CNN
—
Manchester City’s turbulent season took another major knock on Wednesday after it suffered a calamitous 4-2 defeat to Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League group stage.
The loss means the reigning English Premier League champion is now on the brink of elimination from the tournament, needing a win in its last group game against Club Brugge to stand any chance of progression.
But the defeat also speaks to larger problems at the club, with the rainy night in Paris exposing all of its frailties this season.
City, in recent seasons, has been a winning machine. Under Pep Guardiola, arguably the greatest manager in the history of soccer, the team has seemed unbeatable at times but it’s now a mere shadow of its former self.
It should have been a comfortable night against PSG, having gone two goals up through Erling Haaland and Jack Grealish in the second half. But, as has been an unwanted trend this season, City threw away its advantage with PSG scoring four goals to turn the result around.
“They (PSG) were better, and we have to accept it,” Guardiola told reporters after the match. “We have the last chance at home against Brugge and we will do everything there. If not, it’s because we don’t deserve it.”
Despite going ahead, City continued to look vulnerable against PSG’s pace – with Bradley Barcola proving particularly hard to handle.
The 22-year-old showed his electric pace when setting up Ousmane Dembélé for PSG’s first goal in the 56th minute, and then scored himself four minutes later to draw level.
João Neves then headed in at the back post to give the host the lead in the 78th minute, before Gonçalo Ramos completed the rout in injury time.
“We had our moments and they had their moments, but they were better,” Guardiola told TNT Sports.
“They were quicker, faster, they won the duels, we could not cope. They were fast. The best team won. The game was never like we wanted.”
City now sits 25th in the Champions League table, just outside the playoff qualification spots, having managed just eight points from its seven group games so far.
Elsewhere on Wednesday, Bayern Munich suffered a surprise 3-0 defeat to Dutch club Feyenoord as its bid to qualify automatically for the knockout stages took a hit.
The top eight clubs progress straight through to the next round and Bayern now sits in 15th, one point behind those in the automatic places.
Two goals from Santiago Giménez and one from Ayase Ueda secured the famous win for Feyenoord who now leapfrogs Bayern, sitting 11th in the table.
Six-time European champion Bayern plays Slovan Bratislava in the final round of fixtures, needing some luck from other games to qualify in the top 8.
-Those clubs who finish in the playoff berths – between ninth and 24th – will play another two-legged fixture to determine whether they reach the knockout stages.
It’s a similar story for Spanish giant Real Madrid which thrashed Red Bull Salzburg 5-1 on Wednesday.
Braces from Rodrygo and Vinícius Jr., plus a goal from Kylian Mbappé, moved the 15-time champion up to 16th in the table, as it recovers some form in a competition it’s dominated in the last decade.
“We have to play the last game and see where we are. There isn’t much to think about,” Carlo Ancelotti told reporters after the game.
“We have to try to beat Brest in the last game and see where we are in the standings. It’ll be very difficult to finish in the top eight.”
Home vs away
RB Leipzig 2-1 Sporting CP
Shakhtar Donetsk 2-0 Brest
AC Milan 1-0 Girona
Arsenal 3-0 Dinamo Zagreb
Celtic 1-0 Young Boys
Feyenoord 3-0 Bayern Munich
PSG 4-2 Manchester City
Real Madrid 5-1 Red Bull Salzburg
Sparta Prague 0-1 Inter Milan