Key events
14 mins: Kobbie Mainoo comes on. Mount has played around 17% of Unitedâs Premier League minutes this season, and assuming thatâs a minor muscle injury â he walks off the pitch unaided and without apparent physical agony â itâll be a few weeks before he plays any more.
13 mins: Mason Mountâs game is over. Itâs not a contact injury, he just goes down off the ball and the camera finds him sitting there, looking absolutely gutted.
11 mins: Amad Diallo is played into space down the right. Heâs offside by a few yards, but still the linesman waits until he gives the ball away before he raises his flag. That was probably clear enough to have been given at the time.
10 mins: Dalotâs second crossing opportunity of the game, this time on his right foot, is emphatically overhit and ends in a goal-kick.
9 mins: It is, as it should be, high-paced, low-precision stuff so far. âWeâve just been told (in the USA commentary) that the first derby was United representing a local church versus City representing a railway,â writes Justin Kavanagh. âNot much has really changed: The Reds havenât had a prayer recently, while the Sky Blues have gone off the rails completely.â
6 mins: A first foray forward for United, whose break ends with Ederson catching Dalotâs cross from the left.
5 mins: De Bruyne swings a looping cross towards the far post, where Haaland is being marked by Martinez. The defender wins this one.
3 mins: Some early possession for City, which ends when Doku takes on Mazraoui and runs out of play.
1 min: Peeeeep! The home side get the ball rolling.
Blue Moon rings out. Hand shaken, coin flipped, teams huddling. Kick-off imminent.
The players are in the tunnel-type mirror-walled foyer area. Kick-off just a few minutes away. âSo, reading between the lines, Amorim is saying that Rashford got dressed wrong?â writes Matt Dony. âI bet he put his socks on before his shorts. Nothing weirder.â Iâm with you here. Socks go on last, simple.
An email! âLooks like Cityâs injury crisis is really starting to bite, with just £200m of talent on the bench,â writes Tim Woods. âStill, as a Liverpool fan I find myself in that rare position of hoping for a United win. Despite their troubles, I still fear City can put together a 25-game winning run to deny us (or Chelsea) the title once again.â Obviously Iâm completely impartial, but it would be nice if a different team won the league for a change. Four in a row and six out of seven is quite enough for the time being.
Itâs only a few months since Unitedâs then manager, Erik ten Hag, described the idea of Rashford being dropped as âcrazyâ, and that âI would almost say that, as a person, you are not OK when you bring such speculation ⦠Iâm very happy with Marcus, with everything. With his defending part, offensive, he performs very good.â
A bit more from Amorim on the Rashford/Garnacho situation:
Of course the context is difficult, we have to win games and we have a difficult situation. I pay attention to everything â the way you eat, the way you put on your clothes â then I have to decide. I have a lot of players to choose from and today Iâve made my choice.
Pep Guardiola, meanwhile, has confirmed that Matheus Nunes will start at left-back for Manchester City because âheâs the only option we haveâ.
Ruben Amorim says, smiling, that the decision to leave out Rashford and Garnacho was down to what he has seen from them in âtraining, performance [and] engagement with teammatesâ, which feels quietly damning.
We tried to evaluate everything â training, performance, game performance, engagement with teammates. Everything is on the line when we analyse and try to choose the players. Itâs my selection. I donât want to send a message, itâs simply evaluation. Everyone understands my decision.
Meanwhile Jonathan Wilson has written about Ruben Amorimâs task at Manchester United:
There was a moment, at about 5.30pm last Saturday, when there seemed a genuine danger that Manchester United might be turning into a serious football club. But it took only two minutes and the sight of Nikola Milenkovic soaring above Lisandro MartÃnez for that facade to collapse. Two further weird goals later â the sort of accidents that speak of a profound carelessness â and it was clear that the banter era still has some time to run.
That was only the beginning. By the following morning, Dan Ashworth had been mutual-consented out of the club: five monthsâ gardening leave followed by five months of actual work, a truly magnificent piece of living satire, even before you consider the compensation United had to pay Newcastle to secure him and the hefty payoff he must have received.
Much more here:
Iâve got some pre-match reading for you, starting with this piece by Tom Bassam about Pep Guardiolaâs derby record.
Marcus Rashford has played in all 15 of Manchester Unitedâs Premier League games this season but that run ends today: he and Alejandro Garnacho, with 22 league starts between them, have been left out of the matchday squad by Ruben Amorim.
The teams news is in, and the line-ups look like this:
Man City: Ederson, Walker, Dias, Gvardiol, Gundogan, Silva, Doku, De Bruyne, Foden, Matheus Nunes, Haaland. Subs: Ortega, Stones, Kovacic, Grealish, Savio, Simpson-Pusey, OâReilly, McAtee, Mubama.
Man Utd: Onana, de Ligt, Maguire, Martinez, Mazraoui, Ugarte, Fernandes, Dalot, Diallo, Hojlund, Mount. Subs: Bayindir, Lindelof, Zirkzee, Malacia, Eriksen, Yoro, Casemiro, Antony, Mainoo.
Referee: Anthony Taylor.
Hello world!
Itâs the Premier Leagueâs fifth-best team against the 13th, a side that would move level with Liverpool in the home-games-only league table if they win â and lag behind only Brentford – against one that has beaten only one team away from home in the league all season, and that was Southampton three months and a day ago. None of this sound very exciting.
But itâs hard to think of a more intriguing recent Manchester derby. Perhaps itâs come too soon in Ruben Amorimâs spell in charge of United, and results â one win in his four league games so far, three in six if you throw in the Europa League â suggest he has yet to turn that ship around. But at the same time we donât know what Big Derby Energy might do to them, and they have the encouragement of knowing that this Manchester City side are currently worse (on form and in transition) than most sides in the Premier League. Amorim has first-hand experience of this, having led Sporting Lisbon to a rollicking 4-1 rout of City in the Champions League at the start of last month (albeit that was a very odd game, which I thought City should have won). Add to that Cityâs defensive injury crisis, compounded by Rico Lewisâs suspension. âThe soul and the spirit of this team is there,â says Pep Guardiola. âWe have to focus on ourselves because weâre not being at the level we want to be also, so we canât think about the momentum of the others,â says Amorim. âWe just have to think about ourselves.â
Anyway, enough of that. Itâs a derby, and a bigger one than usual. Welcome!