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Fulham v Man City: Key stats and talking points

2025-12-02 09:15
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Fulham v Man City: Key stats and talking points

Can Fulham end their record-breaking losing run against Manchester City? BBC Sport examines some of the key themes before Tuesday's match. When Fulham lost 2-0 at Craven Cottage on the final day of la...

Fulham v Man City: Key stats and talking pointsStory byTom McCoy - BBC Sport journalistTue, December 2, 2025 at 9:15 AM UTC·2 min read

Can Fulham end their record-breaking losing run against Manchester City? BBC Sport examines some of the key themes before Tuesday's match.

This fixture has been remarkably one-sided in the past 13 years. When Fulham lost 2-0 at Craven Cottage on the final day of last season, it was their 18th consecutive defeat against Manchester City.

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It is the longest ever losing run by one English league side against another in all competitions. The streak includes 15 Premier League defeats, which is also a record in English league history.

The Cottagers have not earned a point against City since a 2-2 draw in 2011, last beating them in a 3-1 win at Etihad Staduyn in April 2009, part of their 'Great Escape' under Roy Hodgson.

But Fulham will take heart from the defensive lapses City displayed in their 3-2 win against Leeds on Saturday.

The Londoners have also quietly played themselves back into form over the past month, taking nine points from a possible 12. Only Chelsea and Brighton accrued more points in November.

The image displays a table from the BBC, sourced from Opta, highlighting the top-performing teams in the Premier League during November based on points won and goal difference.
Chelsea and Brighton led the league in November, both securing 10 points and a goal difference of +6.
Man City, Aston Villa, and Fulham each earned 9 points during the month.
Arsenal finished with 8 points and a goal difference of +5.
The data provides a snapshot of team performance over a specific one-month period, not the overall league standings. [BBC]

Victory in west London would take Manchester City to within two points of leaders Arsenal, but Pep Guardiola's side have yet to hit top gear, struggling to find consistency, particularly away from home.

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While they thrashed Wolves 4-0 at Molineux on the opening weekend, they have claimed just one win in five top-flight matches on the road since then, losing each of the past two against Aston Villa and Newcastle.

City have been heavily dependent on Erling Haaland's goals this season but the prolific Norwegian has failed to net in each of his three appearances since the international break (including two starts).

It was instead Phil Foden who stepped up as the matchwinner against Leeds last time out, with the Englishman netting twice, including the decisive streak in injury-time.

Foden only scored seven Premier League goals last season, a substantial drop from his haul of 19 in 2023-24. Despite his double at the weekend, the 25-year-old has often played a slightly deeper, more creative role in the current campaign.

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Guardiola has described Foden as "one of the best players we have in small spaces" and is increasingly relying on his ability to take the ball under pressure, evade the press and deliver incisive passes to team-mates in more advanced positions.

His touch map illustrates this trend. Foden has had 34% of his open-play touches in this season's Premier League in his own half, up from 22% last term.

It is a similar story in terms of touches in the central area and so-called half-spaces just outside the box – where Foden might normally be expected to be most influential. He had 33% of his touches in those zones last term, with that figure dropping to 22% in 2025-26.

The image displays Opta football heatmaps comparing Manchester City player Phil Foden's open-play touches from the Premier League 2024-25 season to the 2025-26 season.
The maps use dots to show where Foden touched the ball and percentages to indicate the distribution of those touches across different zones of the field.
Data is presented as both "% of open-play touches" and "open-play touches per 90" (minutes).
The map for this season shows a decrease in touches for the central spaces just outside the penalty area[BBC]AdvertisementAdvertisement