
Manchester City’s march continues. Their bid to seal Champions League qualification for next season remains in rude health after Kevin De Bruyne fired them to a 1-0 victory over Wolves.
Pep Guardiola’s side played one of the classics as De Bruyne, who is departing the Etihad Stadium at the end of the season and is being targeted by MLS side Chicago Fire, crashed the Wolves box to sweep home the only goal of the game from Jeremy Doku’s cutback with 35 minutes on the clock.
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Rayan Ait-Nouri had earlier come close to giving Wolves the lead when he struck the post and Josko Gvardiol had to block his follow-up on the line, but City are now unbeaten in seven Premier League games and head into the weekend third in the table, their win throwing down the gauntlet to Newcastle United, Chelsea, Nottingham Forest and Aston Villa.
Sam Lee breaks down the main talking points from a Friday-night City triumph.
Kevin De Bruyne – catch him while you can
The De Bruyne farewell tour is rapidly approaching its final destination and only has one more home match to go after this one.
Unfortunately, due to City reaching the FA Cup final, their final home game of the season has been rearranged to Tuesday, May 20, meaning the Belgian’s planned send-off is going to have a slightly low-key vibe to it.
Still, those considerations can wait because there is plenty more to contribute on the pitch, and De Bruyne proved to be the difference again on a night when City were sloppy for the most part.
There has been a decent amount of outcry among supporters since it emerged that De Bruyne, whose name was sung loudly when he was substituted off with six minutes to go and at full-time — the Etihad Stadium DJ played the White Stripes’ Seven Nation Army after the final whistle to soundtrack City fans’ chants — wanted to stay at City but the club decided to part ways this summer when his contract ends.
This was not the kind of all-conquering performance that he used to put in regularly, or indeed when he inspired City to come from 2-0 down to beat Crystal Palace 5-2 a few weeks ago, but his capacity to come up with the goods still shone through with a goal that really strengthens his team’s chances of finishing in the top five.

Kevin De Bruyne celebrates his goal with Jeremy Doku (Carl Recine/Getty Images)
Dangerous Doku catches the eye
De Bruyne’s goal was created by Doku, who looked by far City’s biggest attacking threat on the night.
The fact that Doku started at all was noticeable because, despite two game-changing cameos from the bench against Everton and Aston Villa in recent weeks, he has not been picked because Guardiola likes playing his full-backs high and wide, and pushing the wingers in: something he does not think the Belgian can do as well as others.
Here, the plan changed slightly, with Doku wide and Nico O’Reilly, the left-back who had been providing the width previously, asked to underlap.

Jeremy Doku had an effective night for City (Carl Recine/Getty Images)
This was something that City tried a lot in the first half: with Doku wide and unmarked on the left, Wolves full-back Nelson Semedo had to push out whenever City switched the ball to the left. That opened up a space in the visitors’ back line that O’Reilly and Ilkay Gundogan tried to exploit.
It did not lead to the goal but the intent was clear and when the time came to find De Bruyne with City taking advantage of a high turnover, Doku characteristically beat his man before pulling it back for his countryman to finish.
Wolves doubled up on him in the second half and things inevitably got tougher but he was a very useful option on a night when a lot of other things were not so smooth for City.
City supporters vote with their feet again
After thousands of City fans stayed on the concourse for the first nine minutes of the home game against Leicester at the start of April, they did so again for the first six minutes of the Wolves game — not that there was much let-up in unrest for the intervening four weeks.
Indeed, it has been a busy month on that front, with City announcing a price freeze on season tickets on April 9, supporters protesting outside the stadium before the Aston Villa game on April 22, and then, last week, writing a letter to Guardiola, asking him to speak out to CEO Ferran Soriano.
On Thursday night, the club announced a raft of new measures, among a commitment to releasing new season tickets for the expanded north stand and to create pathways for young supporters, two areas that fans have been voicing their concerns over.

Some Manchester City fans head to their seats late during the opening stages of the game (Martin Rickett/PA Images via Getty Images)
Still, the fan groups at the heart of the protests insist that the new measures do not go far enough. Fundamentally, there is a clear difference of opinion and it is unlikely to change anytime soon.
The best example is perhaps City changing the rules for season-ticket holders for next season, obliging them to attend at least 10 league matches per season. If not, they lose their ticket. Many fans see this as a measure designed to get rid of them, while the club are determined to increase the number of season-ticket holders who do not attend matches, which has been identified as a significant problem.
There is an interesting dynamic at play and this is going to rumble on for a while yet.
What did Pep Guardiola say?
We’ll bring you this once Guardiola has spoken post-match.
What next for Manchester City?
Saturday, May 10: Southampton (Away), Premier League, 3pm UK, 10am ET
(Top photo: Carl Recine/Getty Images)
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