City's Kevin De Bruyne set for last clash vs. Manchester United

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Amorim pays tribute to De Bruyne ahead of Manchester derby

Ruben Amorim heaps praise on Kevin De Bruyne saying he "was on the wrong side" after the Belgian announced he will be leaving Manchester City at the end of the season.


The 196th Manchester Derby also will be the last for longtime Manchester City star Kevin De Bruyne, who announced this week he will be leaving the club at the end of the season.

De Bruyne will compete for the 22nd time in a City shirt against the club's crosstown rival in a Sunday clash at Manchester United's Old Trafford. The match also will have European implications for the Cityzens (15-9-6, 51 points).

The 33-year-old Belgian has three goals and six assists against the Red Devils (10-13-7, 37 points) across those previous 21 fixtures, with seven of those goal involvements coming in Premier League meetings.

That record speaks to a greater legacy as a foundational piece of City's growth into a titan of English and European football. The midfielder played on six of the 10 City sides that have won league titles in club history, 13 of its 25 major domestic honors including the FA Cup and League Cup, and its only UEFA Champions League title-winning team in 2022-23.

"There's no doubt he's one of the greatest for sure," manager Pep Guardiola said Friday. "The consistency in important games and not important games, every three days being there all the time. There's no doubt.

"His assists, goals, vision in (the) final third is so difficult to replace."

De Bruyne's injury problems over the past two seasons are a major reason the club looks set to finally relinquish its four-year hold on the league title. City enter the weekend in fifth, all but mathematically eliminated from the title chase, but only one point back of Chelsea for a top-four finish and another guaranteed Champions League berth.

Similarly, United also have lagged expectations this season and are still mired in 13th place, nowhere close to relegation danger but well outside of contention for Europe.

The Red Devils have had almost no production from their forwards. Portuguese midfielder Bruno Fernandes leads the side with eight goals, and among strikers, Ivorian Amad Diallo has been the most proficient with six goals and six assists.

And although manager Ruben Amorim has engineered some promising stretches, including a four-match unbeaten league run prior to Tuesday's loss to Nottingham Forest, he would trade places with City in a heartbeat.

"I think we have bigger problems than Manchester City," Amorim said. "They had that run in that moment -- but they improved. They can play in different ways, it is really hard to think how they can face us. They have maybe the best coach in the world. They have top players. But I am so focused on my team."

--Field Level Media