The headline is Phil Foden’s form. The story the club will not say out loud is that Manchester City’s setup and Pep Guardiola’s demands may be the wrong fit for his profile, and that the system is moving on without him.
Foden’s Decline Is the Narrative; the System Shift Is the Buried Story
In March 2026, The Guardian reported that Foden had not scored in his last 17 or 18 appearances across all competitions, with his last goal on December 14, 2025. He was benched for two consecutive league games and then substituted just 60 seconds after a costly defensive error in a 2-2 draw against Nottingham Forest on March 4, 2026. He had started only four of City’s past 12 games and was an unused substitute in the 3-0 Champions League loss to Real Madrid on March 12. The narrative is that Foden was meant to take Kevin De Bruyne’s crown; instead, his City career is flatlining.
Guardiola has publicly backed him. According to Tribuna and other outlets, he said “step by step, he will be back” and that Foden had “some very good things in the last game.” The Guardian noted that Foden has acknowledged off-field personal issues affecting his performance. What the experts and the club are not saying is that City’s tactical shift may be the wrong fit for his profile. The BBC reported that Guardiola has moved toward a more dynamic, physical approach with quicker transitions, favouring new signings Antoine Semenyo, Rayan Cherki, and Savinho. That style does not suit Foden’s possession-based, between-the-lines game as well as it did when he was the focal playmaker.
The Guardian framed the Nottingham Forest result as damaging City’s title race hopes against Arsenal. Foden’s failure to track Elliot Anderson contributed directly to the equaliser. The same outlet had previously reported that teammate Jeremy Doku said Foden “struggles when people criticise him,” while defending his talent. The club will not say that the system has moved past him; it will say he will be back. The buried story is that the system was never built to tell that truth.
How Does Guardiola’s System Fit Foden Now?
Guardiola has at times used Foden in a deeper No. 10 or left-of-midfield role, where his technique and ability to play between the lines can shine. According to the Opta Analyst and Total Football Analysis, that role had helped him return to form earlier in the 2025-26 season. By March 2026, however, BBC Sport and The Guardian reported that City had shifted toward a more direct, physical approach. New signings Semenyo, Cherki, and Savinho offer pace and verticality; Foden’s strength is receiving in pockets and dictating tempo. When the team prioritises transitions over sustained possession, his profile becomes less central. The experts quote Guardiola’s faith in Foden; they do not often state that the current tactical blueprint may be the wrong fit. That gap is the story the system was never built to tell.
What This Actually Means
Foden’s flatlining is not only a dip in form. It is a collision between a player who thrived in a specific Guardiola role and a City side that has recalibrated around faster, more physical attackers. The experts quote Guardiola’s patience and Foden’s quality; they do not usually say that the demands of the new setup may be the wrong fit. The club will not say it out loud because it would admit a structural mismatch. The reader should see that the narrative of “form” hides the possibility of institutional misfit.
Who Is Phil Foden?
Phil Foden is an English professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Manchester City and the England national team. He joined City’s academy at under-9 level and made his senior debut in November 2017. He has made over 300 appearances for City and won multiple honours including a continental treble. He was named Premier League Player of the Season and PFA Players’ Player of the Year in 2024. His contract runs to June 2027; The Athletic has reported that renewal is still considered likely despite the current uncertainty over his output.
By March 2026 the contrast was clear: City had invested in Semenyo, Cherki and Savinho for a more direct style, while Foden’s best work had come in a slower, possession-heavy setup. The Guardian and BBC both reported the tactical shift; neither framed it explicitly as a misfit for Foden. That gap between the reported “form” narrative and the possible structural explanation is the story the system was never built to tell. Foden’s contract runs to 2027 and The Athletic has suggested renewal is still on the table; the question is whether his role in the new system will justify it or whether the club will eventually say out loud what the tactics already imply.