Michael Carrick is the sixth Manchester United manager to face Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City, a stat that highlights a decade of instability at Old Trafford and dominance at the Etihad.
Michael Carrick is now the sixth different Manchester United manager to face Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City since the Catalan took over at the Etihad in 2016. The stat is more than trivia—it’s a snapshot of a decade where City became a dynasty and United became a revolving door.
Guardiola has faced United 26 times, more than any other City manager in history. He’s won 14 of those meetings, including victories over every permanent United boss since Sir Alex Ferguson retired in 2013: José Mourinho, Ole Gunnar Solskjær, Ralf Rangnick, Erik ten Hag, and most recently, Rúben Amorim.
Guardiola’s Ruthless Standard: Win or Leave
Asked how he’s survived a decade in the Premier League while United cycled through six managers, Guardiola didn’t mince words: “Results. If you don’t win, you’re sacked. So we won a lot. That’s why I’m still sitting here.”
Since 2016, City have won six Premier League titles, two FA Cups, four League Cups, and the Champions League. This season, they remain in the hunt for four trophies. United, meanwhile, crashed out of both domestic cups at the first hurdle, sit seventh in the league, and failed to qualify for any European competition.
Carrick’s Audition Starts with a Derby
Promoted from within after Amorim’s dismissal, Carrick has been handed the interim reins until season’s end. His first assignment? A derby against City at Old Trafford, followed by a trip to league-leading Arsenal. It’s a trial by fire for a club legend who has never managed a top-flight game.
Carrick’s mandate is clear: secure Champions League qualification and restore a style of play that United fans recognize as their own. “We want to be top of the league,” Carrick said. “But we’ve got to take small steps. European football would be a step forward.”
The Bigger Picture: A Decade of Decline
United’s fall from supremacy is staggering. Since Ferguson’s final title in 2013, the club has:
- Finished above City zero times
- Won five major trophies to City’s 18
- Spent over £1.4 billion on transfers with no league title to show for it
City, meanwhile, have redefined English football. They’ve scored 3+ goals in seven derbies under Guardiola, including a 6–3 rout at the Etihad in 2022. Yet the head-to-head is closer than it feels: United have nine wins in 26 meetings, including a FA Cup final victory in 2024.
What Carrick Must Prove
Carrick isn’t just managing for today—he’s auditioning for tomorrow. United’s board are reportedly considering Oliver Glasner, who confirmed he’ll leave Crystal Palace at season’s end. But a shock derby win and a late-season surge could shift the narrative.
United’s next five league games: City (H), Arsenal (A), Fulham (H), Everton (A), Brentford (H). If Carrick can navigate that slate and drag United into the top four, he won’t just be the sixth manager to face Guardiola—he might be the first to beat him and keep the job.
Bottom line: Saturday isn’t just a derby. It’s a referendum on United’s identity, Carrick’s credentials, and whether the sixth time’s the charm against a manager who’s seen them all come and go.
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