to remain stuck on 99 Premier League
goals, the forward with connections at both clubs to find the net was not him
but Lukas Nmecha, who played for City, never scored for them, but struck
against them. The rampaging display in the No 9 shirt came not from the
Norwegian, but from Dominic Calvert-Lewin. “His quality is never in doubt,”
said Farke.
“With long balls, Calvert-Lewin is unstoppable,” said
Guardiola. Playing like a man possessed, Calvert-Lewin scored Leeds’ first goal
and won the spot kick for the second when he was chopped down by Josko
Gvardiol. While Donnarumma made a first penalty save for City, Nmecha scored
the rebound.
Farke changed the game when he changed his team and tactics.
Calvert-Lewin and Jaka Bijol came on in a double switch at the interval, the
two wingers going off, Leeds going 3-5-2. Guardiola noted the German copied
Leverkusen’s tactics. It worked. Calvert-Lewin scored within four minutes after
two mistakes by Nunes. Fine in the first half, poor in the second, the
Portuguese was City in microcosm.
Gvardiol went from scoring a City goal to playing a part in
one for Leeds. He had supplied a tap-in after Perri was outjumped by Nico
O’Reilly, who shouldered the ball down. City had a threat from corners in the
first half, an ineffective Leeds none at all. “The game should be over,” said
Guardiola.
City had 14 shots before the break but only one in the next
40 minutes before a late rally. Leeds displayed a superb spirit, and yet ended
up with their seventh loss in eight games. “Heartbreak for my players but they
should take lots of pride,” said Farke. City, Foden apart, may deserve less
pride, but they got the points.