Premier League title contenders: Why this is Manchester City’s year

You know, we often spend the summer imagining that next season is actually going to be the one that delivers a proper four-way Premier League title fight. Does it happen? No, it never does. I mean, we somehow delude ourselves into thinking it might…but it actually might happen in 2025/26.

Here’s our four-part series looking at the potential champions. Arsenal have had their credentials lauded and Chelsea have been tipped for the topWe’ve even gone so far as to say Liverpool have a sniff. Today we complete our quartet, with Manchester United City.

Are the team that’s won six of the last eight Premier League titles contenders to win it this season? Feels like a very stupid question really. But is it in fact stupid like a fox?

Really, the sheer scale of the uncertainty around what Man City are in 2025 is at the absolute heart of why we’re even able to kid ourselves there might be a four-way title battle in the first place. There have been plenty of times in those eight years when even wishing for a title race at all of any kind has felt like the foolish dreams of a sweet summer child, given the scale of City’s dominance.

That dominance no longer exists. That aura of invincibility no longer exists. The absolute raging certainty that even in the unlikely event that City did find themselves a handful of points behind at Christmas that they would then just simply go on a run of 18 wins and two draws in their next 20 games to put everyone back in their place is gone.

That the question ‘Are Man City title contenders?’ feels less rhetorical than at any time since Pep Guardiola really go his feet under the desk is matched by the existence – also for the first time since that moment – of the phrase ‘third favourites Manchester City’.

And that is exactly where they deserve to be. Liverpool won the league last season and have spent the thick end of £300m upgrading that squad. Arsenal were far better than City last season and now have an actual real no-fooling striker in their squad.

City have to be considered less likely than either of them to win the league. This in itself is intoxicating, because the problem with City – for everyone else – was that when they were the best team there was an utter certainty to it. When they got themselves clear of the pack you knew they were not going to be caught.

We can’t yet say that about Liverpool or Arsenal. Liverpool haven’t retained an English league title since 1984 and Arsenal haven’t won one since 2004. Either one of those teams could go off and win the league at a canter, but neither carries the certainty that existed around Peak City.

But we’re not any longer dealing with Peak City. We’re dealing with Rebuild City, where doubts exist everywhere you look, up to and including Pep Guardiola himself

It really does feel like the start of this season is vital for him. If City start slowly and drift out of meaningful title contention early, does he have the energy and heart to stick it out? He was awful weary at various points last season, and has already spent far longer than he did at either Barcelona or Bayern Munich before understandably needing to take a step back from the relentlessness of it all.

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*