In our previous Pep Guardiola and Pepijn Lijnders analysis, we began exploring Manchester City’s in-possession tactics by focusing on their build-up—the phase in whichPep Guardiola’s side demonstrated tactical flexibility and diversity in their game plan, adapting based on the starting personnel and showing resilience against the opposition’s high-pressing schemes.
With the addition of assistant coach Pepijn Lijnders and several new signings, Man City’s tactical evolution has taken a fresh turn, especially in how they approach the next phase of play: progression.
In this piece, we move beyond the defensive third and into the middle third, analysing how Man City advance the ball with their updated positional dynamics, how they manipulate man-oriented systems like Juventus’, and how specific roles enable them to gain territory.
Progression—the phase between build-up and final third penetration—requires cohesion, timing, and flexibility.
It is the phase where Pep Guardiola’s tactical ideas meet the opposition’s pressure in the middle third.
Here, Man City operate with a clear objective—a point worth keeping in mind when analysing their approach.
While creating a goalscoring chance from this phase is certainly a positive outcome, Manchester Citys primary aim is to progress with control into the final third.
The focus is not on forcing opportunities but dictating the game’s rhythm through measured possession.
Manchester City Progression Tactics Vs Wydad
vswac1
In this match against Wydad AC, Manchester City lined up with Ederson in goal.
Vitor Reis and Nathan Aké operated as the centre-backs, flanked by Rico Lewis on the right and Nico OReilly on the left as full-backs.
Try TFA Risk Free For 14 Days
Full Access To TFA Articles
New Content 7 Days
Expert Insights
TFA Podcast Access
14 Day Free Trial
Money Back Guarantee