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Manchester City F.C. in international football

Manchester City Football Club, an English professional association football club, has gained entry to Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) competitions on multiple occasions. They have represented England in the European Cup (now the Champions League) on fourteen occasions, the UEFA Cup (now the Europa League) on eight occasions, in the now-defunct Cup Winners' Cup twice, the UEFA Super Cup once, and at the FIFA Club World Cup once. Manchester City are one of thirteen English football clubs to have won European and worldwide titles, in City's case the 1969–70 Cup Winners' Cup, 2022–23 Champions League, 2023 Super Cup, and 2023 Club World Cup.

Manchester City F.C. in international football
ClubManchester City
Seasons played23
Most appearancesFernandinho (75)
Top scorerSergio Agüero (43)
First entry1968–69 European Cup
Latest entry2023–24 UEFA Champions League
Titles
Champions League
Cup Winners' Cup
Super Cup
1
FIFA Club World Cup
1

The club's first entry into European competition occurred in 1968, as a result of winning the Football League Championship. However, the participation was short-lived, as Manchester City suffered a surprise defeat at the hands of Fenerbahçe in the first round. Entry into the Cup Winners' Cup the following season was more successful; Manchester City won the competition, defeating Górnik Zabrze 2–1 in the final at the Prater Stadium in Vienna. The club reached the semi-finals of the same competition the following year, and continued to play European football regularly during the 1970s. City then endured a period of decline, and did not play in Europe again until 2003, a gap of 24 years. Since then, the Blues have qualified for European competition on a regular basis; they progressed past the quarter-final stage of a continental competition four times during that period, reaching the semi-finals of the 2015–16 and 2021–22 Champions League, losing their maiden European Cup final to Chelsea in 2020–21, and winning their first-ever European championship in 2022–23.

In the 1970s, Manchester City also had a track record of repeated entry into several of the non-UEFA sanctioned European competitions which were run in the era, including the Anglo-Italian League Cup and Texaco Cup.

History edit

First entries into European competition edit

European club football competitions began in the mid-1950s. Though Manchester City were moderately successful domestically in this period, the club did not play in Europe. City were not invited to play in the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup, and the European Cup Winners' Cup did not begin until 1960.[1] When eight players from neighbours Manchester United lost their lives in the Munich air disaster when returning from a European Cup match in February 1958, UEFA wished for City to take United's place in the competition. City rejected the idea out of hand.[2]

Manchester City's first appearance in European competition occurred during the 1968–69 season. City played in the European Cup, by virtue of having won the 1967–68 league championship. Extroverted Manchester City coach Malcolm Allison made a number of grandiose statements predicting how the team would fare, saying that City would "terrify Europe", and that "City will attack these people as they have not been attacked since the days of the old Real Madrid".[3][4] The opposition in the first round was Turkish club Fenerbahçe. The City management did not scout Fenerbahçe in advance of the game, opting to rely on a report from Oscar Hold, an Englishman who had managed Fenerbahçe between 1965 and 1967.[5] In the first leg at Maine Road, City had what the Guardian's Albert Barham called "overwhelming territorial advantage".[6] However, to the frustration of the home crowd City were denied by a strong defensive performance by Fenerbahçe, most notably by goalkeeper Yavuz Şimşek, and the match finished 0–0.[7] The return leg in Istanbul was played in front of a Turkish record crowd.[8] City took an early lead through Tony Coleman, but conceded two goals in the second half and were eliminated.[9]

Manchester City won the 1969 FA Cup final to earn a place in the 1969–70 European Cup Winners' Cup. Their first tie was against Athletic Bilbao, in Spain's Basque Country. Athletic were themselves managed by an Englishman, Ronnie Allen.[10] In the first leg, City recovered from a two-goal deficit to secure a 3–3 draw.[10] The home leg was a comfortable 3–0 win. Post-match reports alleged that a scuffle had taken place at half-time between Mike Doyle and José Ramón Betzuen. The referee spoke to both managers, but did not take any further action.[11]

In the second round, City travelled to Belgians Lierse S.K. and won the first leg 3–0, with two goals from Francis Lee and one from Colin Bell.[12] The home leg produced a 5–0 win, a club record for European competition that stood until 2019.[13] The first leg of the quarter-finals, at Académica de Coimbra, took place three days before Manchester City were due to play in the League Cup final. Malcolm Allison rejected the prevailing British football orthodoxy, in which domestic competitions took priority, by saying he would rather win in Portugal than in the League Cup final.[14] The match finished goalless. At Maine Road, extra-time was required for Manchester City to break down the stubbornly defensive Coimbra. Tony Towers scored the only goal of the tie with a minute of extra-time remaining.[15]

The draw for the semi-finals meant Manchester City played the away leg first in every round, this time in Germany, where Schalke 04 were the opposition. City lost the first leg by a single goal. Needing to win at Maine Road by at least two goals, the Blues used a very attacking approach. It worked; City led 3–0 at half-time and won the match 5–1.[15] In the final, they faced Górnik Zabrze of Poland, who had progressed via a coin toss after three matches with A.S. Roma could not produce a winner in the other semi-final.[16]

1970 Cup Winners' Cup final edit

The final was held at a neutral venue, Prater Stadium in Vienna. The match took place in torrential rain, adversely affecting the attendance. The official figure was 7,968, though sources vary, with a number of figures between 7,968 and 15,000 reported.[17] Of those, approximately 5,000 were Manchester City supporters.[18] Owing to Soviet Bloc travel restrictions, only 300 supporters, relatives and officials were permitted to travel from communist Poland by its government.[19]

Manchester City started the match strongly, particularly Francis Lee; The Guardian correspondent wrote "Lee, indefatigable and nigh irresistible continually embarrassed the Górnik defence in the early stages".[20] Lee had the first chance of the match, a close range shot which was saved by goalkeeper Hubert Kostka.[20] Manchester City took the lead in the 12th minute. Lee cut in from the left wing, escaping a tackle from Alfred Olek, and struck a fierce shot.[21] Kostka parried the ball, only for it to land at the feet of Neil Young for a simple finish.[22] Shortly after, City defender Mike Doyle sustained an ankle injury after colliding with Stefan Florenski.[22] The Blues played on with ten men for a period as Doyle received treatment from trainer Dave Ewing, but the defender was unable to continue. Substitute Ian Bowyer replaced him.[23] The change prompted an alteration in formation, in which Colin Bell switched to a deeper position.[20] Shortly before half-time, Young won the ball after loose play from Florenski, which put him clear on goal.[21] As Young moved into the penalty area, Kostka rushed out of his goal and upended him, leaving the referee no option but to give a penalty. Lee struck the spot-kick with power into the centre of the goal. Kostka's legs made contact with the ball, but the force of the shot carried it into the net to make it 2–0.[22][24] Górnik got a goal back midway through the second half, but there were no more goals and the match finished 2–1.

After the match, City manager Joe Mercer said "the heavy rain in the second half ruined the game" and that he was "quite happy with the performance of our team, although the technical level was rather low in the second half". Górnik manager Michał Matyas blamed his side's poor start, saying the "first goal came too early for us and we never recovered from this shock".[25] The trophy was Manchester City's fourth major honour in three seasons. It made them the third English club to win the Cup Winners' Cup, after Tottenham Hotspur and West Ham United.

Regular participation in the 1970s edit

As title holders, Manchester City automatically qualified to defend the Cup Winners' Cup in the 1970–71 season. Had they not won the trophy, they would still have been qualified for European competition, as City's victory in the 1970 League Cup granted a place in the Fairs Cup. As a UEFA-organised competition, the Cup Winners' Cup took precedence over the Fairs Cup, and so the club took a place in the former. In the first round, Manchester City almost suffered an upset at the hands of Linfield, from Belfast. City held a one-goal lead after the first leg, but Linfield twice took the lead in the second leg. The match finished 2–1 to Linfield, and Manchester City progressed on the away goals rule.[26] Honvéd were the opposition in the second round. Manchester City won both legs, with the score being 3–0 on aggregate.

The quarter-finals saw a rematch with Górnik Zabrze, who City had beaten in the previous year's final. Both legs finished 2–0 to the home team, so to separate the sides a third match was played on neutral ground, in Copenhagen. Despite having several players unavailable through injury,[27] City won this match 3–1, and were drawn to play fellow English club Chelsea in the semi-finals, the first time Manchester City had drawn another English club in European competition. Further injuries occurred in domestic fixtures in the run-up to the game, to the extent that goalkeeper Joe Corrigan played the first leg of the Chelsea tie unable to fully open his left eye because of a facial injury.[28] City lost the first leg at Stamford Bridge 1–0. Corrigan was unable to play in the second leg, in which stand-in goalkeeper Ron Healey conceded an own goal, resulting in another 1–0 defeat.[29]

A mid-table finish in the 1970–71 season meant that for the first time in four years Manchester City did not qualify for Europe. The following year, a fourth-place league finish gave the club a berth in the UEFA Cup for the first time.[30] The UEFA Cup had replaced the Fairs Cup in 1971, when control of the competition transferred to UEFA. City's debut in the competition was a short one. Drawn against a Valencia side managed by Alfredo Di Stéfano, City were bounced out in the second leg at the Mestalla 3–2, despite producing a pulsating 2–2 draw at Maine Road in the first leg.[31]

Triumph in the 1976 League Cup final gave Manchester City a place in the UEFA Cup after a four-year absence. City drew Juventus in the first round. Drawn at home first, City won the first leg 1–0, Brian Kidd scoring his first goal for the club. The second leg in Turin resulted in a 2–0 defeat and elimination.[32] Juventus went on to win the competition. As league runners-up in the 1976–77 season, City again qualified for the UEFA Cup. Drawn against Widzew Łódź, the Blues drew the first leg at Maine Road 2–2. In the late 1970s, hooliganism was becoming a more prominent part of English football. Following an incident where a fan invaded the pitch and attacked Widzew's Zbigniew Boniek, City were fined by UEFA, and fencing was erected between the pitch and the stands.[33] A 0–0 draw in Łódź resulted in City's elimination on the away goals rule.

A fifth-place finish in the 1977–78 season proved sufficient to qualify for the UEFA Cup once again. Dutchmen FC Twente were the first opposition. In Enschede, Dave Watson gave City the lead. Twente equalised in the second half from a free kick.[34] In the second leg City ran up a 3–1 lead, but a second Twente goal meant a nervy finish. City held on, preserving their 3–2 lead to win the tie.[35] This was the first time the club had progressed past the first round of the UEFA Cup in four attempts. Further opposition from the Low Countries awaited in the second round, in the form of Standard Liège. A flurry of late goals gave Manchester City a 4–0 lead after the first leg.[36] The large lead meant that despite a 2–0 defeat in Liège, in which Gary Owen received a red card, City progressed with ease.[37] Owen's sending off resulted in a five match ban.[38]

In the third round City faced four-time European trophy winners A.C. Milan. The first leg, held at the San Siro, was initially postponed due to fog, and was instead played the following day.[39] City took a 2–0 lead and came close to becoming the first English team to beat Milan at the San Siro, but conceded twice; the equaliser scored eight minutes from time.[40] City won the home leg 3–0, with goals from Booth, Hartford and Kidd.[41] City's first European quarter-final since 1971 was against Borussia Mönchengladbach. The club received advice from Bob Paisley, whose Liverpool had met Mönchengladbach several times.[42] City opened the scoring in the first leg, but while attempting to extend their lead were caught on the counter-attack and conceded an equaliser.[43] After failing to win the home leg, having conceded an away goal in the process, City travelled to Germany with few expecting them to progress. So it proved, as City lost 3–1 at the Bökelbergstadion.[44]

Return to Europe in the 2000s; little progress in the early 2010s edit

Manchester City's fortunes declined during the 1980s and 1990s. For a single season, 1998–99, the club fell as far as English football's third tier. The club did not qualify for European competition in this period. In ordinary circumstances, the club's fifth-placed finish in 1991 and 1992 would have granted a UEFA Cup place. However, English clubs had recently returned from a ban issued after the Heysel Stadium disaster. As the UEFA coefficient that determines the number of places per country is based upon performances in European competition over the previous five years, England had a reduced allocation until 1995.

By the 2002–03 season, Manchester City were back in the Premier League. An unusual route into European competition for the 2003–04 season was provided by the UEFA Respect Fair Play ranking, which allocated extra UEFA Cup qualifying round places for the leagues with the best records for discipline and positive play.[45] This marked Manchester City's first European participation for 24 years. In the qualifying round City played Welsh club Total Network Solutions. The first leg was the first-ever competitive match at Manchester City's new ground, the City of Manchester Stadium. Trevor Sinclair became the first ever goalscorer at the stadium in a 5–0 win.[46] In the hope of attracting a large crowd, TNS switched the second leg to Millennium Stadium, the national stadium of Wales.[47] With the tie effectively won, City made 10 changes to their team.[48] The match finished 2–0 to City. Against Sporting Lokeren in the first round proper, City won the home leg 3–2, and the away leg 1–0.[49] A tie against Groclin Dyskobolia followed. Both legs were drawn,[50] and just as in 1976, City were eliminated on away goals after a 0–0 draw in Poland.

In 2008, Manchester City once again qualified for the UEFA Cup through the Fair Play rankings. As City had to play the qualifying rounds, it meant a very early start to the season, in mid-July. Their first match was a trip to the remote Faroe Islands to play EB/Streymur. As Streymur's ground had a capacity of only 1,000, the match was moved to Tórsvøllur, the Faroese national stadium.[51] Two early goals gave City a 2–0 win.[52] The home leg was unusual in that it was played outside Manchester. The pitch at the City of Manchester Stadium had been relaid following a Bon Jovi concert, and was not ready in time. Instead, the match was played at Barnsley's Oakwell ground.[53] Another 2–0 win resulted in a 4–0 aggregate scoreline.[54] In the second qualifying round City played FC Midtjylland. The first leg ended in a 1–0 defeat, only City's second ever home defeat in European competition.[35] In the second leg City looked to be heading out of the competition until an 89th minute cross was diverted into his own net by Midtjylland's Danny Califf. The tie then went to extra time, and City progressed on penalties.[55] In the first round proper Cypriots AC Omonia took the lead, but City overcame the deficit and won 2–1, and also won the second leg by the same scoreline.[56]

 
Manchester City prepare to kick off their 2010–11 Europa League match at Red Bull Salzburg

A five team group stage then followed, in which each team played the others once. Manchester City were drawn with Twente, Schalke 04, Racing de Santander and Paris Saint-Germain. City topped the group, after wins against Twente and Schalke, a draw with Paris Saint-Germain and a defeat in a dead rubber in Santander.[57] The knockout stages then resumed, with a visit to F.C. Copenhagen in freezing conditions. City took the lead twice but could only draw 2–2.[58] The home leg was more comfortable, and ended in a 2–1 victory. Another Danish club, Aalborg, awaited in the next round. Both matches finished 2–0 to the home side, and the tie was decided by a penalty shootout, which Manchester City won.[59] City then faced Hamburger SV, in their first European quarter-final since 1979. The away leg was played first, and started exceptionally well for Manchester City, as Stephen Ireland scored after just 35 seconds. However, Hamburg soon equalised, and won the match 3–1.[60] A difficult task in the home leg soon became even harder, when Hamburg scored an away goal early in the match. City scored twice, the first by Elano, who also hit the woodwork on two occasions with free-kicks. However, City could not produce the third goal that would have taken the tie into extra time.[61]

 
Lech Poznań vs Manchester City F.C., 4 November 2010

UEFA rebranded and restructured the UEFA Cup in 2009, resulting in it becoming the UEFA Europa League. By finishing fifth in the 2009–10 Premier League, Manchester City qualified for this competition. A play-off round took place before the four team group stage, in which Manchester City beat Timișoara of Romania home and away.[62] City's group stage opponents were Juventus, Red Bull Salzburg and Lech Poznań. Each team played the others twice. City's opener was in Salzburg, and resulted in a 2–0 win.[63] A 1–1 draw at home to Juventus then followed.[64] A 3–1 win at home to Lech Poznań is remembered primarily not for the action on the pitch, in which Emmanuel Adebayor scored a hat-trick, but for the actions of the Polish supporters, whose backs to the pitch dance was later adopted by Manchester City fans, for whom it became known as The Poznań.[65] The return match with Lech Poznań resulted in a 3–1 defeat, but a 3–0 home victory over Red Bull Salzburg ensured qualification with a match to spare.[66] The dead rubber against Juventus ended 1–1, and Manchester City won the group.[67] In the knockout stages City then beat Aris 3–0 on aggregate,[68] and met Dynamo Kyiv in the last 16. City lost 2–0 in Kyiv, and had to play most of the second leg with ten men after Mario Balotelli was sent off. A 1–0 win was insufficient to overcome the deficit, as City lost 2–1 on aggregate.[69]

 
2011–12 match between Villarreal and Manchester City

Manchester City finished third in the 2010–11 Premier League, to qualify for the rebranded version of the European Cup, the UEFA Champions League, for the first time since 1968. The club's league finish granted direct entry into the group stages without qualification. Their group stage opponents were Bayern Munich, Villarreal and Napoli. City's first group match was at home to Napoli. The Italians took the lead in the second half following a counter-attacking move, but five minutes later Aleksandar Kolarov scored from a free-kick to equalise, and the match finished 1–1.[70] City then lost 2–0 at Bayern Munich, a match most notable for the refusal of Carlos Tevez to come on as substitute,[71] which resulted in an exile from the first team lasting nearly six months.[72] A double-header with Villarreal resulted in two Manchester City wins. Sergio Agüero scored a last-minute winner in the first, which finished 2–1;[73] the second was a comfortable 3–0 victory.[74] A 2–1 defeat at Napoli then took qualification out of Manchester City's hands, and despite a 2–0 win against group winners Bayern Munich, City finished third in the group and failed to qualify for the knockout stages.[75]

 
Manchester City vs Bayern Munich, 7 December 2011

As a third placed team the club then entered the Europa League in the round of 32, where they faced Europa League holders Porto. Manchester City won both legs. Agüero's goal after 19 seconds of the second leg was the second fastest in the history of the competition.[76] City returned to Portugal in the next round, against Lisbon club Sporting CP. City lost the first leg 0–1 in Lisbon and were trailing 0–2 early in the home game. The team mounted a great comeback, scoring three goals, but it was not enough, as they were eliminated on away goals rule.

Manchester City qualified for the 2012–13 UEFA Champions League as league champions and hope were high for the team to perform successfully. The team was drawn with Real Madrid, Borussia Dortmund, and AFC Ajax. Cityzens failed to win even a single watch, losing three and drawing three and failed to progress even to the Europa League knock-out stage, finishing last in their group.

The 2013–14 UEFA Champions League campaign was a watershed moment for the team, as they won five games in the group stage and qualified for the knockout phase for the first time since 1968. However, City's performance in the round of 16 was a disappointment, as they dropped both games to Barcelona with an aggregate score of 1–4. The team's next Champions League campaign was similar to the previous one, as Manchester City were again drawn with Bayern Munich and CSKA Moscow in the group stage and, after qualifying for the playoffs as the second best team, Cityzens once again had to face Barcelona. The final result saw little improvement, as Man City again lost both games but this time with an aggregate score of 1–3. Barça went on to win the tournament.

The 2015–16 UEFA Champions League campaign went on to become the most successful in history for City as they reached the semi-finals before being eliminated by Real Madrid after drawing the home game and losing at the Santiago Bernabéu 0–1. Real Madrid went on to win the tournament. The Cityzens eliminated Dynamo Kyiv and Paris on their way to the semi-finals.

Under Pep Guardiola: 2016 to present day, top-four UEFA ranking, first-ever Champions League final and continental treble edit

In the first season under the reign Pep Guardiola, hopes were high for Manchester City as they progressed to the knockout phase after finishing second in the group that featured Guardiola's former team, Barcelona. City lost their away match to Barça 0–4, but then rebounded to win 3–1 at home. In the Round of 16 City were drawn against Monaco. The Blues were trailing 1–2 and 2–3 in their home match before scoring three unanswered goals and winning 5–3. In the away game, the Cityzens were down 0–2 when Leroy Sané scored to put City in front of the tie again, but Tiémoué Bakayoko's late goal meant that Monaco progressed further and City were eliminated.

 
Manchester City line-up against Shakhtar Donetsk in the UEFA Champions League, on 26 September 2017

The 2017–18 season was an undoubted success for the Blues domestically, but their European campaign was quite underwhelming. The team confidently won five games in the group stage and qualified for the knockout stage, where they defeated Basel 5–2 on aggregate. The Cityzens were drawn with fellow Premier League side Liverpool in the quarter-finals. The outcome of those games was an utter devastation as Manchester City were thrashed 5–1 on aggregate and eliminated amid the controversy with refereeing mistakes favourable to Liverpool. The Premier League title where City achieved 100 points was somewhat a consolation for this anticlimactic European campaign.

Manchester City were one of the favourites prior to their 2018–19 Champions league campaign. The team again won their group with 13 points, then defeated Schalke 04 in the Round of 16, winning their home game with a record 7–0 scoreline. Similarly to the previous season, Manchester City were drawn against an English club in the quarter-finals, this time Tottenham Hotspur. The Blues lost the away game 0–1, with Agüero missing a penalty. In the home leg, Sterling scored early for the hosts, but then City quickly conceded two goals and now needed to score three. They did exactly that, leading 4–2 twenty minutes before the end of the game, but Fernando Llorente's wrongly awarded handball meant that City were again required to score.[77] In stoppage time, Sterling converted a pass from Agüero to seemingly send City through. However, the goal was disallowed after a VAR review, and the Blues were eliminated in a heartbreaking fashion.[78] Manchester City swept all their domestic tournaments that season, but were still unable to add European success.

Acknowledging that City would be judged by their Champions League performance after all,[79] Pep Guardiola stated that the new season's main objective would be to win the European title. The Cityzens progressed to the knockout phase and faced old foes Real Madrid there. City won the away game 2–1, but the remainder of the tournament was indefinitely postponed due to the COVID–19 pandemic. Finally, UEFA announced that the tournament would be resumed in August 2020. The home match against Madrid was scheduled for 7 August. Thanks to goals from Raheem Sterling and Gabriel Jesus, the Citizens once again defeated Madrid 2–1, achieving a 4–2 victory on aggregate and advancing to the quarter-finals. Man City faced Lyon on 15 August, losing 3–1 and exiting the Champions league at the quarter-final stage for the third year in a row.[80][81]

The 2020–21 campaign saw City top its group with a club record of 16 points, twice defeating Marseille and Olympiacos, and collecting four points against Porto. In the round of 16, the Blues were paired with Borussia Mönchengladbach and progressed to the quarter-finals for the fourth consecutive year after winning both legs 2–0.[82] In the quarter-finals, City were paired against another German outfit, this time Borussia Dortmund. The Blues managed to neutralize Dortmund's inform striker Erling Haaland to win the double-legged tie 4–2 on aggregate after two identical 2–1 wins home and away.[83][84] In the semi-finals, Manchester City were drawn against reigning finalists Paris Saint-Germain who'd avenged their loss to Bayern Munich in the 2020 final by knocking out the German club in their quarter-final tie on away goals. City rallied from behind to win 2–1 at the Parc des Princes thanks to goals by Kevin De Bruyne and Riyad Mahrez.[85] In the second leg, a goal in either half from Mahrez booked City's place in their first-ever European Cup final, which happened to be an all-English affair against Chelsea, with a stylish 4–1 aggregate victory.[86] The final took place at the Estádio do Dragão in Porto, Portugal, and the Citizens were defeated 1–0 by a lone goal scored by Kai Havertz in an anticlimactic game. Still, City's breakthrough marked its most successful European campaign to date.[87] As a consequence of that successful campaign, City entered the top four in the UEFA rankings, placing third.

City once again reached the Champions League semi-finals in the 2021–22 competition. They won a group including Paris Sant Germain, RB Leipzig and Club Brugges with four victories and two defeats.[88] In the round of 16 they earnt a commanding first leg lead in their tie against Sporting Lisbon, beating the Portuguese champions 5–0 away including a brace from Bernardo Silva. before wrapping up the victory with a 0–0 draw at home.[89][90] In the quarter-final a 1–0 victory in the first leg at home gave City a slight advantage against Atlético as they headed to Madrid. An intense and maturely hard fought 0–0 draw then ensured City progressed to the semi-finals. There, City beat Real Madrid 4–3 in an outstanding game at a full and noisy Etihad Stadium to take a slender advantage to the Bernabéu. City scored in under 2 minutes as Kevin De Bruyne finished the fastest goal in European Cup semi-final history and had held a two goal advantage on three occasions during the tie, with several other good opportunities to increase their lead, only to see a resilient Madrid reduce their deficit to a single goal, including a brace and Panenka penalty from their top scorer, captain and talisman Karim Benzema.[91] City would go onto regret these missed opportunities as they failed to reach the Champions League final in dramatic and heart-breaking circumstances. Leading the second leg 1–0 (5–3 on aggregate), from a 75th-minute goal from Riyad Mahrez, and approaching the last minute of normal time, it appeared City were heading comfortably to the final, where they would have met Liverpool. However two goals in a minute from Madrid's substitute striker Rodrygo sent the game into extra time; and another penalty from Benzema five minutes later proved to be the winner as City were defeated 1–3 (5–6 on aggregate).[92] Despite the heartbreaking defeat, City retained the third place in the UEFA rankings.

For the third consecutive season, and for the fourth time in the club's history, City reached the Champions League semi-finals in 2022–23. After topping their group of Borussia Dortmund of the Bundesliga, Sevilla of La Liga and F.C. Copenhagen of the Danish Superliga undefeated, with four wins and two draws, the Blues were drawn up against RB Leipzig in the round of 16 for the third and fourth fixtures between the sides in their histories. At the Red Bull Arena, Riyad Mahrez's first half opener was cancelled out by Joško Gvardiol in the second half, and City drew 1–1 after being denied a penalty in the final seconds. The draw would not matter as City eviscerated the German side 7–0 in the second leg, with a record-equalling five goals from Erling Haaland, and one each from new captain İlkay Gündoğan and from Kevin De Bruyne. The Blues would then be drawn up against another Bundesliga side, this time Bayern Munich, 2019–20 Champions League winners and reigning German champions. In the first leg at the Etihad Stadium, City comfortably outplayed Bayern and defeated them 3–0, with a first Champions League goal for Rodri and one each from Bernardo Silva and Erling Haaland, effectively sending City through after one leg. The following week, they drew 1–1 at the Allianz Arena, with another goal from Haaland confirming City's semi-finals spot 4–1 on aggregate to face Real Madrid there for the second consecutive season. The first leg was played at the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium, and Vinícius Júnior gave Madrid a 1–0 lead at half time with a stunning goal. However, City's reliable talisman Kevin De Bruyne salvaged the Blues a 1–1 draw at a stadium that saw their Champions League campaign collapse a year ago. Then, in one of their best performances in the Pep Guardiola era, Manchester City sealed their spot in the final thanks to an incredible 4–0 win in the second leg at the Etihad Stadium, with a first half brace from Bernardo Silva, and second half goals from Manuel Akanji and Julián Álvarez.[93]

2023 Champions League final edit

On 10 June 2023, at the Atatürk Olympic Stadium in front of 71,412 supporters, a second-half goal from Rodri saw Manchester City win the Champions League final against Inter Milan, completing a historic continental treble, only the second in English men's football history. In doing so, City completed a task of winning the UEFA Champions League set out 15 years ago in 2008 when the club was purchased by the Abu Dhabi United Group. The game itself was a nervy one for the Blues; in the fifth minute, Bernardo Silva curled an effort just wide. Erling Haaland and Kevin De Bruyne both had efforts, but they were saved by Inter goalkeeper André Onana. In the 36th minute, De Bruyne was substituted due to injury for the second time in a Champions League final, after going off in City's 2021 defeat to Chelsea. In the 59th minute, City's keeper Ederson failed to collect a weird backpass from Manuel Akanji which was found by Inter's Lautaro Martínez; his shot from near the touchline was blocked by Ederson. Rodri scored the opening goal for City in the 68th minute by finishing a pulled-back pass that Bernardo Silva sent from near the goal to the top of the penalty area. Inter had a chance to equalise three minutes later through a header by defender Federico Dimarco that hit the crossbar. Dimarco tried to capitalise on the rebound as well, but his shot was blocked by on-loan Chelsea striker Romelu Lukaku. The Belgian striker had his own chance to score from a close-range header in the 89th minute, which Ederson blocked with his legs. The Brazilian made an additional save in stoppage time off Robin Gosens' header to preserve a 1–0 victory for City. With this being the club's first European Cup title (making them the first new winners of the competition since fellow English club Chelsea in 2012), City became the sixth English team, and 23rd overall, to win the European Cup, which also marked the 15th time an English club were European champions. With this triumph, Manchester City topped the UEFA coefficient rankings.[94][95]

UEFA and FIFA competitions edit

Manchester City results in UEFA & FIFA competition
Season Competition Qualification method Round Opposition Home Away Neutral
1968–69 European Cup First Division, Champions First round   Fenerbahçe 0–0 1–2
1969–70 European Cup Winners' Cup FA Cup Winners First round   Athletic Bilbao 3–0 3–3
Second round   Lierse 5–0 3–0
Quarter-final   Académica de Coimbra 1–0 (a.e.t.) 0–0
Semi-final   Schalke 04 5–1 0–1
Final   Górnik Zabrze 2–1
1970–71 European Cup Winners' Cup Cup Winners' Cup Winners First round   Linfield 1–0 1–2
Second round   Budapest Honvéd SE 2–0 1–0
Quarter-final   Górnik Zabrze 2–0 (a.e.t.) 0–2 3–1
Semi-final   Chelsea 0–1 0–1
1972–73 UEFA Cup First Division, 4th First round   Valencia 2–2 1–2
1976–77 UEFA Cup League Cup Winners First round   Juventus 1–0 0–2
1977–78 UEFA Cup First Division, Runners-up First round   Widzew Łódź 2–2 0–0 (a)
1978–79 UEFA Cup First Division, 4th First round   Twente 3–2 1–1
Second round   Standard Liège 4–0 0–2
Third round   Milan 3–0 2–2
Quarter-final   Borussia Mönchengladbach 2–2 1–3
2003–04 UEFA Cup UEFA Fair Play Entry Qualifying round   Total Network Solutions 5–0 2–0
First round   Sporting Lokeren 3–2 1–0
Second round   Dyskobolia Grodzisk 1–1 0–0 (a)
2008–09 UEFA Cup UEFA Fair Play Entry First qualifying round   EB/Streymur 2–0 2–0
Second qualifying round   Midtjylland 0–1 1–0 (a.e.t.) (4–2 p)
First round   Omonia 2–1 2–1
Group stage   Twente 3–2
  Schalke 04 2–0
  Paris Saint-Germain 0–0
  Racing Santander 1–3
Round of 32   Copenhagen 2–1 2–2
Round of 16   Aalborg BK 2–0 0–2 (a.e.t.) (4–3 p)
Quarter-final   Hamburger SV 2–1 1–3
2010–11 Europa League Premier League, 5th Play-off round   Timișoara 2–0 1–0
Group stage   Red Bull Salzburg 3–0 2–0
  Juventus 1–1 1–1
  Lech Poznań 3–1 1–3
Round of 32   Aris 3–0 0–0
Round of 16   Dynamo Kyiv 1–0 0–2
2011–12 Champions League Premier League, 3rd Group A
  Napoli 1–1 1–2
  Bayern Munich 2–0 0–2
  Villarreal 2–1 3–0
Europa League Champions League Group Stage, 3rd Round of 32   Porto 4–0 2–1
Round of 16   Sporting CP 3–2 (a) 0–1
2012–13 Champions League Premier League, Champions Group D   Real Madrid 1–1 2–3
  Borussia Dortmund 1–1 0–1
  Ajax 2–2 1–3
2013–14 Champions League Premier League, Runners-up Group D   Viktoria Plzeň 4–2 3–0
  Bayern Munich 1–3 3–2
  CSKA Moscow 5–2 2–1
Round of 16   Barcelona 0–2 1–2
2014–15 Champions League Premier League, Champions Group E   Bayern Munich 3–2 0–1
  Roma 1–1 2–0
  CSKA Moscow 1–2 2–2
Round of 16   Barcelona 1–2 0–1
2015–16 Champions League Premier League, Runners-up Group D   Juventus 1–2 0–1
  Borussia Mönchengladbach 4–2 2–1
  Sevilla 2–1 3–1
Round of 16   Dynamo Kyiv 0–0 3–1
Quarter-final   Paris Saint-Germain 1–0 2–2
Semi-final   Real Madrid 0–0 0–1
2016–17 Champions League Premier League, 4th Play-off round   Steaua București 1–0 5–0
Group C   Barcelona 3–1 0–4
  Borussia Mönchengladbach 4–0 1–1
  Celtic 1–1 3–3
Round of 16   Monaco 5–3 1–3 (a)
2017–18 Champions League Premier League, 3rd Group F   Shakhtar Donetsk 2–0 1–2
  Napoli 2–1 4–2
  Feyenoord 1–0 4–0
Round of 16   Basel 1–2 4–0
Quarter-final   Liverpool 1–2 0–3
2018–19 Champions League Premier League, Champions Group F   Lyon 1–2 2–2
  1899 Hoffenheim 2–1 2–1
  Shakhtar Donetsk 6–0 3–0
Round of 16   Schalke 04 7–0 3–2
Quarter-final   Tottenham Hotspur 4–3 (a) 0–1
2019–20[a] Champions League Premier League, Champions Group C   Shakhtar Donetsk 1–1 3–0
  Dinamo Zagreb 2–0 4–1
  Atalanta 5–1 1–1
Round of 16   Real Madrid 2–1 2–1
Quarter-final   Lyon 1–3
2020–21 Champions League Premier League, Runners-up Group C   Porto 3–1 0–0
  Olympiacos 3–0 1–0
  Marseille 3–0 3–0
Round of 16   Borussia Mönchengladbach 2–0 2–0
Quarter-final   Borussia Dortmund 2–1 2–1
Semi-final   Paris Saint-Germain 2–0 2–1
Final   Chelsea 0–1
2021–22 Champions League Premier League, Champions Group A   RB Leipzig 6–3 1–2
  Paris Saint-Germain 2–1 0–2
  Club Brugge 4–1 5–1
Round of 16   Sporting CP 0–0 5–0
Quarter-final   Atlético Madrid 1–0 0–0
Semi-final   Real Madrid 4–3 1–3 (a.e.t.)
2022–23 Champions League Premier League, Champions Group G   Sevilla 3–1 4–0
  Borussia Dortmund 2–1 0–0
  Copenhagen 5–0 0–0
Round of 16   RB Leipzig 7–0 1–1
Quarter-final   Bayern Munich 3–0 1–1
Semi-final   Real Madrid 4–0 1–1
Final   Inter Milan 1–0
2023 UEFA Super Cup Champions League, Winners Final   Sevilla 1–1 (5–4 p)
2023 FIFA Club World Cup Champions League, Winners Semi-final   Urawa Red Diamonds 3–0
Final   Fluminense 4–0
2023–24 Champions League Premier League, Champions
Champions League, Winners
Group G   Red Star Belgrade 3–1 3–2
  RB Leipzig 3–2 3–1
  Young Boys 3–0 3–1
Round of 16   Copenhagen 3–1 3–1
Quarter-final   Real Madrid 17 April 3–3


Non-UEFA / FIFA competitions edit

In addition to the major UEFA competitions, Manchester City have also played a number of first team fixtures in other, more minor multi-national competitions. As winners of the 1970 League Cup, Manchester City played against the Coppa Italia winners Bologna in the Anglo-Italian League Cup. The competition started the previous year, as a way of enabling 1969 League Cup winners Swindon Town to play European opposition.[96] For the first leg in Bologna, the City team stayed over 100 km (60 miles) away in the coastal resort of Rimini, and took a relaxed attitude to proceedings.[97] City lost the match 1–0, and drew 2–2 at home, losing the competition.

After missing out on a UEFA berth for 1971–72, Manchester City were invited to play in the Texaco Cup, a competition for English, Scottish and Irish teams. City fielded a weakened side for the second leg of their tie against Airdrieonians. As punishment Manchester City had their £1,000 prize money withheld and were banned from the competition for two years.[98] Upon the expiry of the suspension in 1974, the club entered the competition again, but exited in the group stage. The tournament saw Denis Law play his final matches as a professional. The withdrawal of Irish teams saw the competition renamed the Anglo-Scottish Cup the following year. Again, City failed to progress beyond the group stage.

Manchester City results in non-UEFA competition
Season Competition Qualification method Round Opposition Home Away
1970–71 Anglo-Italian League Cup League Cup Winners Final   Bologna 2–2 0–1
1971–72 Texaco Cup Invitation First round   Airdrieonians 2–2 0–2
1974–75 Texaco Cup Invitation Group stage   Blackpool 1–1
  Sheffield United 2–4
  Oldham Athletic 2–1
1975–76 Anglo-Scottish Cup Invitation Group stage   Blackpool 0–1
  Blackburn Rovers 0–1
  Sheffield United 3–1

Records edit

As of 9 March 2024[b]

Competitive record edit

Competition T Part Teams Pld W D L GF GA GD Win%
European Cup / UEFA Champions League 1 14 32 128 74 25 29 272 143 +129 057.81
European Cup Winners' Cup 1 2 8 18 11 2 5 32 13 +19 061.11
UEFA Cup / Europa League 0 8 25 52 28 13 11 85 52 +33 053.85
UEFA Super Cup 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 1 +0 000.00
FIFA Club World Cup 1 1 2 2 2 0 0 7 0 +7 100.00
Total 4 26 68 201 115 41 45 397 209 +188 057.21
Competition T Part Pld W D L GF GA GD Win%
Non-UEFA competitions
Anglo-Italian League Cup 0 1 2 0 1 1 2 3 −1 000.00
Texaco Cup / Anglo-Scottish Cup 0 3 8 2 2 4 10 13 −3 025.00
Total 0 4 10 2 3 5 12 16 −4 020.00

Finals edit

29 April 1970 Final Manchester City   2–1   Górnik Zabrze Vienna, Austria
19:30 Young   12'
Lee   43' (pen.)
Oślizło   68' Stadium: Praterstadion
Attendance: 7,968
Referee: Paul Schiller (Austria)
29 May 2021 Final Manchester City   0–1   Chelsea Porto, Portugal
20:00 WEST PTT (UTC+1) Gündoğan   35'
Gabriel Jesus   88'
Report Havertz   42'
Rüdiger   57'
Stadium: Estádio do Dragão
Attendance: 14,110
Referee: Antonio Mateu Lahoz (Spain)
Note: The final was originally scheduled to be played at the Atatürk Olympic Stadium in Istanbul. However, on 12 May, UEFA announced it had been moved to Portugal since the high level of COVID-19 infection rates in Turkey had led the UK government to place travel to Turkey on its red list, meaning fans would have had to quarantine for ten days in a hotel at their expense after their return. Portugal at the same time was on the green list, which meant no travel restrictions at either end for those attending the final.[99][100]
10 June 2023 Final Manchester City   1–0   Inter Milan Istanbul, Turkey
22:00 TRT (UTC+3)
Report
Stadium: Atatürk Olympic Stadium
Attendance: 71,412
Referee: Szymon Marciniak (Poland)
16 August 2023 (2023-08-16) Final Manchester City   1–1
(5–4 p)
  Sevilla Piraeus, Greece
22:00 EEST
Report
Stadium: Karaiskakis Stadium
Attendance: 29,207[101]
Referee: François Letexier (France)
Penalties
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)

Lost semi-finals edit

Year Competition Opposing Team Agg Score Final venue Other Semi-finalists*
1970–71 Cup Winners' Cup   Chelsea 0–2   Karaiskakis Stadium   PSV Eindhoven
  Real Madrid
2015–16 Champions League   Real Madrid 0–1   San Siro   Atlético Madrid
  Bayern Munich
2021–22 Champions League   Real Madrid 5–6 (a.e.t.)   Stade de France   Villarreal
  Liverpool

*Other winning semi-finalists are shown in italics. Tournaments winners are in bold.

By country edit

UEFA and FIFA competitions edit

Result summary by country
Country Teams Pld W D L GF GA GD
  Austria 1 2 2 0 0 5 0 +5
  Belgium 4 8 7 0 1 25 6 +19
  Brazil 1 1 1 0 0 4 0 +4
  Croatia 1 2 2 0 0 6 1 +5
  Cyprus 1 2 2 0 0 4 2 +2
  Czech Republic 1 2 2 0 0 7 2 +5
  Denmark 3 10 6 2 2 18 8 +10
  England 3 7 1 0 6 5 12 −7
  Faroe Islands 1 2 2 0 0 4 0 +4
  France 4 14 7 3 4 25 19 +6
  Germany (incl. West Germany) 7 37 23 6 8 83 44 +39
  Greece 2 4 3 1 0 7 0 +7
  Hungary 1 2 2 0 0 3 0 +3
  Italy 6 17 7 6 4 27 18 +9
  Japan 1 1 1 0 0 3 0 +3
  Netherlands 3 7 4 2 1 15 10 +5
  Northern Ireland 1 2 1 0 1 2 2 0
  Poland 4 10 4 4 2 14 11 +3
  Portugal 3 10 6 3 1 18 5 +13
  Romania 2 4 4 0 0 9 0 +9
  Russia 1 4 2 1 1 10 7 +3
  Scotland 1 2 0 2 0 4 4 0
  Serbia 1 2 2 0 0 6 3 +3
  Spain 8 31 13 8 10 54 44 +10
  Switzerland 2 4 3 0 1 11 3 +5
  Turkey 1 2 0 1 1 1 2 −1
  Ukraine 2 10 6 2 2 20 6 +14
  Wales 1 2 2 0 0 7 0 +7

Non-UEFA competitions edit

Result summary by country (Non-UEFA competitions)
Country Pld W D L GF GA GD
  England 6 2 1 3 8 9 −1
  Italy 2 0 1 1 2 3 −1
  Scotland 2 0 1 1 2 4 −2

By team edit

Manchester City have played against 68 different teams internationally.

Record in international football by team
Team Country Pld W D L GF GA GD Win%
1899 Hoffenheim   Germany 2 2 0 0 4 2 +2 100.00
Aalborg BK   Denmark 2 1 0 1 2 2 +0 050.00
Académica de Coimbra   Portugal 2 1 1 0 1 0 +1 050.00
Ajax   Netherlands 2 0 1 1 3 5 −2 000.00
Aris   Greece 2 1 1 0 3 0 +3 050.00
Atalanta   Italy 2 1 1 0 6 2 +4 050.00
Athletic Bilbao   Spain 2 1 1 0 6 3 +3 050.00
Atlético Madrid   Spain 2 1 1 0 1 0 +1 050.00
Barcelona   Spain 6 1 0 5 5 12 −7 016.67
Basel    Switzerland 2 1 0 1 5 2 +3 050.00
Bayern Munich   Germany 8 4 1 3 13 11 +2 050.00
Borussia Dortmund   Germany 6 3 2 1 7 5 +2 050.00
Borussia Mönchengladbach   Germany 8 5 2 1 18 9 +9 062.50
Budapest Honvéd   Hungary 2 2 0 0 3 0 +3 100.00
CSKA Moscow   Russia 4 2 1 1 10 7 +3 050.00
Celtic   Scotland 2 0 2 0 4 4 +0 000.00
Chelsea   England 3 0 0 3 0 3 −3 000.00
Club Brugge   Belgium 2 2 0 0 9 2 +7 100.00
Copenhagen   Denmark 6 4 2 0 15 5 +10 066.67
Dinamo Zagreb   Croatia 2 2 0 0 6 1 +5 100.00
Dynamo Kyiv   Ukraine 4 2 1 1 4 3 +1 050.00
Dyskobolia Grodzisk Wielkopolski   Poland 2 0 2 0 1 1 +0 000.00
EB/Streymur   Faroe Islands 2 2 0 0 4 0 +4 100.00
Fenerbahçe   Turkey 2 0 1 1 1 2 −1 000.00
Feyenoord   Netherlands 2 2 0 0 5 0 +5 100.00
Fluminense   Brazil 1 1 0 0 4 0 +4 100.00
Górnik Zabrze   Poland 4 3 0 1 7 4 +3 075.00
Hamburger SV   Germany 2 1 0 1 3 4 −1 050.00
Inter Milan   Italy 1 1 0 0 1 0 +1 100.00
Juventus   Italy 6 1 2 3 4 7 −3 016.67
Lech Poznań   Poland 2 1 0 1 4 4 +0 050.00
Lierse   Belgium 2 2 0 0 8 0 +8 100.00
Linfield   Northern Ireland 2 1 0 1 2 2 +0 050.00
Liverpool   England 2 0 0 2 1 5 −4 000.00
Lyon   France 3 0 1 2 4 7 −3 000.00
Marseille   France 2 2 0 0 6 0 +6 100.00
Midtjylland   Denmark 2 1 0 1 1 1 +0 050.00
Milan   Italy 2 1 1 0 5 2 +3 050.00
Monaco   France 2 1 0 1 6 6 +0 050.00
Napoli   Italy 4 2 1 1 8 6 +2 050.00
Olympiacos   Greece 2 2 0 0 4 0 +4 100.00
Omonia   Cyprus 2 2 0 0 4 2 +2 100.00
Paris Saint-Germain   France 7 4 2 1 9 6 +3 057.14
Porto   Portugal 4 3 1 0 9 2 +7 075.00
RB Leipzig   Germany 6 4 1 1 21 9 +12 066.67
Racing Santander   Spain 1 0 0 1 1 3 −2 000.00
Real Madrid   Spain 11 4 4 3 20 17 +3 036.36
Red Bull Salzburg   Austria 2 2 0 0 5 0 +5 100.00
Red Star Belgrade   Serbia 2 2 0 0 6 3 +3 100.00
Roma   Italy 2 1 1 0 3 1 +2 050.00
Schalke 04   Germany 5 4 0 1 17 4 +13 080.00
Sevilla   Spain 5 4 1 0 13 4 +9 080.00
Shakhtar Donetsk   Ukraine 6 4 1 1 16 3 +13 066.67
Sporting CP   Portugal 4 2 1 1 8 3 +5 050.00
Sporting Lokeren   Belgium 2 2 0 0 4 2 +2 100.00
Standard Liège   Belgium 2 1 0 1 4 2 +2 050.00
Steaua București   Romania 2 2 0 0 6 0 +6 100.00
Timișoara   Romania 2 2 0 0 3 0 +3 100.00
Total Network Solutions   Wales 2 2 0 0 7 0 +7 100.00
Tottenham Hotspur   England 2 1 0 1 4 4 +0 050.00
Twente   Netherlands 3 2 1 0 7 5 +2 066.67
Urawa Red Diamonds   Japan 1 1 0 0 3 0 +3 100.00
Valencia   Spain 2 0 1 1 3 4 −1 000.00
Viktoria Plzeň   Czech Republic 2 2 0 0 7 2 +5 100.00
Villarreal   Spain 2 2 0 0 5 1 +4 100.00
Widzew Łódź   Poland 2 0 2 0 2 2 +0 000.00
Young Boys    Switzerland 2 2 0 0 6 1 +5 100.00

UEFA coefficient edit

The UEFA club coefficients are based on the results of clubs competing in the five previous seasons of the UEFA Champions League, UEFA Europa League and UEFA Europa Conference League. The rankings determine the seeding of each club in relevant UEFA competition draws. The table and graph below show the progress of City's rankings in these coefficients since they re-entered the Europa League competition in 2010–11 as of the end of the season specified.

 
Progression of Manchester City's UEFA club coefficient ranking
Season Coefficient Ranking
2010–11 30 42
2011–12 47 28
2012–13 54 22
2013–14 56 22
2014–15 71 17
2015–16 84 11
2016–17 85 12
2017–18 100 8
2018–19 106 6
2019–20 116 6
2020–21 125 3
2021–22 134 3
2022–23 145 1

Last updated: 10 June 2023.
Source: UEFA
Final coefficient at season end indicated

Club records edit

  • Record European home victory: 7–0 vs Schalke 04, UEFA Champions League round of 16 second leg, 12 March 2019; vs RB Leipzig, UEFA Champions League round of 16 second leg, 14 March 2023.
  • Record European away victory: 5–0 vs Sporting CP, UEFA Champions League round of 16 first leg, 15 February 2022.
  • Record European home defeat: 1–3 vs Bayern Munich, UEFA Champions League group stage, 2 October 2013.
  • Record European away defeat: 0–4 vs Barcelona, UEFA Champions League group stage, 19 October 2016.
  • Longest winning run in UEFA competitions: 10 matches, 17 May 2023 – 6 March 2024, national record.
  • Most UEFA Champions League home wins in a row: 12 matches, 9 March 2022 – 6 March 2024, ongoing.
  • Most UEFA Champions League wins in a single season: 11 matches, 2020–21, national record.
  • Longest unbeaten run in the UEFA Champions League: 22 matches, 6 September 2022 – 6 April 2024, ongoing.
  • Longest unbeaten home run in the UEFA Champions League: 30 matches, 7 November 2018 – 6 March 2024, ongoing, national record.
  • Longest unbeaten away run in the UEFA Champions League: 12 matches, 6 September 2022 – 6 April 2024, ongoing.
  • Most points amassed in a UEFA Champions League group: 18 points, 2023–24.
  • Fewest points amassed in a UEFA Champions League group: 3 points, 2012–13.
  • Most goals scored in a single season: 32 goals, 2022–23.
  • Fewest goals conceded in a single season: 5 goals, 2020–21 and 2022–23.
  • Highest home attendance: 53,461 vs Liverpool, UEFA Champions League quarter-finals second leg, 10 April 2018.

Player records edit

Manager records edit

  • Most decorated managers: 3 titlesPep Guardiola.
  • Most games managed: 89 matches (including preliminary rounds) – Pep Guardiola.
  • Most matches won: 59 wins (including preliminary rounds) – Pep Guardiola.

Notes edit

  1. ^ On 17 June 2020, UEFA announced that the final stages of that season's Champions League would feature a format change due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe. As such, the quarter-finals, semi-finals and final were all played behind closed doors in a single-leg format from 12 to 23 August 2020 at the Estádio da Luz and Estádio José Alvalade in Lisbon, Portugal.
  2. ^ Champions League figures include results from preliminary round matches.

References edit

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  3. ^ James, Gary (2006). Manchester City – The Complete Record. Derby: Breedon. p. 55. ISBN 1-85983-512-0.
  4. ^ Tossell, David (2008). Big Mal: The High Life and Hard Times of Malcolm Allison, Football Legend. Edinburgh: Mainstream. p. 156. ISBN 978-1-84596-478-8.
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  10. ^ a b Gardner, The Manchester City Football Book No. 2, p. 14.
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  16. ^ Gardner, "The Manchester City Football Book No. 2", p. 18.
  17. ^ Penney's Manchester City: The Mercer-Allison Years states 15,000, Tossell's Big Mal states 10,000, James' Big Book of City says "a crowd variously reported as anything from 7,968 to around 12,000".
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manchester, city, international, football, manchester, city, football, club, english, professional, association, football, club, gained, entry, union, european, football, associations, uefa, competitions, multiple, occasions, they, have, represented, england, . Manchester City Football Club an English professional association football club has gained entry to Union of European Football Associations UEFA competitions on multiple occasions They have represented England in the European Cup now the Champions League on fourteen occasions the UEFA Cup now the Europa League on eight occasions in the now defunct Cup Winners Cup twice the UEFA Super Cup once and at the FIFA Club World Cup once Manchester City are one of thirteen English football clubs to have won European and worldwide titles in City s case the 1969 70 Cup Winners Cup 2022 23 Champions League 2023 Super Cup and 2023 Club World Cup Manchester City F C in international footballClubManchester CitySeasons played23Most appearancesFernandinho 75 Top scorerSergio Aguero 43 First entry1968 69 European CupLatest entry2023 24 UEFA Champions LeagueTitlesChampions League1 2022 23Cup Winners Cup1 1969 70Super Cup1 2023FIFA Club World Cup1 2023The club s first entry into European competition occurred in 1968 as a result of winning the Football League Championship However the participation was short lived as Manchester City suffered a surprise defeat at the hands of Fenerbahce in the first round Entry into the Cup Winners Cup the following season was more successful Manchester City won the competition defeating Gornik Zabrze 2 1 in the final at the Prater Stadium in Vienna The club reached the semi finals of the same competition the following year and continued to play European football regularly during the 1970s City then endured a period of decline and did not play in Europe again until 2003 a gap of 24 years Since then the Blues have qualified for European competition on a regular basis they progressed past the quarter final stage of a continental competition four times during that period reaching the semi finals of the 2015 16 and 2021 22 Champions League losing their maiden European Cup final to Chelsea in 2020 21 and winning their first ever European championship in 2022 23 In the 1970s Manchester City also had a track record of repeated entry into several of the non UEFA sanctioned European competitions which were run in the era including the Anglo Italian League Cup and Texaco Cup Contents 1 History 1 1 First entries into European competition 1 1 1 1970 Cup Winners Cup final 1 2 Regular participation in the 1970s 1 3 Return to Europe in the 2000s little progress in the early 2010s 1 4 Under Pep Guardiola 2016 to present day top four UEFA ranking first ever Champions League final and continental treble 1 4 1 2023 Champions League final 2 UEFA and FIFA competitions 3 Non UEFA FIFA competitions 4 Records 4 1 Competitive record 4 2 Finals 4 3 Lost semi finals 4 4 By country 4 4 1 UEFA and FIFA competitions 4 4 2 Non UEFA competitions 4 5 By team 4 6 UEFA coefficient 4 7 Club records 4 8 Player records 4 9 Manager records 5 Notes 6 References 6 1 BibliographyHistory editFirst entries into European competition edit European club football competitions began in the mid 1950s Though Manchester City were moderately successful domestically in this period the club did not play in Europe City were not invited to play in the Inter Cities Fairs Cup and the European Cup Winners Cup did not begin until 1960 1 When eight players from neighbours Manchester United lost their lives in the Munich air disaster when returning from a European Cup match in February 1958 UEFA wished for City to take United s place in the competition City rejected the idea out of hand 2 Manchester City s first appearance in European competition occurred during the 1968 69 season City played in the European Cup by virtue of having won the 1967 68 league championship Extroverted Manchester City coach Malcolm Allison made a number of grandiose statements predicting how the team would fare saying that City would terrify Europe and that City will attack these people as they have not been attacked since the days of the old Real Madrid 3 4 The opposition in the first round was Turkish club Fenerbahce The City management did not scout Fenerbahce in advance of the game opting to rely on a report from Oscar Hold an Englishman who had managed Fenerbahce between 1965 and 1967 5 In the first leg at Maine Road City had what the Guardian s Albert Barham called overwhelming territorial advantage 6 However to the frustration of the home crowd City were denied by a strong defensive performance by Fenerbahce most notably by goalkeeper Yavuz Simsek and the match finished 0 0 7 The return leg in Istanbul was played in front of a Turkish record crowd 8 City took an early lead through Tony Coleman but conceded two goals in the second half and were eliminated 9 Manchester City won the 1969 FA Cup final to earn a place in the 1969 70 European Cup Winners Cup Their first tie was against Athletic Bilbao in Spain s Basque Country Athletic were themselves managed by an Englishman Ronnie Allen 10 In the first leg City recovered from a two goal deficit to secure a 3 3 draw 10 The home leg was a comfortable 3 0 win Post match reports alleged that a scuffle had taken place at half time between Mike Doyle and Jose Ramon Betzuen The referee spoke to both managers but did not take any further action 11 In the second round City travelled to Belgians Lierse S K and won the first leg 3 0 with two goals from Francis Lee and one from Colin Bell 12 The home leg produced a 5 0 win a club record for European competition that stood until 2019 13 The first leg of the quarter finals at Academica de Coimbra took place three days before Manchester City were due to play in the League Cup final Malcolm Allison rejected the prevailing British football orthodoxy in which domestic competitions took priority by saying he would rather win in Portugal than in the League Cup final 14 The match finished goalless At Maine Road extra time was required for Manchester City to break down the stubbornly defensive Coimbra Tony Towers scored the only goal of the tie with a minute of extra time remaining 15 The draw for the semi finals meant Manchester City played the away leg first in every round this time in Germany where Schalke 04 were the opposition City lost the first leg by a single goal Needing to win at Maine Road by at least two goals the Blues used a very attacking approach It worked City led 3 0 at half time and won the match 5 1 15 In the final they faced Gornik Zabrze of Poland who had progressed via a coin toss after three matches with A S Roma could not produce a winner in the other semi final 16 1970 Cup Winners Cup final edit Main article 1970 European Cup Winners Cup final The final was held at a neutral venue Prater Stadium in Vienna The match took place in torrential rain adversely affecting the attendance The official figure was 7 968 though sources vary with a number of figures between 7 968 and 15 000 reported 17 Of those approximately 5 000 were Manchester City supporters 18 Owing to Soviet Bloc travel restrictions only 300 supporters relatives and officials were permitted to travel from communist Poland by its government 19 Manchester City started the match strongly particularly Francis Lee The Guardian correspondent wrote Lee indefatigable and nigh irresistible continually embarrassed the Gornik defence in the early stages 20 Lee had the first chance of the match a close range shot which was saved by goalkeeper Hubert Kostka 20 Manchester City took the lead in the 12th minute Lee cut in from the left wing escaping a tackle from Alfred Olek and struck a fierce shot 21 Kostka parried the ball only for it to land at the feet of Neil Young for a simple finish 22 Shortly after City defender Mike Doyle sustained an ankle injury after colliding with Stefan Florenski 22 The Blues played on with ten men for a period as Doyle received treatment from trainer Dave Ewing but the defender was unable to continue Substitute Ian Bowyer replaced him 23 The change prompted an alteration in formation in which Colin Bell switched to a deeper position 20 Shortly before half time Young won the ball after loose play from Florenski which put him clear on goal 21 As Young moved into the penalty area Kostka rushed out of his goal and upended him leaving the referee no option but to give a penalty Lee struck the spot kick with power into the centre of the goal Kostka s legs made contact with the ball but the force of the shot carried it into the net to make it 2 0 22 24 Gornik got a goal back midway through the second half but there were no more goals and the match finished 2 1 After the match City manager Joe Mercer said the heavy rain in the second half ruined the game and that he was quite happy with the performance of our team although the technical level was rather low in the second half Gornik manager Michal Matyas blamed his side s poor start saying the first goal came too early for us and we never recovered from this shock 25 The trophy was Manchester City s fourth major honour in three seasons It made them the third English club to win the Cup Winners Cup after Tottenham Hotspur and West Ham United Regular participation in the 1970s edit As title holders Manchester City automatically qualified to defend the Cup Winners Cup in the 1970 71 season Had they not won the trophy they would still have been qualified for European competition as City s victory in the 1970 League Cup granted a place in the Fairs Cup As a UEFA organised competition the Cup Winners Cup took precedence over the Fairs Cup and so the club took a place in the former In the first round Manchester City almost suffered an upset at the hands of Linfield from Belfast City held a one goal lead after the first leg but Linfield twice took the lead in the second leg The match finished 2 1 to Linfield and Manchester City progressed on the away goals rule 26 Honved were the opposition in the second round Manchester City won both legs with the score being 3 0 on aggregate The quarter finals saw a rematch with Gornik Zabrze who City had beaten in the previous year s final Both legs finished 2 0 to the home team so to separate the sides a third match was played on neutral ground in Copenhagen Despite having several players unavailable through injury 27 City won this match 3 1 and were drawn to play fellow English club Chelsea in the semi finals the first time Manchester City had drawn another English club in European competition Further injuries occurred in domestic fixtures in the run up to the game to the extent that goalkeeper Joe Corrigan played the first leg of the Chelsea tie unable to fully open his left eye because of a facial injury 28 City lost the first leg at Stamford Bridge 1 0 Corrigan was unable to play in the second leg in which stand in goalkeeper Ron Healey conceded an own goal resulting in another 1 0 defeat 29 A mid table finish in the 1970 71 season meant that for the first time in four years Manchester City did not qualify for Europe The following year a fourth place league finish gave the club a berth in the UEFA Cup for the first time 30 The UEFA Cup had replaced the Fairs Cup in 1971 when control of the competition transferred to UEFA City s debut in the competition was a short one Drawn against a Valencia side managed by Alfredo Di Stefano City were bounced out in the second leg at the Mestalla 3 2 despite producing a pulsating 2 2 draw at Maine Road in the first leg 31 Triumph in the 1976 League Cup final gave Manchester City a place in the UEFA Cup after a four year absence City drew Juventus in the first round Drawn at home first City won the first leg 1 0 Brian Kidd scoring his first goal for the club The second leg in Turin resulted in a 2 0 defeat and elimination 32 Juventus went on to win the competition As league runners up in the 1976 77 season City again qualified for the UEFA Cup Drawn against Widzew Lodz the Blues drew the first leg at Maine Road 2 2 In the late 1970s hooliganism was becoming a more prominent part of English football Following an incident where a fan invaded the pitch and attacked Widzew s Zbigniew Boniek City were fined by UEFA and fencing was erected between the pitch and the stands 33 A 0 0 draw in Lodz resulted in City s elimination on the away goals rule A fifth place finish in the 1977 78 season proved sufficient to qualify for the UEFA Cup once again Dutchmen FC Twente were the first opposition In Enschede Dave Watson gave City the lead Twente equalised in the second half from a free kick 34 In the second leg City ran up a 3 1 lead but a second Twente goal meant a nervy finish City held on preserving their 3 2 lead to win the tie 35 This was the first time the club had progressed past the first round of the UEFA Cup in four attempts Further opposition from the Low Countries awaited in the second round in the form of Standard Liege A flurry of late goals gave Manchester City a 4 0 lead after the first leg 36 The large lead meant that despite a 2 0 defeat in Liege in which Gary Owen received a red card City progressed with ease 37 Owen s sending off resulted in a five match ban 38 In the third round City faced four time European trophy winners A C Milan The first leg held at the San Siro was initially postponed due to fog and was instead played the following day 39 City took a 2 0 lead and came close to becoming the first English team to beat Milan at the San Siro but conceded twice the equaliser scored eight minutes from time 40 City won the home leg 3 0 with goals from Booth Hartford and Kidd 41 City s first European quarter final since 1971 was against Borussia Monchengladbach The club received advice from Bob Paisley whose Liverpool had met Monchengladbach several times 42 City opened the scoring in the first leg but while attempting to extend their lead were caught on the counter attack and conceded an equaliser 43 After failing to win the home leg having conceded an away goal in the process City travelled to Germany with few expecting them to progress So it proved as City lost 3 1 at the Bokelbergstadion 44 Return to Europe in the 2000s little progress in the early 2010s edit Manchester City s fortunes declined during the 1980s and 1990s For a single season 1998 99 the club fell as far as English football s third tier The club did not qualify for European competition in this period In ordinary circumstances the club s fifth placed finish in 1991 and 1992 would have granted a UEFA Cup place However English clubs had recently returned from a ban issued after the Heysel Stadium disaster As the UEFA coefficient that determines the number of places per country is based upon performances in European competition over the previous five years England had a reduced allocation until 1995 By the 2002 03 season Manchester City were back in the Premier League An unusual route into European competition for the 2003 04 season was provided by the UEFA Respect Fair Play ranking which allocated extra UEFA Cup qualifying round places for the leagues with the best records for discipline and positive play 45 This marked Manchester City s first European participation for 24 years In the qualifying round City played Welsh club Total Network Solutions The first leg was the first ever competitive match at Manchester City s new ground the City of Manchester Stadium Trevor Sinclair became the first ever goalscorer at the stadium in a 5 0 win 46 In the hope of attracting a large crowd TNS switched the second leg to Millennium Stadium the national stadium of Wales 47 With the tie effectively won City made 10 changes to their team 48 The match finished 2 0 to City Against Sporting Lokeren in the first round proper City won the home leg 3 2 and the away leg 1 0 49 A tie against Groclin Dyskobolia followed Both legs were drawn 50 and just as in 1976 City were eliminated on away goals after a 0 0 draw in Poland In 2008 Manchester City once again qualified for the UEFA Cup through the Fair Play rankings As City had to play the qualifying rounds it meant a very early start to the season in mid July Their first match was a trip to the remote Faroe Islands to play EB Streymur As Streymur s ground had a capacity of only 1 000 the match was moved to Torsvollur the Faroese national stadium 51 Two early goals gave City a 2 0 win 52 The home leg was unusual in that it was played outside Manchester The pitch at the City of Manchester Stadium had been relaid following a Bon Jovi concert and was not ready in time Instead the match was played at Barnsley s Oakwell ground 53 Another 2 0 win resulted in a 4 0 aggregate scoreline 54 In the second qualifying round City played FC Midtjylland The first leg ended in a 1 0 defeat only City s second ever home defeat in European competition 35 In the second leg City looked to be heading out of the competition until an 89th minute cross was diverted into his own net by Midtjylland s Danny Califf The tie then went to extra time and City progressed on penalties 55 In the first round proper Cypriots AC Omonia took the lead but City overcame the deficit and won 2 1 and also won the second leg by the same scoreline 56 nbsp Manchester City prepare to kick off their 2010 11 Europa League match at Red Bull SalzburgA five team group stage then followed in which each team played the others once Manchester City were drawn with Twente Schalke 04 Racing de Santander and Paris Saint Germain City topped the group after wins against Twente and Schalke a draw with Paris Saint Germain and a defeat in a dead rubber in Santander 57 The knockout stages then resumed with a visit to F C Copenhagen in freezing conditions City took the lead twice but could only draw 2 2 58 The home leg was more comfortable and ended in a 2 1 victory Another Danish club Aalborg awaited in the next round Both matches finished 2 0 to the home side and the tie was decided by a penalty shootout which Manchester City won 59 City then faced Hamburger SV in their first European quarter final since 1979 The away leg was played first and started exceptionally well for Manchester City as Stephen Ireland scored after just 35 seconds However Hamburg soon equalised and won the match 3 1 60 A difficult task in the home leg soon became even harder when Hamburg scored an away goal early in the match City scored twice the first by Elano who also hit the woodwork on two occasions with free kicks However City could not produce the third goal that would have taken the tie into extra time 61 nbsp Lech Poznan vs Manchester City F C 4 November 2010UEFA rebranded and restructured the UEFA Cup in 2009 resulting in it becoming the UEFA Europa League By finishing fifth in the 2009 10 Premier League Manchester City qualified for this competition A play off round took place before the four team group stage in which Manchester City beat Timișoara of Romania home and away 62 City s group stage opponents were Juventus Red Bull Salzburg and Lech Poznan Each team played the others twice City s opener was in Salzburg and resulted in a 2 0 win 63 A 1 1 draw at home to Juventus then followed 64 A 3 1 win at home to Lech Poznan is remembered primarily not for the action on the pitch in which Emmanuel Adebayor scored a hat trick but for the actions of the Polish supporters whose backs to the pitch dance was later adopted by Manchester City fans for whom it became known as The Poznan 65 The return match with Lech Poznan resulted in a 3 1 defeat but a 3 0 home victory over Red Bull Salzburg ensured qualification with a match to spare 66 The dead rubber against Juventus ended 1 1 and Manchester City won the group 67 In the knockout stages City then beat Aris 3 0 on aggregate 68 and met Dynamo Kyiv in the last 16 City lost 2 0 in Kyiv and had to play most of the second leg with ten men after Mario Balotelli was sent off A 1 0 win was insufficient to overcome the deficit as City lost 2 1 on aggregate 69 nbsp 2011 12 match between Villarreal and Manchester CityManchester City finished third in the 2010 11 Premier League to qualify for the rebranded version of the European Cup the UEFA Champions League for the first time since 1968 The club s league finish granted direct entry into the group stages without qualification Their group stage opponents were Bayern Munich Villarreal and Napoli City s first group match was at home to Napoli The Italians took the lead in the second half following a counter attacking move but five minutes later Aleksandar Kolarov scored from a free kick to equalise and the match finished 1 1 70 City then lost 2 0 at Bayern Munich a match most notable for the refusal of Carlos Tevez to come on as substitute 71 which resulted in an exile from the first team lasting nearly six months 72 A double header with Villarreal resulted in two Manchester City wins Sergio Aguero scored a last minute winner in the first which finished 2 1 73 the second was a comfortable 3 0 victory 74 A 2 1 defeat at Napoli then took qualification out of Manchester City s hands and despite a 2 0 win against group winners Bayern Munich City finished third in the group and failed to qualify for the knockout stages 75 nbsp Manchester City vs Bayern Munich 7 December 2011As a third placed team the club then entered the Europa League in the round of 32 where they faced Europa League holders Porto Manchester City won both legs Aguero s goal after 19 seconds of the second leg was the second fastest in the history of the competition 76 City returned to Portugal in the next round against Lisbon club Sporting CP City lost the first leg 0 1 in Lisbon and were trailing 0 2 early in the home game The team mounted a great comeback scoring three goals but it was not enough as they were eliminated on away goals rule Manchester City qualified for the 2012 13 UEFA Champions League as league champions and hope were high for the team to perform successfully The team was drawn with Real Madrid Borussia Dortmund and AFC Ajax Cityzens failed to win even a single watch losing three and drawing three and failed to progress even to the Europa League knock out stage finishing last in their group The 2013 14 UEFA Champions League campaign was a watershed moment for the team as they won five games in the group stage and qualified for the knockout phase for the first time since 1968 However City s performance in the round of 16 was a disappointment as they dropped both games to Barcelona with an aggregate score of 1 4 The team s next Champions League campaign was similar to the previous one as Manchester City were again drawn with Bayern Munich and CSKA Moscow in the group stage and after qualifying for the playoffs as the second best team Cityzens once again had to face Barcelona The final result saw little improvement as Man City again lost both games but this time with an aggregate score of 1 3 Barca went on to win the tournament The 2015 16 UEFA Champions League campaign went on to become the most successful in history for City as they reached the semi finals before being eliminated by Real Madrid after drawing the home game and losing at the Santiago Bernabeu 0 1 Real Madrid went on to win the tournament The Cityzens eliminated Dynamo Kyiv and Paris on their way to the semi finals Under Pep Guardiola 2016 to present day top four UEFA ranking first ever Champions League final and continental treble edit In the first season under the reign Pep Guardiola hopes were high for Manchester City as they progressed to the knockout phase after finishing second in the group that featured Guardiola s former team Barcelona City lost their away match to Barca 0 4 but then rebounded to win 3 1 at home In the Round of 16 City were drawn against Monaco The Blues were trailing 1 2 and 2 3 in their home match before scoring three unanswered goals and winning 5 3 In the away game the Cityzens were down 0 2 when Leroy Sane scored to put City in front of the tie again but Tiemoue Bakayoko s late goal meant that Monaco progressed further and City were eliminated nbsp Manchester City line up against Shakhtar Donetsk in the UEFA Champions League on 26 September 2017The 2017 18 season was an undoubted success for the Blues domestically but their European campaign was quite underwhelming The team confidently won five games in the group stage and qualified for the knockout stage where they defeated Basel 5 2 on aggregate The Cityzens were drawn with fellow Premier League side Liverpool in the quarter finals The outcome of those games was an utter devastation as Manchester City were thrashed 5 1 on aggregate and eliminated amid the controversy with refereeing mistakes favourable to Liverpool The Premier League title where City achieved 100 points was somewhat a consolation for this anticlimactic European campaign Manchester City were one of the favourites prior to their 2018 19 Champions league campaign The team again won their group with 13 points then defeated Schalke 04 in the Round of 16 winning their home game with a record 7 0 scoreline Similarly to the previous season Manchester City were drawn against an English club in the quarter finals this time Tottenham Hotspur The Blues lost the away game 0 1 with Aguero missing a penalty In the home leg Sterling scored early for the hosts but then City quickly conceded two goals and now needed to score three They did exactly that leading 4 2 twenty minutes before the end of the game but Fernando Llorente s wrongly awarded handball meant that City were again required to score 77 In stoppage time Sterling converted a pass from Aguero to seemingly send City through However the goal was disallowed after a VAR review and the Blues were eliminated in a heartbreaking fashion 78 Manchester City swept all their domestic tournaments that season but were still unable to add European success Acknowledging that City would be judged by their Champions League performance after all 79 Pep Guardiola stated that the new season s main objective would be to win the European title The Cityzens progressed to the knockout phase and faced old foes Real Madrid there City won the away game 2 1 but the remainder of the tournament was indefinitely postponed due to the COVID 19 pandemic Finally UEFA announced that the tournament would be resumed in August 2020 The home match against Madrid was scheduled for 7 August Thanks to goals from Raheem Sterling and Gabriel Jesus the Citizens once again defeated Madrid 2 1 achieving a 4 2 victory on aggregate and advancing to the quarter finals Man City faced Lyon on 15 August losing 3 1 and exiting the Champions league at the quarter final stage for the third year in a row 80 81 The 2020 21 campaign saw City top its group with a club record of 16 points twice defeating Marseille and Olympiacos and collecting four points against Porto In the round of 16 the Blues were paired with Borussia Monchengladbach and progressed to the quarter finals for the fourth consecutive year after winning both legs 2 0 82 In the quarter finals City were paired against another German outfit this time Borussia Dortmund The Blues managed to neutralize Dortmund s inform striker Erling Haaland to win the double legged tie 4 2 on aggregate after two identical 2 1 wins home and away 83 84 In the semi finals Manchester City were drawn against reigning finalists Paris Saint Germain who d avenged their loss to Bayern Munich in the 2020 final by knocking out the German club in their quarter final tie on away goals City rallied from behind to win 2 1 at the Parc des Princes thanks to goals by Kevin De Bruyne and Riyad Mahrez 85 In the second leg a goal in either half from Mahrez booked City s place in their first ever European Cup final which happened to be an all English affair against Chelsea with a stylish 4 1 aggregate victory 86 The final took place at the Estadio do Dragao in Porto Portugal and the Citizens were defeated 1 0 by a lone goal scored by Kai Havertz in an anticlimactic game Still City s breakthrough marked its most successful European campaign to date 87 As a consequence of that successful campaign City entered the top four in the UEFA rankings placing third City once again reached the Champions League semi finals in the 2021 22 competition They won a group including Paris Sant Germain RB Leipzig and Club Brugges with four victories and two defeats 88 In the round of 16 they earnt a commanding first leg lead in their tie against Sporting Lisbon beating the Portuguese champions 5 0 away including a brace from Bernardo Silva before wrapping up the victory with a 0 0 draw at home 89 90 In the quarter final a 1 0 victory in the first leg at home gave City a slight advantage against Atletico as they headed to Madrid An intense and maturely hard fought 0 0 draw then ensured City progressed to the semi finals There City beat Real Madrid 4 3 in an outstanding game at a full and noisy Etihad Stadium to take a slender advantage to the Bernabeu City scored in under 2 minutes as Kevin De Bruyne finished the fastest goal in European Cup semi final history and had held a two goal advantage on three occasions during the tie with several other good opportunities to increase their lead only to see a resilient Madrid reduce their deficit to a single goal including a brace and Panenka penalty from their top scorer captain and talisman Karim Benzema 91 City would go onto regret these missed opportunities as they failed to reach the Champions League final in dramatic and heart breaking circumstances Leading the second leg 1 0 5 3 on aggregate from a 75th minute goal from Riyad Mahrez and approaching the last minute of normal time it appeared City were heading comfortably to the final where they would have met Liverpool However two goals in a minute from Madrid s substitute striker Rodrygo sent the game into extra time and another penalty from Benzema five minutes later proved to be the winner as City were defeated 1 3 5 6 on aggregate 92 Despite the heartbreaking defeat City retained the third place in the UEFA rankings For the third consecutive season and for the fourth time in the club s history City reached the Champions League semi finals in 2022 23 After topping their group of Borussia Dortmund of the Bundesliga Sevilla of La Liga and F C Copenhagen of the Danish Superliga undefeated with four wins and two draws the Blues were drawn up against RB Leipzig in the round of 16 for the third and fourth fixtures between the sides in their histories At the Red Bull Arena Riyad Mahrez s first half opener was cancelled out by Josko Gvardiol in the second half and City drew 1 1 after being denied a penalty in the final seconds The draw would not matter as City eviscerated the German side 7 0 in the second leg with a record equalling five goals from Erling Haaland and one each from new captain Ilkay Gundogan and from Kevin De Bruyne The Blues would then be drawn up against another Bundesliga side this time Bayern Munich 2019 20 Champions League winners and reigning German champions In the first leg at the Etihad Stadium City comfortably outplayed Bayern and defeated them 3 0 with a first Champions League goal for Rodri and one each from Bernardo Silva and Erling Haaland effectively sending City through after one leg The following week they drew 1 1 at the Allianz Arena with another goal from Haaland confirming City s semi finals spot 4 1 on aggregate to face Real Madrid there for the second consecutive season The first leg was played at the Santiago Bernabeu Stadium and Vinicius Junior gave Madrid a 1 0 lead at half time with a stunning goal However City s reliable talisman Kevin De Bruyne salvaged the Blues a 1 1 draw at a stadium that saw their Champions League campaign collapse a year ago Then in one of their best performances in the Pep Guardiola era Manchester City sealed their spot in the final thanks to an incredible 4 0 win in the second leg at the Etihad Stadium with a first half brace from Bernardo Silva and second half goals from Manuel Akanji and Julian Alvarez 93 2023 Champions League final edit Main article 2023 UEFA Champions League final On 10 June 2023 at the Ataturk Olympic Stadium in front of 71 412 supporters a second half goal from Rodri saw Manchester City win the Champions League final against Inter Milan completing a historic continental treble only the second in English men s football history In doing so City completed a task of winning the UEFA Champions League set out 15 years ago in 2008 when the club was purchased by the Abu Dhabi United Group The game itself was a nervy one for the Blues in the fifth minute Bernardo Silva curled an effort just wide Erling Haaland and Kevin De Bruyne both had efforts but they were saved by Inter goalkeeper Andre Onana In the 36th minute De Bruyne was substituted due to injury for the second time in a Champions League final after going off in City s 2021 defeat to Chelsea In the 59th minute City s keeper Ederson failed to collect a weird backpass from Manuel Akanji which was found by Inter s Lautaro Martinez his shot from near the touchline was blocked by Ederson Rodri scored the opening goal for City in the 68th minute by finishing a pulled back pass that Bernardo Silva sent from near the goal to the top of the penalty area Inter had a chance to equalise three minutes later through a header by defender Federico Dimarco that hit the crossbar Dimarco tried to capitalise on the rebound as well but his shot was blocked by on loan Chelsea striker Romelu Lukaku The Belgian striker had his own chance to score from a close range header in the 89th minute which Ederson blocked with his legs The Brazilian made an additional save in stoppage time off Robin Gosens header to preserve a 1 0 victory for City With this being the club s first European Cup title making them the first new winners of the competition since fellow English club Chelsea in 2012 City became the sixth English team and 23rd overall to win the European Cup which also marked the 15th time an English club were European champions With this triumph Manchester City topped the UEFA coefficient rankings 94 95 UEFA and FIFA competitions editManchester City results in UEFA amp FIFA competition Season Competition Qualification method Round Opposition Home Away Neutral1968 69 European Cup First Division Champions First round nbsp Fenerbahce 0 0 1 2 1969 70 European Cup Winners Cup FA Cup Winners First round nbsp Athletic Bilbao 3 0 3 3 Second round nbsp Lierse 5 0 3 0 Quarter final nbsp Academica de Coimbra 1 0 a e t 0 0 Semi final nbsp Schalke 04 5 1 0 1 Final nbsp Gornik Zabrze 2 11970 71 European Cup Winners Cup Cup Winners Cup Winners First round nbsp Linfield 1 0 1 2 Second round nbsp Budapest Honved SE 2 0 1 0 Quarter final nbsp Gornik Zabrze 2 0 a e t 0 2 3 1Semi final nbsp Chelsea 0 1 0 1 1972 73 UEFA Cup First Division 4th First round nbsp Valencia 2 2 1 2 1976 77 UEFA Cup League Cup Winners First round nbsp Juventus 1 0 0 2 1977 78 UEFA Cup First Division Runners up First round nbsp Widzew Lodz 2 2 0 0 a 1978 79 UEFA Cup First Division 4th First round nbsp Twente 3 2 1 1 Second round nbsp Standard Liege 4 0 0 2 Third round nbsp Milan 3 0 2 2 Quarter final nbsp Borussia Monchengladbach 2 2 1 3 2003 04 UEFA Cup UEFA Fair Play Entry Qualifying round nbsp Total Network Solutions 5 0 2 0 First round nbsp Sporting Lokeren 3 2 1 0 Second round nbsp Dyskobolia Grodzisk 1 1 0 0 a 2008 09 UEFA Cup UEFA Fair Play Entry First qualifying round nbsp EB Streymur 2 0 2 0 Second qualifying round nbsp Midtjylland 0 1 1 0 a e t 4 2 p First round nbsp Omonia 2 1 2 1 Group stage nbsp Twente 3 2 nbsp Schalke 04 2 0 nbsp Paris Saint Germain 0 0 nbsp Racing Santander 1 3 Round of 32 nbsp Copenhagen 2 1 2 2 Round of 16 nbsp Aalborg BK 2 0 0 2 a e t 4 3 p Quarter final nbsp Hamburger SV 2 1 1 3 2010 11 Europa League Premier League 5th Play off round nbsp Timișoara 2 0 1 0 Group stage nbsp Red Bull Salzburg 3 0 2 0 nbsp Juventus 1 1 1 1 nbsp Lech Poznan 3 1 1 3 Round of 32 nbsp Aris 3 0 0 0 Round of 16 nbsp Dynamo Kyiv 1 0 0 2 2011 12 Champions League Premier League 3rd Group A nbsp Napoli 1 1 1 2 nbsp Bayern Munich 2 0 0 2 nbsp Villarreal 2 1 3 0 Europa League Champions League Group Stage 3rd Round of 32 nbsp Porto 4 0 2 1 Round of 16 nbsp Sporting CP 3 2 a 0 1 2012 13 Champions League Premier League Champions Group D nbsp Real Madrid 1 1 2 3 nbsp Borussia Dortmund 1 1 0 1 nbsp Ajax 2 2 1 3 2013 14 Champions League Premier League Runners up Group D nbsp Viktoria Plzen 4 2 3 0 nbsp Bayern Munich 1 3 3 2 nbsp CSKA Moscow 5 2 2 1 Round of 16 nbsp Barcelona 0 2 1 2 2014 15 Champions League Premier League Champions Group E nbsp Bayern Munich 3 2 0 1 nbsp Roma 1 1 2 0 nbsp CSKA Moscow 1 2 2 2 Round of 16 nbsp Barcelona 1 2 0 1 2015 16 Champions League Premier League Runners up Group D nbsp Juventus 1 2 0 1 nbsp Borussia Monchengladbach 4 2 2 1 nbsp Sevilla 2 1 3 1 Round of 16 nbsp Dynamo Kyiv 0 0 3 1 Quarter final nbsp Paris Saint Germain 1 0 2 2 Semi final nbsp Real Madrid 0 0 0 1 2016 17 Champions League Premier League 4th Play off round nbsp Steaua București 1 0 5 0 Group C nbsp Barcelona 3 1 0 4 nbsp Borussia Monchengladbach 4 0 1 1 nbsp Celtic 1 1 3 3 Round of 16 nbsp Monaco 5 3 1 3 a 2017 18 Champions League Premier League 3rd Group F nbsp Shakhtar Donetsk 2 0 1 2 nbsp Napoli 2 1 4 2 nbsp Feyenoord 1 0 4 0 Round of 16 nbsp Basel 1 2 4 0 Quarter final nbsp Liverpool 1 2 0 3 2018 19 Champions League Premier League Champions Group F nbsp Lyon 1 2 2 2 nbsp 1899 Hoffenheim 2 1 2 1 nbsp Shakhtar Donetsk 6 0 3 0 Round of 16 nbsp Schalke 04 7 0 3 2 Quarter final nbsp Tottenham Hotspur 4 3 a 0 1 2019 20 a Champions League Premier League Champions Group C nbsp Shakhtar Donetsk 1 1 3 0 nbsp Dinamo Zagreb 2 0 4 1 nbsp Atalanta 5 1 1 1 Round of 16 nbsp Real Madrid 2 1 2 1 Quarter final nbsp Lyon 1 32020 21 Champions League Premier League Runners up Group C nbsp Porto 3 1 0 0 nbsp Olympiacos 3 0 1 0 nbsp Marseille 3 0 3 0 Round of 16 nbsp Borussia Monchengladbach 2 0 2 0 Quarter final nbsp Borussia Dortmund 2 1 2 1 Semi final nbsp Paris Saint Germain 2 0 2 1 Final nbsp Chelsea 0 12021 22 Champions League Premier League Champions Group A nbsp RB Leipzig 6 3 1 2 nbsp Paris Saint Germain 2 1 0 2 nbsp Club Brugge 4 1 5 1 Round of 16 nbsp Sporting CP 0 0 5 0 Quarter final nbsp Atletico Madrid 1 0 0 0 Semi final nbsp Real Madrid 4 3 1 3 a e t 2022 23 Champions League Premier League Champions Group G nbsp Sevilla 3 1 4 0 nbsp Borussia Dortmund 2 1 0 0 nbsp Copenhagen 5 0 0 0 Round of 16 nbsp RB Leipzig 7 0 1 1 Quarter final nbsp Bayern Munich 3 0 1 1 Semi final nbsp Real Madrid 4 0 1 1 Final nbsp Inter Milan 1 02023 UEFA Super Cup Champions League Winners Final nbsp Sevilla 1 1 5 4 p 2023 FIFA Club World Cup Champions League Winners Semi final nbsp Urawa Red Diamonds 3 0Final nbsp Fluminense 4 02023 24 Champions League Premier League ChampionsChampions League Winners Group G nbsp Red Star Belgrade 3 1 3 2 nbsp RB Leipzig 3 2 3 1 nbsp Young Boys 3 0 3 1 Round of 16 nbsp Copenhagen 3 1 3 1 Quarter final nbsp Real Madrid 17 April 3 3 Non UEFA FIFA competitions editIn addition to the major UEFA competitions Manchester City have also played a number of first team fixtures in other more minor multi national competitions As winners of the 1970 League Cup Manchester City played against the Coppa Italia winners Bologna in the Anglo Italian League Cup The competition started the previous year as a way of enabling 1969 League Cup winners Swindon Town to play European opposition 96 For the first leg in Bologna the City team stayed over 100 km 60 miles away in the coastal resort of Rimini and took a relaxed attitude to proceedings 97 City lost the match 1 0 and drew 2 2 at home losing the competition After missing out on a UEFA berth for 1971 72 Manchester City were invited to play in the Texaco Cup a competition for English Scottish and Irish teams City fielded a weakened side for the second leg of their tie against Airdrieonians As punishment Manchester City had their 1 000 prize money withheld and were banned from the competition for two years 98 Upon the expiry of the suspension in 1974 the club entered the competition again but exited in the group stage The tournament saw Denis Law play his final matches as a professional The withdrawal of Irish teams saw the competition renamed the Anglo Scottish Cup the following year Again City failed to progress beyond the group stage Manchester City results in non UEFA competition Season Competition Qualification method Round Opposition Home Away1970 71 Anglo Italian League Cup League Cup Winners Final nbsp Bologna 2 2 0 11971 72 Texaco Cup Invitation First round nbsp Airdrieonians 2 2 0 21974 75 Texaco Cup Invitation Group stage nbsp Blackpool 1 1 nbsp Sheffield United 2 4 nbsp Oldham Athletic 2 1 1975 76 Anglo Scottish Cup Invitation Group stage nbsp Blackpool 0 1 nbsp Blackburn Rovers 0 1 nbsp Sheffield United 3 1 Records editSee also List of Manchester City F C records and statistics As of 9 March 2024 b Competitive record edit Competition T Part Teams Pld W D L GF GA GD Win European Cup UEFA Champions League 1 14 32 128 74 25 29 272 143 129 0 57 81European Cup Winners Cup 1 2 8 18 11 2 5 32 13 19 0 61 11UEFA Cup Europa League 0 8 25 52 28 13 11 85 52 33 0 53 85UEFA Super Cup 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 00 0 00FIFA Club World Cup 1 1 2 2 2 0 0 7 0 7 100 00Total 4 26 68 201 115 41 45 397 209 188 0 57 21Competition T Part Pld W D L GF GA GD Win Non UEFA competitionsAnglo Italian League Cup 0 1 2 0 1 1 2 3 1 00 0 00Texaco Cup Anglo Scottish Cup 0 3 8 2 2 4 10 13 3 0 25 00Total 0 4 10 2 3 5 12 16 4 0 20 00Finals edit Manchester City nbsp v nbsp Gornik Zabrze 29 April 1970 FinalManchester City nbsp 2 1 nbsp Gornik ZabrzeVienna Austria19 30 Young nbsp 12 Lee nbsp 43 pen Report Oslizlo nbsp 68 Stadium Praterstadion Attendance 7 968Referee Paul Schiller Austria Manchester City nbsp v nbsp Chelsea 29 May 2021 FinalManchester City nbsp 0 1 nbsp ChelseaPorto Portugal20 00 WEST PTT UTC 1 Gundogan nbsp 35 Gabriel Jesus nbsp 88 Report Havertz nbsp 42 Rudiger nbsp 57 Stadium Estadio do Dragao Attendance 14 110Referee Antonio Mateu Lahoz Spain Note The final was originally scheduled to be played at the Ataturk Olympic Stadium in Istanbul However on 12 May UEFA announced it had been moved to Portugal since the high level of COVID 19 infection rates in Turkey had led the UK government to place travel to Turkey on its red list meaning fans would have had to quarantine for ten days in a hotel at their expense after their return Portugal at the same time was on the green list which meant no travel restrictions at either end for those attending the final 99 100 Manchester City nbsp v nbsp Inter Milan 10 June 2023 FinalManchester City nbsp 1 0 nbsp Inter MilanIstanbul Turkey22 00 TRT UTC 3 Rodri nbsp 68 Haaland nbsp 90 2 Ederson nbsp 90 4 Report Barella nbsp 59 Lukaku nbsp 83 Onana nbsp 90 2 Stadium Ataturk Olympic Stadium Attendance 71 412Referee Szymon Marciniak Poland Manchester City nbsp v nbsp Sevilla 16 August 2023 2023 08 16 FinalManchester City nbsp 1 1 5 4 p nbsp SevillaPiraeus Greece22 00 EEST Palmer nbsp 63 Report En Nesyri nbsp 25 Bade nbsp 33 Lamela nbsp 62 Juanlu nbsp 90 Stadium Karaiskakis Stadium Attendance 29 207 101 Referee Francois Letexier France PenaltiesHaaland nbsp Alvarez nbsp Kovacic nbsp Grealish nbsp Walker nbsp nbsp Ocampos nbsp Mir nbsp Rakitic nbsp Montiel nbsp GudeljManchester City nbsp v nbsp Fluminense 22 December 2023 FinalManchester City nbsp 4 0 nbsp FluminenseJeddah Saudi Arabia21 00 SAST Alvarez nbsp 1 88 Nino nbsp 27 o g Foden nbsp 72 Report Marcelo nbsp 57 Alexsander nbsp 68 John Kennedy nbsp 84 Stadium King Abdullah Sports City Attendance 52 601Referee Szymon Marciniak Poland Lost semi finals edit Year Competition Opposing Team Agg Score Final venue Other Semi finalists 1970 71 Cup Winners Cup nbsp Chelsea 0 2 nbsp Karaiskakis Stadium nbsp PSV Eindhoven nbsp Real Madrid2015 16 Champions League nbsp Real Madrid 0 1 nbsp San Siro nbsp Atletico Madrid nbsp Bayern Munich2021 22 Champions League nbsp Real Madrid 5 6 a e t nbsp Stade de France nbsp Villarreal nbsp Liverpool Other winning semi finalists are shown in italics Tournaments winners are in bold By country edit UEFA and FIFA competitions edit Result summary by country Country Teams Pld W D L GF GA GD nbsp Austria 1 2 2 0 0 5 0 5 nbsp Belgium 4 8 7 0 1 25 6 19 nbsp Brazil 1 1 1 0 0 4 0 4 nbsp Croatia 1 2 2 0 0 6 1 5 nbsp Cyprus 1 2 2 0 0 4 2 2 nbsp Czech Republic 1 2 2 0 0 7 2 5 nbsp Denmark 3 10 6 2 2 18 8 10 nbsp England 3 7 1 0 6 5 12 7 nbsp Faroe Islands 1 2 2 0 0 4 0 4 nbsp France 4 14 7 3 4 25 19 6 nbsp Germany incl West Germany 7 37 23 6 8 83 44 39 nbsp Greece 2 4 3 1 0 7 0 7 nbsp Hungary 1 2 2 0 0 3 0 3 nbsp Italy 6 17 7 6 4 27 18 9 nbsp Japan 1 1 1 0 0 3 0 3 nbsp Netherlands 3 7 4 2 1 15 10 5 nbsp Northern Ireland 1 2 1 0 1 2 2 0 nbsp Poland 4 10 4 4 2 14 11 3 nbsp Portugal 3 10 6 3 1 18 5 13 nbsp Romania 2 4 4 0 0 9 0 9 nbsp Russia 1 4 2 1 1 10 7 3 nbsp Scotland 1 2 0 2 0 4 4 0 nbsp Serbia 1 2 2 0 0 6 3 3 nbsp Spain 8 31 13 8 10 54 44 10 nbsp Switzerland 2 4 3 0 1 11 3 5 nbsp Turkey 1 2 0 1 1 1 2 1 nbsp Ukraine 2 10 6 2 2 20 6 14 nbsp Wales 1 2 2 0 0 7 0 7Non UEFA competitions edit Result summary by country Non UEFA competitions Country Pld W D L GF GA GD nbsp England 6 2 1 3 8 9 1 nbsp Italy 2 0 1 1 2 3 1 nbsp Scotland 2 0 1 1 2 4 2By team edit Manchester City have played against 68 different teams internationally Record in international football by team Team Country Pld W D L GF GA GD Win 1899 Hoffenheim nbsp Germany 2 2 0 0 4 2 2 100 00Aalborg BK nbsp Denmark 2 1 0 1 2 2 0 0 50 00Academica de Coimbra nbsp Portugal 2 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 50 00Ajax nbsp Netherlands 2 0 1 1 3 5 2 00 0 00Aris nbsp Greece 2 1 1 0 3 0 3 0 50 00Atalanta nbsp Italy 2 1 1 0 6 2 4 0 50 00Athletic Bilbao nbsp Spain 2 1 1 0 6 3 3 0 50 00Atletico Madrid nbsp Spain 2 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 50 00Barcelona nbsp Spain 6 1 0 5 5 12 7 0 16 67Basel nbsp Switzerland 2 1 0 1 5 2 3 0 50 00Bayern Munich nbsp Germany 8 4 1 3 13 11 2 0 50 00Borussia Dortmund nbsp Germany 6 3 2 1 7 5 2 0 50 00Borussia Monchengladbach nbsp Germany 8 5 2 1 18 9 9 0 62 50Budapest Honved nbsp Hungary 2 2 0 0 3 0 3 100 00CSKA Moscow nbsp Russia 4 2 1 1 10 7 3 0 50 00Celtic nbsp Scotland 2 0 2 0 4 4 0 00 0 00Chelsea nbsp England 3 0 0 3 0 3 3 00 0 00Club Brugge nbsp Belgium 2 2 0 0 9 2 7 100 00Copenhagen nbsp Denmark 6 4 2 0 15 5 10 0 66 67Dinamo Zagreb nbsp Croatia 2 2 0 0 6 1 5 100 00Dynamo Kyiv nbsp Ukraine 4 2 1 1 4 3 1 0 50 00Dyskobolia Grodzisk Wielkopolski nbsp Poland 2 0 2 0 1 1 0 00 0 00EB Streymur nbsp Faroe Islands 2 2 0 0 4 0 4 100 00Fenerbahce nbsp Turkey 2 0 1 1 1 2 1 00 0 00Feyenoord nbsp Netherlands 2 2 0 0 5 0 5 100 00Fluminense nbsp Brazil 1 1 0 0 4 0 4 100 00Gornik Zabrze nbsp Poland 4 3 0 1 7 4 3 0 75 00Hamburger SV nbsp Germany 2 1 0 1 3 4 1 0 50 00Inter Milan nbsp Italy 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 100 00Juventus nbsp Italy 6 1 2 3 4 7 3 0 16 67Lech Poznan nbsp Poland 2 1 0 1 4 4 0 0 50 00Lierse nbsp Belgium 2 2 0 0 8 0 8 100 00Linfield nbsp Northern Ireland 2 1 0 1 2 2 0 0 50 00Liverpool nbsp England 2 0 0 2 1 5 4 00 0 00Lyon nbsp France 3 0 1 2 4 7 3 00 0 00Marseille nbsp France 2 2 0 0 6 0 6 100 00Midtjylland nbsp Denmark 2 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 50 00Milan nbsp Italy 2 1 1 0 5 2 3 0 50 00Monaco nbsp France 2 1 0 1 6 6 0 0 50 00Napoli nbsp Italy 4 2 1 1 8 6 2 0 50 00Olympiacos nbsp Greece 2 2 0 0 4 0 4 100 00Omonia nbsp Cyprus 2 2 0 0 4 2 2 100 00Paris Saint Germain nbsp France 7 4 2 1 9 6 3 0 57 14Porto nbsp Portugal 4 3 1 0 9 2 7 0 75 00RB Leipzig nbsp Germany 6 4 1 1 21 9 12 0 66 67Racing Santander nbsp Spain 1 0 0 1 1 3 2 00 0 00Real Madrid nbsp Spain 11 4 4 3 20 17 3 0 36 36Red Bull Salzburg nbsp Austria 2 2 0 0 5 0 5 100 00Red Star Belgrade nbsp Serbia 2 2 0 0 6 3 3 100 00Roma nbsp Italy 2 1 1 0 3 1 2 0 50 00Schalke 04 nbsp Germany 5 4 0 1 17 4 13 0 80 00Sevilla nbsp Spain 5 4 1 0 13 4 9 0 80 00Shakhtar Donetsk nbsp Ukraine 6 4 1 1 16 3 13 0 66 67Sporting CP nbsp Portugal 4 2 1 1 8 3 5 0 50 00Sporting Lokeren nbsp Belgium 2 2 0 0 4 2 2 100 00Standard Liege nbsp Belgium 2 1 0 1 4 2 2 0 50 00Steaua București nbsp Romania 2 2 0 0 6 0 6 100 00Timișoara nbsp Romania 2 2 0 0 3 0 3 100 00Total Network Solutions nbsp Wales 2 2 0 0 7 0 7 100 00Tottenham Hotspur nbsp England 2 1 0 1 4 4 0 0 50 00Twente nbsp Netherlands 3 2 1 0 7 5 2 0 66 67Urawa Red Diamonds nbsp Japan 1 1 0 0 3 0 3 100 00Valencia nbsp Spain 2 0 1 1 3 4 1 00 0 00Viktoria Plzen nbsp Czech Republic 2 2 0 0 7 2 5 100 00Villarreal nbsp Spain 2 2 0 0 5 1 4 100 00Widzew Lodz nbsp Poland 2 0 2 0 2 2 0 00 0 00Young Boys nbsp Switzerland 2 2 0 0 6 1 5 100 00UEFA coefficient edit The UEFA club coefficients are based on the results of clubs competing in the five previous seasons of the UEFA Champions League UEFA Europa League and UEFA Europa Conference League The rankings determine the seeding of each club in relevant UEFA competition draws The table and graph below show the progress of City s rankings in these coefficients since they re entered the Europa League competition in 2010 11 as of the end of the season specified nbsp Progression of Manchester City s UEFA club coefficient rankingSeason Coefficient Ranking2010 11 30 422011 12 47 282012 13 54 222013 14 56 222014 15 71 172015 16 84 112016 17 85 122017 18 100 82018 19 106 62019 20 116 62020 21 125 32021 22 134 32022 23 145 1Last updated 10 June 2023 Source UEFA Final coefficient at season end indicated Club records edit Record European home victory 7 0 vs Schalke 04 UEFA Champions League round of 16 second leg 12 March 2019 vs RB Leipzig UEFA Champions League round of 16 second leg 14 March 2023 Record European away victory 5 0 vs Sporting CP UEFA Champions League round of 16 first leg 15 February 2022 Record European home defeat 1 3 vs Bayern Munich UEFA Champions League group stage 2 October 2013 Record European away defeat 0 4 vs Barcelona UEFA Champions League group stage 19 October 2016 Longest winning run in UEFA competitions 10 matches 17 May 2023 6 March 2024 national record Most UEFA Champions League home wins in a row 12 matches 9 March 2022 6 March 2024 ongoing Most UEFA Champions League wins in a single season 11 matches 2020 21 national record Longest unbeaten run in the UEFA Champions League 22 matches 6 September 2022 6 April 2024 ongoing Longest unbeaten home run in the UEFA Champions League 30 matches 7 November 2018 6 March 2024 ongoing national record Longest unbeaten away run in the UEFA Champions League 12 matches 6 September 2022 6 April 2024 ongoing Most points amassed in a UEFA Champions League group 18 points 2023 24 Fewest points amassed in a UEFA Champions League group 3 points 2012 13 Most goals scored in a single season 32 goals 2022 23 Fewest goals conceded in a single season 5 goals 2020 21 and 2022 23 Highest home attendance 53 461 vs Liverpool UEFA Champions League quarter finals second leg 10 April 2018 Player records edit Most appearances 75 Fernandinho Most goals scored in European competitions 43 Sergio Aguero Most goals scored in the UEFA Champions League 39 Sergio Aguero Most goals scored in the play off round 3 Sergio Aguero Most goals scored in the group stage 27 Sergio Aguero Most goals scored in the knockout phase 12 Kevin De Bruyne Most goals scored in a single season 12 Erling Haaland 2022 23 Most hat tricks scored 3 Sergio Aguero Most hat tricks in a single season 2 Sergio Aguero 2016 17 Most goals scored in a single match 5 Erling Haaland vs RB Leipzig 2022 23 Most assists 29 Kevin De Bruyne Most assists in a single season 7 Kevin De Bruyne 2022 23 Most assists in a single match 3 Kevin De Bruyne vs Tottenham Hotspur UEFA Champions League 17 April 2019 Joao Cancelo vs Club Brugge UEFA Champions League 3 November 2021 Most clean sheets 29 Ederson Manager records edit Most decorated managers 3 titles Pep Guardiola Most games managed 89 matches including preliminary rounds Pep Guardiola Most matches won 59 wins including preliminary rounds Pep Guardiola Notes edit On 17 June 2020 UEFA announced that the final stages of that season s Champions League would feature a format change due to the COVID 19 pandemic in Europe As such the quarter finals semi finals and final were all played behind closed doors in a single leg format from 12 to 23 August 2020 at the Estadio da Luz and Estadio Jose Alvalade in Lisbon Portugal Champions League figures include results from preliminary round matches References edit UEFA Direct Issue 100 PDF UEFA August 2010 Archived PDF from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 4 June 2012 James Gary 2008 Manchester A Football History Halifax James Ward p 225 ISBN 978 0 9558127 0 5 James Gary 2006 Manchester City The Complete Record Derby Breedon p 55 ISBN 1 85983 512 0 Tossell David 2008 Big Mal The High Life and Hard Times of Malcolm Allison Football Legend Edinburgh Mainstream p 156 ISBN 978 1 84596 478 8 Tossell Big Mal p 158 Albert Barham 19 September 1968 Manchester City have no goals to take to Turkey The Guardian p 17 Penney Ian 2008 Manchester City The Mercer Allison Years Derby Breedon p 63 ISBN 978 1 85983 608 8 Albert Barham 4 October 1968 City delight Turks The Guardian p 20 Penney Manchester City The Mercer Allison Years p 65 a b Gardner The Manchester City Football Book No 2 p 14 Penney Manchester City The Mercer Allison Years p 112 James The Big Book of City p 36 Manchester City FC UEFA Archived from the original on 21 May 2012 Retrieved 4 June 2012 James The Big Book of City p 37 a b Penney Manchester City The Mercer Allison Years p 129 Gardner The Manchester City Football Book No 2 p 18 Penney s Manchester City The Mercer Allison Years states 15 000 Tossell s Big Mal states 10 000 James Big Book of City says a crowd variously reported as anything from 7 968 to around 12 000 James The Big Book of City p 41 James The Big Book of City p 42 a b c Paul Fitzpatrick 30 April 1970 Lee Inspired by Vienna The Guardian a b Gardner The Manchester City Football Book No 2 p 20 a b c Ward The Manchester City Story p 66 James Manchester City The Complete Record p 133 James The Big Book of City p 41 Paul Fitzpatrick 30 April 1970 Mercer happy The Guardian Penney Manchester City The Mercer Allison Years p 141 Tossell Big Mal p 208 James The Big Book of City p 62 Penney Manchester City The Mercer Allison Years p 174 James The Big Book of City p 75 Summerbee Mike Summerbee The Autobiography pp 161 2 James The Big Book of City pp 96 97 James Manchester A Football History p 280 John Roberts 14 September 1978 Watson shows way The Guardian p 20 a b James The Big Book of City p 177 Michael Carey 19 October 1978 Barnes storming The Guardian p 26 Patrick Barclay 2 November 1978 City s success is soured The Guardian p 20 John Roberts 10 November 1978 UEFA ban Owen for five games The Guardian p 18 James The Big Book of City p 181 Patrick Barclay 24 November 1978 Steadfast City The Guardian p 20 Patrick Barclay 7 December 1978 Lesson from Book s men The Guardian p 20 James The Big Book of City p 185 John Roberts 8 March 1979 Another sad chapter for Book The Guardian p 24 John Roberts 21 March 1979 City are whirled out The Guardian p 24 Man City net Uefa Cup place BBC 2 June 2003 Archived from the original on 23 June 2006 Retrieved 5 June 2012 William Johnson 15 August 2003 City take total control The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 29 February 2016 Retrieved 5 June 2012 TNS confirm Millennium date BBC 26 June 2003 Archived from the original on 10 May 2004 Retrieved 5 June 2012 T N S 0 2 Manchester City ESPN 28 August 2003 Archived from the original on 11 December 2004 Retrieved 5 June 2012 Man City cruise past Lokeren BBC 15 October 2003 Archived from the original on 12 June 2004 Retrieved 5 June 2012 Groclin send Man City out BBC 27 November 2003 Archived from the original on 19 May 2004 Retrieved 5 June 2012 Mark Hughes ready for Euro success Wales Online 17 July 2008 Archived from the original on 7 November 2021 Retrieved 29 September 2020 EB Streymur 0 City 2 Manchester Evening News 17 July 2008 Retrieved 5 June 2012 Man City given Faroes Uefa task BBC 1 July 2008 Archived from the original on 7 November 2021 Retrieved 5 June 2012 Man City 2 0 EB Streymur BBC 31 July 2008 Archived from the original on 23 October 2021 Retrieved 5 June 2012 FC Midtjylland 0 Manchester City 1 after extra time Man City win 4 2 on penalties A lucky escape for Hughes men The Independent 28 August 2008 Archived from the original on 4 December 2008 Retrieved 5 June 2012 James The Big Book of City pp 269 70 James The Big Book of City pp 270 2 Daniel Taylor 19 February 2009 Late equaliser leaves City to draw cold comfort The Guardian Archived from the original on 7 October 2015 Retrieved 5 June 2012 James The Big Book of City p 273 Mandeep Sanghera 9 April 2009 Hamburg 3 1 Man City BBC Archived from the original on 13 April 2009 Retrieved 5 June 2012 Nabil Hassan 16 April 2009 Man City 2 1 Hamburg 3 4 BBC Archived from the original on 21 April 2009 Retrieved 5 June 2012 Mark Ogden 26 August 2010 Manchester City 2 Timișoara 0 agg 3 0 match report The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 29 August 2010 Retrieved 5 June 2012 Saj Chowdhury 16 September 2010 Red Bull Salzburg 0 2 Man City BBC Archived from the original on 7 November 2021 Retrieved 5 June 2012 David Ornstein 30 September 2010 Man City 1 1 Juventus BBC Archived from the original on 7 November 2021 Retrieved 5 June 2012 Jack Pitt Brooke 20 April 2011 Poles apart how fans of Poznan inspired City s unlikely dance craze The Independent Archived from the original on 26 October 2011 Retrieved 5 June 2012 Saj Chowdhury 1 December 2010 Man City 3 0 Red Bull Salzburg BBC Retrieved 6 June 2012 Jon Barbuti 16 December 2010 Juventus 1 1 Man City BBC Archived from the original on 7 November 2021 Retrieved 6 June 2012 Rory Smith 24 February 2011 Manchester City 3 Aris Salonika 0 agg 3 0 match report The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 3 August 2011 Retrieved 6 June 2012 Saj Chowdhury 17 March 2011 Man City 1 0 Dynamo Kiev BBC Archived from the original on 7 November 2021 Retrieved 6 June 2012 Chris Bevan 14 September 2011 Man City 1 1 Napoli BBC Archived from the original on 12 April 2012 Retrieved 1 July 2012 Daniel Taylor 27 September 2011 Carlos Tevez refuses sub s role as Bayern Munich beat Manchester City The Guardian Archived from the original on 7 June 2015 Retrieved 1 July 2012 Carlos Tevez makes his Manchester City return BBC 21 March 2012 Archived from the original on 12 April 2012 Retrieved 1 July 2012 Phil McNulty 18 October 2011 Man City 2 1 Villarreal BBC Archived from the original on 23 October 2012 Retrieved 1 July 2012 Saj Chowdhury 2 November 2011 Villarreal 0 3 Man City BBC Archived from the original on 23 October 2012 Retrieved 1 July 2012 cite c, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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