
Manchester City vs Bayer Leverkusen in the Champions League became the shock of the round. The Etihad—long considered an unbreakable fortress with a 23-match unbeaten home run—fell silent as Leverkusen executed a disciplined and clinical performance. Despite City’s dominance in possession and chances, goals from Alejandro Grimaldo and Patrik Schick sealed a 2-0 victory that rewrote expectations and reminded the football world that efficiency can defeat control.
Match context
Manchester City entered this fixture with an intimidating record: 23 consecutive Champions League home matches without defeat. With elite possession, an aggressive front line and a fortress-like Etihad, Pep Guardiola’s side were expected to dominate.
But Bayer Leverkusen, organized and clinical, rewrote the script.
Key moments
In the 23rd minute, Alejandro Grimaldo broke the deadlock with a precise finish following a sharp counterattack.
City pushed for an equalizer, controlling possession and volume of shots, yet lacked end product.
Then in the 54th minute, Patrik Schick delivered the knockout punch, doubling the lead and silencing the Etihad.
Match statistics
- Shots: Man City 18 — Leverkusen 4
- Shots on target: 8 — 2
- Possession: 54% — 46%
- Passes: 571 — 431
- Pass accuracy: both 92%
- Corners: 9 — 3
- Yellow cards: 0 — 2
City dominated almost every metric except the one that mattered: goals.
Leverkusen made the most of their limited opportunities, proving that efficiency can outweigh volume.
Tactical highlights
City pressed high but struggled to penetrate Leverkusen’s compact defensive block.
Leverkusen shifted into a disciplined 5-4-1 shape off the ball.
Quick transitions and flank overloads exposed gaps behind City’s fullbacks.
The Grimaldo–Schick axis punished mistakes with ruthless precision.
A historic run ends
This was more than just a loss.
It ended Manchester City’s 23-match home unbeaten streak in the Champions League, raising questions about their resilience against well-structured, counter-attacking sides.
Final thoughts
This 0–2 result ended Manchester City’s 23-match unbeaten Champions League home streak, a run stretching across multiple seasons.
It was not a smash-and-grab — it was a plan executed with discipline and precision.