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{{short description|Football match between Manchester United and Manchester City}}
The '''Manchester derby''' is the name given to [[football (soccer)|football]] matches between [[Manchester City F.C.|Manchester City]] and [[Manchester United F.C.|Manchester United]]. As with any major football rivalry, gloating and banter between the two sets of fans is commonplace. United fans like to gloat over the length of time City have gone without winning a major trophy, whereas City fans claim United do not actually come from Manchester (United's [[Old Trafford (football)|Old Trafford]] ground lies just outside the city boundaries).
{{For|more information on football clubs in Greater Manchester|List of football clubs in Greater Manchester}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2020}}
{{Infobox sports rivalry
| name = Manchester derby
| other names =
| image = File:Manchester United v Manchester City, 6 November 2021 (15).jpg
| image_size = 320px
| caption = Manchester derby, [[2021–22 Premier League|Premier League]], 6 November 2021
| team1 = [[Manchester City F.C.|Manchester City]]
| team2 = [[Manchester United F.C.|Manchester United]]
| city or region = [[Greater Manchester]]
| stadiums = [[City of Manchester Stadium]] <small>(City)</small><br />[[Old Trafford]] <small>(United)</small><!--{{Col-start}}{{Col-2}}'''City:'''<br />[[Hyde Road (stadium)|Hyde Road]]<br />[[Maine Road]]<br />{{nowrap|City of Manchester Stadium}}{{Col-2}}'''United:'''<br />[[Bank Street (football ground)|Bank Street]]<br />[[Old Trafford]]{{col-end}}-->
| first contested = 12 November 1881<br />{{nowrap|[[Manchester City F.C.|St. Mark's (West Gorton)]] 0–3 [[Manchester United F.C.|Newton Heath LYR]]}}
| mostrecent = 15 December 2024<br>[[2024–25 Premier League|Premier League]]<br>Manchester City 1–2 Manchester United
| nextmeeting = 5 April 2025<br>[[2024–25 Premier League|Premier League]]<br>Manchester United v Manchester City
| total = 195
| series = City: 61<br />Drawn: 54<br />United: 81
| most wins = Manchester United (80)
| largestvictory = United 1–6 '''City''' (1926)<br />United 0–5 '''City''' (1955)<br />'''United''' 5–0 City (1994)<br />United 1–6 '''City''' (2011)
| largestscoring = '''City''' 6–3 United (2022)
| longeststreak = 8 games<br/>Manchester United<br/>(1993–2000)
| longestunbeatenstreak = 16 games<br/>Manchester United<br/>(1990–2001)
| currentunbeatenstreak = 3 games<br/>Manchester United<br/>(2024–present)
| most player appearances = [[Ryan Giggs]] (36)
| top scorer = [[Wayne Rooney]] (11)
| map_location = United Kingdom Greater Manchester
| coordinates1 = {{coord|53.483056|-2.200278|display=inline}}
| map_mark1 = Sky blue pog.svg
| map_label1 = '''Manchester City'''
| map_label1_position = right
| coordinates2 = {{coord|53.463056|-2.291389|display=inline}}
| map_mark2 = Red pog.svg
| map_label2 = '''Manchester United'''
| map_label2_position = left
}}


The '''Manchester derby''' refers to [[association football|football]] matches between [[Manchester City F.C.|Manchester City]] and [[Manchester United F.C.|Manchester United]], first contested in 1881. City play at the [[City of Manchester Stadium]] in [[Bradford, Manchester|Bradford]], east [[Manchester]], while United play at [[Old Trafford]] in the borough of [[Trafford]], [[Greater Manchester]]; the two grounds are separated by approximately {{convert|4|mi}}. The teams have played 195 matches in all competitions; United winning 80, City 61 and the remaining 54 have been drawn. Amongst [[List of football clubs in England by competitive honours won|the most successful clubs in England]], they have won a combined 104 honours: 68 for Manchester United and 36 for Manchester City. They are also the first two English clubs and first cross-city rivals to have won the [[Treble (association football)|treble]]; United's success came in [[1998–99 Manchester United F.C. season|1999]], while City's occurred [[2022–23 Manchester City F.C. season|24 years later]].
The [[FA Premier League 2006-07|2006-07]] derby games were both won by Manchester United, 3-1 at [[Old Trafford (football)|Old Trafford]] in [[December]], and 1-0 at the [[City of Manchester Stadium]] in early [[May]].


==History==
==History==
[[File:Manchester Football Map.jpg|thumb|upright|Map of Manchester showing the current and former home grounds of the clubs.<br />City: Hyde Road (1887–1923), Maine Road (1923–2003), City of Manchester (2003–present).<br />United: North Road (1878–1893), Bank Street (1893–1910), Old Trafford (1910–present).]]
The first meeting between the two teams occurred on 12th November 1881, when West Gorton (St. Marks) (who would later become City) hosted Newton Heath (who would later become United). The game finished 3-0 in favour of ''the Heathens'', and was described by the ''Ashton Reporter'' as "a pleasant game"<ref>Gary James, ''Manchester: The Greatest City'' (Polar Publishing, 2002), 12.</ref>. The first League meeting between the teams came in the 1894/95 season, Newton Heath beating Manchester City 5-2 at [[Hyde Road]].
The first meeting between the two teams occurred on 12 November 1881, when St. Mark's (West Gorton) – who would later become Manchester City – hosted Newton Heath LYR – who would later become Manchester United. The game finished 3–0 in favour of Newton Heath and was described by the ''Ashton Reporter'' as "a pleasant game".<ref>Gary James, ''Manchester: The Greatest City'' (Polar Publishing, 2002), p.12.</ref> At this time, the clubs were just two of many fledgling sides in the Manchester area, and the fixture had no special significance. Both clubs grew in stature as the 1880s progressed, leading to their first meeting of the 1890s being billed as "a meeting of two local clubs, <nowiki>[Ardwick (City)]</nowiki> just rising to the highest standard in the football world whilst <nowiki>[Newton Heath]</nowiki> are nearly in the front rank".<ref>{{cite book |title=Manchester City – The Birth of the Blues 1880–1894 |publisher=Paul Toovey |year=2009 |location=Stockport |isbn=978-0-9561910-0-7 |page=90 }}</ref> The pair became the dominant teams in the Manchester area; the winner of the [[Manchester Cup]] was either Newton Heath or Ardwick every year between 1888 and 1893. Both teams joined the [[Football Alliance]], a short-lived rival to the Football League. During this period both clubs made unsuccessful attempts to gain election to the League (Newton Heath in 1889, 1890 and 1891; Ardwick in 1891). Admission to the Football League finally came in 1892. Newton Heath joined the First Division, and Ardwick the new Second Division.<ref>{{cite book |last=James |first=Gary |title=Manchester – A Football History |publisher=James Ward |location=Halifax |year=2008 |isbn=978-0-9558127-0-5 |pages=71–72 }}</ref>


===Early years===
Before the [[World War II|Second World War]], many football supporters in Manchester watched City one week and United the next. After the war, a stronger rivalry developed and following both teams became uncommon.
The first Football League meeting between the teams came in the 1894–95 season, Newton Heath beating Manchester City 5–2 at [[Hyde Road Football Stadium|Hyde Road]]. In the late 1890s, Scottish brothers [[Billie Gillespie|Billy]] and [[Matthew Gillespie]] played on opposite sides in the fixture on three occasions.<ref>[https://bluemoon-mcfc.co.uk/History/Players/Player.aspx?id=91 Billy Gillespie], BlueMoon. Retrieved 1 January 2022.</ref><ref>[http://www.mufcinfo.com/manupag/a-z_player_archive/a-z_player_archive_pages/gillespie_matthew.html MUFCInfo.com] MUFCInfo.com. Retrieved 1 January 2022.</ref> The first meeting between the clubs to take place at the highest level of English football occurred in December 1906, a 3–0 City win in a [[Football League First Division|First Division]] match for which the gate receipts exceeded £1,000, a very large figure for the era.<ref>{{cite book |chapter="A quick look back" |title=Manchester City v Manchester United match programme |date=30 September 1967 |page=17 }}</ref> At this time City were suffering the after-effects of a [[English football bribery scandal|financial scandal]] in which the club were found guilty of making off-balance sheet payments to players. As a result, seventeen players were suspended and banned from ever representing the club again,<ref>Ward, ''The Manchester City Story'', p. 14.</ref> including the core of the team which had won the [[1904 FA Cup final|1904 FA Cup]]. When the suspensions ended in January 1907, four players ([[Jimmy Bannister]], [[Herbert Burgess]], [[Billy Meredith]] and [[Sandy Turnbull]]) joined United, where they helped United gain their first league title in 1908. In contrast to modern antipathy, the transfers were generally welcomed for helping a fellow Manchester club.<ref>James, ''Manchester – A Football History, pp. 117–9''</ref> The following season Turnbull became the first player to be sent off in a derby.<ref>Cawley & James, ''The Pride of Manchester'', p. 41.</ref>


Before the Second World War, many football supporters in Manchester watched City one week and United the next. After the war, a stronger rivalry developed and following both teams became uncommon.
Manchester derbies in the 1970s were frequently bad tempered. In the December 1970 derby, a tackle by [[George Best]] broke the leg of [[Glyn Pardoe]], the severity of the injury almost resulted in the City defender losing his leg.<ref>Ibid., 283.</ref> The following season, an entertaining 3-3 draw saw [[Francis Lee]] and George Best accuse each other of diving. The first derby of the 1973/74 season saw [[Mike Doyle]] and [[Lou Macari]] each receive a [[Misconduct (football)|red card]] in a dour contest which finished 0-0. Both players refused to leave the pitch, leading the referee to take both teams back to the dressing room until the two players accepted their dismissals<ref>{{cite web | title=Derby day memories: Lou Macari|work=Manchester Evening News article| url=http://www.manchesteronline.co.uk/sport/football/manchesterunited/s/75/75373_derby_day_memories_lou_macari.html| accessdate=December 26 | accessyear=2005}}.</ref>


===Floodlights===
The return fixture came at Old Trafford on the last day of the season and had high stakes, as United needed to win to stand a chance of avoiding relegation. The first hour of the game was fairly unremarkable, with neither side making much headway. Then in the 81st minute, with the game seemingly headed towards a stalemate, Francis Lee played the ball towards former United player [[Denis Law]], who was standing with his back to goal. Law instinctively back-heeled the ball past goalkeeper [[Alex Stepney]] and into the back of the net. As his City teammates went to congratulate him, the stunned Law made his way off the pitch with his head down as he realised the consequences his goal had for his former club. Law later said of the goal: "I have seldom felt so depressed in my life as I did that weekend. After 19 years of giving everything I had to score goals, I had finally scored one which I almost wished I hadn't."<ref>''Manchester: The Greatest City'', 300.</ref> Law was immediately substituted, and never played league football again. In the closing minutes of the match United supporters staged a pitch invasion, and the match ended in abandonment. However, the result stood, and United's relegation was confirmed. Results subsequently revealed that United would have been relegated if the match was drawn, but among City supporters the match is still remembered as "the day Denis Law back-heeled United into the Second Division". Happily for United however, they won promotion at the first time of asking in the next season.
The first floodlit Manchester derby was played on 26 February 1889 at the Belle Vue Athletic Ground. Wells electric lights were placed around the ground and a crowd of 10,000 watched Newton Heath defeat Ardwick 3–2. The match was played in aid of the Hyde Coal Mine disaster.<ref>Gary James & Keith Mellor, ''From Maine Men To Banana Citizens'' (Temple Press, 1989), p8.</ref>


The first competitive floodlit derby was the [[1956 FA Charity Shield]] match, as Manchester United were defending league champions and Manchester City were FA Cup holders.<ref>Steve Cawley & Gary James, ''The Pride of Manchester – A History of the Manchester Derby'' (ACL & Polar Publishing, 1991), p320.</ref> The game was a break with tradition as Charity Shield games were typically played at the home ground of the League Champions, but as Old Trafford had yet to install lights, the game was played at Maine Road.
In the 1990s United dominated the fixture, going unbeaten in derbies for the full decade, including a 5-0 win in 1994 in which [[Andrei Kanchelskis]] scored a [[hat-trick]]. Since the turn of the decade, the fixture has been more evenly contested, with both teams having three wins each at January 2006.


===1970s===
The first Old Trafford derby of the new millennium saw the culmination of a long standing feud between [[Roy Keane]] and [[Alf-Inge Haaland]]. The feud started in 1998, when United captain Keane suffered a [[cruciate ligament]] injury after attempting to foul Haaland, who was then playing for Leeds, who also have an unpleasant rivalry with United. As Keane lay on the ground, Haaland accused him of feigning injury. Three years later, in the derby match of April 2001, Haaland was the City captain. Late in the game Keane made a knee height tackle on Haaland, for which he received a red card. In his autobiography, published in 2002, Keane admitted that the challenge was a premeditated attempt to injure, an admission which resulted in a £150,000 fine and a five match ban. Subsequent to the incident Haaland had a long struggle with knee problems and retired in 2002. Haaland initially stated that his injury problems were not related to the challenge, but later received medical advice which suggested the challenge aggravated an earlier injury. <ref>{{cite web | title=Keane wants helping hand from Haaland|work=Manchester Evening News article| url=http://www.manchesteronline.co.uk/sport/football/manchesterunited/s/20/20612_keane_wants_helping_hand_from_haaland.html| accessdate=January 13| accessyear=2005}}</ref><sup>,</sup> <ref>{{cite web | title=City decide against Keane legal action|work=Soccernet article| url=http://soccernet.espn.go.com/news/story?id=257933&cc=5739| accessdate=January 13 | accessyear=2005}}</ref>
Manchester derbies in the 1970s saw two controversial incidents. In the December 1970 derby, a tackle by United's [[George Best]] broke the leg of City's [[Glyn Pardoe]]; the severity of the injury almost resulted in the City defender losing his leg.<ref>Gary James, ''Manchester: The Greatest City'' (Polar Publishing, 2002), 283.</ref> The following season, an entertaining 3–3 draw saw [[Francis Lee (footballer)|Francis Lee]] accuse Best of diving and emphasised the point to the referee by throwing himself theatrically to the floor. The first derby of the 1973–74 season saw [[Mike Doyle (footballer)|Mike Doyle]] and [[Lou Macari]] each receive a [[Misconduct (football)|red card]] in a dour contest which finished 0–0 at [[Maine Road]]. Both players refused to leave the pitch, leading the referee to take both teams back to the dressing room until the two players accepted their dismissals.<ref>{{cite news |title=Derby day memories: Lou Macari |url=https://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/sport/football/football-news/derby-day-memories-lou-macari-1158709 |work=Manchester Evening News |publisher=MEN Media |date=8 February 2005 |access-date=17 January 2011 }}</ref>


====Denis Law game====
City won both the last derby match at Maine Road and the first derby match at their new stadium.
[[File:Denis Law.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Denis Law]] scored the winning goal for Manchester City at Old Trafford near the end of the 1973–74 season.]]
The return fixture came at Old Trafford on the penultimate day of the season (United still had an away game to play at Stoke) with United trying to avoid relegation with a win, although they were also relying on Norwich beating Birmingham that day for their result to matter. After 80 minutes, with no score, Francis Lee played the ball towards former United player [[Denis Law]] who was standing with his back to goal. Law back-heeled the ball past goalkeeper [[Alex Stepney]] into the net. This was Law's last appearance in league football, announcing his retirement soon after. In the closing minutes of the match, United supporters invaded the pitch and forced an abandonment. However, the result stood, and other results meant that United would have still been relegated if the match had ended in a United win or a draw.


United returned to the First Division a year later. The rest of the decade brought generally good fortunes for the two sides, as City won the League Cup in 1976 and were league runners-up a year later, while United reached three FA Cup finals in four seasons, although they had only one win in the competition.
Manchester City fans commonly refer to Manchester United as not being from Manchester. Although it is true that United's ground is actually in Trafford, Manchester United were in fact formed in Clayton, which is in Manchester.

===1980s===
The 1980's began with a 2–2 draw at [[Old Trafford]] between the two sides on 27 September 1980. It was the beginning of a relatively frustrating season in the league for United, who sacked manager [[Dave Sexton]] at the end of the campaign, while City dismissed manager [[Malcolm Allison]] soon afterwards and improved in the league under his successor [[John Bond (footballer)|John Bond]], also reaching [[1981 FA Cup final|the FA Cup final]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.aboutmanutd.com/man-u-matches/27-09-1980-manchester-city.html |title=About Man Utd &#124; Manchester United vs Manchester City - 27 Sep 1980 |access-date=6 November 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121105185447/http://www.aboutmanutd.com/man-u-matches/27-09-1980-manchester-city.html |archive-date=5 November 2012}}</ref>

By [[1982–83 in English football|1982–83]], however, any suggestions that City were a better side than United were silenced as United finished third in the league and [[1983 FA Cup final|won the FA Cup]], while City were relegated. The Old Trafford derby on 23 October 1982 ended in a 2–2 draw, but United won the return game at [[Maine Road]] 2–1 on 5 March 1983.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.aboutmanutd.com/man-u-seasons/1982-1983.html |title=About Man Utd &#124; 1982-1983, Manchester United season |access-date=6 November 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121116121215/http://www.aboutmanutd.com/man-u-seasons/1982-1983.html |archive-date=16 November 2012}}</ref>

City regained their First Division status for the [[1985-86 in English football|1985–86 season]], and hosted United at Maine Road on 14 September 1985. United won this game 3–0, to extend their winning start to the league season to eight games. They would go on to win all of their opening 10 games and lead the First Division table into the new year, but eventually finished fourth. Although City finished 15th in the league this season, they did come to Old Trafford on 22 March 1986 and hold the hosts to a 2–2 draw, costing them two vital points as their title hopes continued to fade.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.manchester-united-fans-site.com/manchester-united-results-1985-86.html |title=Manchester United Results 1985-86, Division One, FA Cup, League Cup |access-date=12 May 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110905231124/http://www.manchester-united-fans-site.com/manchester-united-results-1985-86.html |archive-date=5 September 2011 }}</ref>

[[1986-87 in English football|1986–87]] brought relegation for City, while United finished 11th in a season which saw them replace [[Ron Atkinson]] with [[Alex Ferguson]] as manager on 6 November 1986. One of Atkinson's last games in charge of United was the visit to Maine Road in the league on 25 October, which ended in a 1–1 draw. Alex Ferguson first faced City as United manager on 10 January 1987 in the third round of the FA Cup, which United won 1–0. The league clash at Old Trafford came on 7 March 1987, which United won 2–0 to continue their improvement in form under Ferguson and push City closer to eventual relegation.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.manchester-united-fans-site.com/manchester-united-results-1986-87.html |title=Manchester United Results 1986-87, Division One, FA Cup, League Cup |access-date=6 November 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120829164521/http://www.manchester-united-fans-site.com/manchester-united-results-1986-87.html |archive-date=29 August 2012}}</ref>

The 1980s ended on a high note for City as they won promotion back to the First Division in 1989 and were paired with United for the derby match at Maine Road on 23 September 1989, just weeks into the [[1989-90 in English football|1989–90 season]]. City defeated United 5–1, but this would be their last win over United for 13 years.<ref>{{cite news |title=From the Vault: Manchester City beat United 5–1 |url=https://www.theguardian.com/sport/blog/2009/sep/23/manchester-city-united-derby-1989 |work=The Guardian |location=London |date=23 September 2009 }}</ref>

===1990s===
Goalkeeper [[Peter Schmeichel]], who played for both United and City, can claim an unbeaten record in derby games – United were unbeaten during his 10 matches keeping goal for them against City, while in his single season at Maine Road, City beat United at home and picked up a point at Old Trafford.

However, in the 1990s, United dominated the fixture, going unbeaten in derbies for the full decade. In [[1990–91 in English football|1990–91]], with both Manchester clubs competing in the top half of the table but not looking like real title contenders, the [[Maine Road]] clash in October delivered a pulsating 3–3 draw, but the return match at Old Trafford in early May saw United win 1–0 and the only goal of the game came from 17-year-old winger [[Ryan Giggs]], scoring the first senior goal of what would prove to be an illustrious and uniquely successful career. The [[1991–92 in English football|1991–92]] derbies were uneventful – a goalless draw at Maine Road in mid-November and a 1–1 draw at Old Trafford in early April. United finished the season runners-up after leading the league for much of the season, finally buckling under fixture congestion and a shortage of goals in the second half of the campaign.

The first Manchester derby following the creation of the [[Premier League]] for the [[1992–93 in English football|1992–93 season]] was a 2–1 win for United at Old Trafford on 6 December 1992. Making his United debut on that day was new signing [[Eric Cantona]], who would go on to score eight goals in Manchester derbies over the next four seasons – the first in the return match at Maine Road that March which ended in a 1–1 draw. [[1993–94 in English football|1993–94]] saw one of the finest Manchester derbies ever, when United overturned a 2–0 deficit at Maine Road to win 3–2, with Eric Cantona scoring twice. Cantona scored a double on [[St George's Day]] as United won 2–0 at Old Trafford. Cantona was on target again in the next Manchester derby in November 1994, though it was [[Andrei Kanchelskis]] who stole the show with a hat-trick in a 5–0 win. United won the return game 3–0 at Maine Road three months later. 1995–96 was the last season of the millennium which brought a Manchester derby, as City were relegated at the end of the season. The first derby of the season came at Old Trafford in mid-October with a 1–0 win for United in which [[Paul Scholes]], still only 20, scored the only goal of the game and only a string of superb saves from United goalkeeper [[Peter Schmeichel]] prevented City from gaining a surprise win. The return game in early April saw United win 3–2 at Maine Road, with yet another goal from Cantona, who had netted a highly controversial penalty after [[Uwe Rosler]] had put City 1–0 FA Cup fifth round two months earlier, which United went on to win 2–1.

===2000s===
Three years later, in the first Old Trafford derby of the new millennium in April 2001, saw the culmination of a long-standing feud between [[Roy Keane]] and [[Alfie Haaland]], which Keane received a red card for making a knee-high tackle on Haaland. The feud started in 1997, when United captain Keane suffered a [[cruciate ligament]] injury when he fouled Haaland (then playing for Leeds, a team that also have an unpleasant rivalry with United). As Keane lay on the ground, Haaland accused him of feigning injury. The game ended in a 1–1 draw; United were already league champions and City's two dropped points brought them closer to eventual relegation, which was confirmed in the penultimate game of the season. It was the first time in nine years that City had come away from Old Trafford unbeaten, and the first time in eight years that they had been unbeaten by United home or away in any competition.

In his autobiography, published in 2002, Keane admitted that the challenge was a premeditated attempt to injure, an admission which resulted in a £150,000 fine and a five-match ban during the autumn of that year.

[[File:Scarves of Derby Day.jpg|thumb|upright|Commemorative scarves given out for the 50th anniversary of the [[Munich air disaster]] which coincided with the Manchester derby in February 2008. Blue scarves were also given to Manchester City supporters. ]]

On 9 November 2002, City, managed by [[Kevin Keegan]], won the last derby at Maine Road 3–1, with [[Shaun Goater]] scoring his 100th and 101st goals for the club, and [[Nicolas Anelka]] scoring the other. This was City's first win over United since the 5–1 victory in 1989, ending a 13-year barren run for the blue half of Manchester. City would later go on to draw at Old Trafford in the same season 1–1, Shaun Goater again scoring the goal. This was the first season since [[1991–92 in English football|1991–92]] that City had been unbeaten by United in either of their league meetings.

Goater also had a second goal disallowed for handball, which would have handed City their first derby double over United since 1970 and their first win at Old Trafford since the "Denis Law game" of 1974. City followed this up by winning the first ever derby match at their new stadium, the [[City of Manchester Stadium]], 4–1, with goals from [[Robbie Fowler]], [[Jon Macken]], [[Trevor Sinclair]] and [[Shaun Wright-Phillips]].

The [[2007–08 Premier League|2007–08]] derby games were both won by Manchester City, 1–0 at the City of Manchester Stadium on 19 August 2007, and 2–1 at [[Old Trafford]] on 10 February 2008 (four days after the 50th anniversary of the [[Munich air disaster]]; a well-observed one-minute silence preceded the match). [[Darius Vassell]] and [[Benjani Mwaruwari|Benjani]] scored for City in the 24th and 45th minutes respectively, and [[Michael Carrick]] scored a consolation goal for United in the 90th minute. It was the first time since April 1974 that City had beaten United in the league at Old Trafford and the first time they had won both league derby games since the 1969–70 season. United prevented City from winning a third consecutive derby match in the first derby of the [[2008–09 Premier League|2008–09 season]], [[Wayne Rooney]] scoring the game's only goal. [[Cristiano Ronaldo]] was sent off in the same game for a bizarre handball. Ronaldo and [[Carlos Tevez]] then scored in the return match at Old Trafford to give United a 2–0 win.

===2010s===
[[File:Wembley Manchester derby pre-kick-off.JPG|thumb|190px|right|Wembley pictured before the [[2010–11 FA Cup#Semi-finals|2010–11 FA Cup semi-final]] – only the second semi-final between both clubs and the first ever meeting at Wembley (new or old).]]
The seasons following City's takeover in [[2008–09 in English football|2008–09]], saw two well-contested semi-final fixtures (League Cup and FA Cup) between the clubs. Controversy was generated prior to the start of the [[2009–10 in English football|2009–10 season]], when City signed Carlos Tevez after his contract with United ended and erected a billboard reading "Welcome to Manchester" at the top of [[Deansgate]]. The billboard provoked Alex Ferguson into claiming City were a "small club with a small mentality"<ref>{{Cite news |title=Man City a small club – Ferguson |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/teams/m/man_utd/8169153.stm |publisher=bbc.co.uk |date=26 July 2009 |access-date=17 April 2011}}</ref> and subsequently called them "noisy neighbours"<ref>{{cite news |first=James |last=Ducker |title=Sir Alex Ferguson stokes up hostilities with Manchester City after derby victory |url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/football/article6841960.ece |location=London |newspaper=The Times |date=21 September 2009 }}{{dead link|date=September 2024|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref> during the season.

The 2009–10 season featured some tense matches, including two League Cup semi-final legs. Sir Alex Ferguson proclaimed the 2009–10 Manchester derby at Old Trafford as "probably [...] the best derby of all time".<ref>{{cite news |title=Boss Ferguson hails 'best derby' |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/teams/m/man_utd/8265764.stm |work=BBC Sport |publisher=British Broadcasting Corporation |date=20 September 2009 |access-date=15 July 2011 }}</ref> Manchester United [[Manchester United F.C. 4–3 Manchester City F.C. (2009)|won this game 4–3]] after Manchester City had equalised three times only for [[Michael Owen]] to score the winning goal after 95 minutes.<ref>{{cite news |title=Ferguson hails 'best ever derby' |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/teams/m/man_utd/8265764.stm |work=BBC Sport |publisher=British Broadcasting Corporation |date=20 September 2009 |access-date=20 September 2009 }}</ref> The match was voted the greatest Premier League game at the [[Premier League 20 Seasons Awards]] in 2012.<ref>{{cite news|title=Manchester derby wins 20 Seasons Best Match |url=http://www.premierleague.com/en-gb/news/news/manchester-derby-wins-20-seasons-best-match.html |publisher=Premier League |date=12 May 2012 |access-date=17 May 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120515081721/http://www.premierleague.com/en-gb/news/news/manchester-derby-wins-20-seasons-best-match.html |archive-date=15 May 2012 }}</ref> The sides were drawn against each other in the [[Football League Cup|League Cup]] semi-finals, meaning a further two games. City won the first leg 2–1 after overturning a 1–0 deficit made by Ryan Giggs with goals from Carlos Tevez. United went 2–0 up in the second leg via Paul Scholes and Michael Carrick before Tevez made it 2–1, levelling the tie and setting the game up for extra time. However, Rooney scored a stoppage time header which won the tie for United and took them to their second consecutive League Cup final. On 17 April 2010, United beat City 1–0 thanks to a 90th minute Scholes goal, but the victory was to little avail as it was not enough to help United chase Chelsea down to win the Premier League title, pipping United by a point.

The [[2010–11 in English football|2010–11 season]] featured three Manchester derbies, with one victory for United, one draw and one victory for City. The victory for United was at Old Trafford, where Wayne Rooney defined the game through a spectacular bicycle kick, this game gave United some space to overcome the rest of the season and get their 19th league title. City's win came in the FA Cup semi-final, knocking United out on the way to their ninth FA Cup final, and their first trophy since 1976. Consequently, the Community Shield that began the [[2011–12 in English football|2011–12 season]] was a Manchester derby, as United won the league the same day City won the FA Cup, 14 May. United won the [[2011 FA Community Shield|Community Shield]] 3–2 at Wembley, coming from two goals behind to clinch the Shield in stoppage time.

On 23 October 2011, Manchester City beat United [[Manchester United F.C. 1–6 Manchester City F.C.|6–1]] at Old Trafford, giving the latter their first defeat of the season. [[Jonny Evans]] was sent off in the 47th minute after fouling [[Mario Balotelli]], with the score at 1–0 to City. United pulled a goal back at 3–0 down before three goals for City sealed their victory. The 6–1 score was the biggest defeat suffered by Manchester United against City at Old Trafford since the 5–0 loss in 1955. It was also the first time since 1926 that City had scored six at Old Trafford, when the score that day also finished 6–1.

United and City met for the third time in the season in the third round of the FA Cup, resulting in a 3–2 win for United. The scoring opened in the tenth minute as [[Wayne Rooney]] headed neatly past stand-in keeper [[Costel Pantilimon]], before [[Vincent Kompany]] received a red card in the 12th minute for a challenge on [[Nani (footballer)|Nani]]. United went 3–0 up by half time, and successfully battled off a second half comeback from City in which they scored twice. The game was notable for the re-emergence of [[Paul Scholes]], who came out of retirement and replaced Nani in the 59th minute.

City beat United 1–0 at the [[City of Manchester Stadium]] on 30 April 2012, with Vincent Kompany scoring a header just before the half-time whistle.<ref>{{cite news |first=Kevin |last=McCarra |title=Manchester City 1–0 Manchester United |url=https://www.theguardian.com/football/2012/apr/30/manchester-city-united-premier-league |work=The Guardian |location=London |date=30 April 2012 }}</ref> There was also a spat between City boss [[Roberto Mancini]] and Sir Alex Ferguson after a challenge on [[Danny Welbeck]] by [[Nigel de Jong]]. Ferguson claimed that Mancini harangued the fourth official [[Mike Jones (referee)|Mike Jones]] throughout the match, while Mancini laughed off the incident, sarcastically claiming Ferguson never talks to, or harangues the referee –<ref>{{Cite news |title=Man City boss Roberto Mancini reacts to Sir Alex Ferguson jibe |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/17902842 |work=BBC Sport |date=1 May 2012 |access-date=1 June 2012}}</ref> an offence Ferguson has been found guilty of on numerous occasions, most recently in 2011 for which he received a five-match ban.<ref>{{Cite news |title=Sir Alex Ferguson handed five-match ban for outburst |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/teams/m/man_utd/9426939.stm |work=BBC News |date=17 March 2011 |access-date=23 August 2012 |first=Matt |last=Slater}}</ref> Consequently, the win put City top of the league on [[goal difference]] after being 8 points behind in the league in March.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/17810224|title=Manchester City 1–0 Manchester United|first=Phil |last=McNulty|publisher=BBC Sport|access-date=10 September 2016}}</ref> Only two wins against [[Newcastle United F.C.|Newcastle United]] and [[Queens Park Rangers F.C.|Queens Park Rangers]] were required for City to win the league, which they subsequently achieved. City ultimately won the last six league matches to clinch the league title on goal difference – the first time a tie-breaker was used to decide the championship since [[1988–89 Football League|1988–89]], and repeated the [[1967–68 Football League|1967–68 league season]], when City pipped United to the title after both teams went into their final games level on points.

The first Manchester derby of the [[2012–13 in English football|2012–13 season]] was won by Manchester United in the dying minutes of the game. United went ahead with two early goals from [[Wayne Rooney]], before City came back and levelled the match with goals from [[Yaya Touré]] and the equaliser from [[Pablo Zabaleta]] in the 86th minute. [[Robin van Persie]] scored from a free kick that took a deflection off of [[Samir Nasri]] in the 92nd minute, to seal the win and three points in the league. Manchester United's victory ended Manchester City's run of being unbeaten in 37 games.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.heraldscotland.com/sport/football/man-city-2-man-utd-3rvp-ends-citys-unbeaten-home-run.1355068398|title=Man City 2 Man Utd 3: RVP ends City's unbeaten home run|date=9 December 2012 |access-date=10 September 2016}}</ref> During the celebrations following the late winner by Robin van Persie, [[Rio Ferdinand]] was hit by a coin thrown by a fan, causing Ferdinand to suffer an injury near his left eye. Another fan invaded the pitch and attempted to confront Ferdinand, only to be restrained by Joe Hart. City won the second derby of the season at Old Trafford, the first time they had won two away derbies in a row since the 1970s.{{citation needed|date=August 2013}}

The first Manchester derby of the [[2013–14 in English football|2013–14 season]] was won by City 4–1 at the City of Manchester Stadium on 22 September 2013. [[Sergio Agüero]] opened the scoring on the 16th minute followed by a goal from Yaya Touré just before half-time. In the second half, Agüero scored his second followed by a [[Samir Nasri]] goal three minutes later. Wayne Rooney scored a late free kick for United as a consolation goal. It was the first time in 26 years that the Derby had been contested by two new managers: [[Manuel Pellegrini]] for Manchester City and [[David Moyes]] for Manchester United. Manchester City went on to do the double over United with a third consecutive win at Old Trafford on 25 March 2014. During the [[2014–15 in English football|2014–15 season]], City defeated United 1–0 at [[City of Manchester Stadium]] in November 2014,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.premierleague.com/en-gb/matchday/matches/2014-2015/epl.html/man-city-vs-man-utd |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141010084643/http://www.premierleague.com/en-gb/matchday/matches/2014-2015/epl.html/man-city-vs-man-utd |archive-date=10 October 2014 |title=Fixture {{!}} Man City vs Man Utd }}</ref> but United won their next encounter at Old Trafford in April 2015 with a final score of 4–2, a game which City goalkeeper [[Joe Hart]] dubbed "one of my worst days in a Man City shirt".<ref>{{cite news |last1=Rich |first1=Tim |title=Manuel Pellegrini has six games to save his Manchester City job... he must qualify for the Champions League |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/premier-league/pellegrini-has-six-games-to-save-his-manchester-city-job-10174044.html |access-date=3 September 2020 |work=The Independent |date=13 April 2015}}</ref>

The first derby of the [[2015–16 in English football|2015–16 campaign]], contested at Old Trafford, ended in a 0–0 draw. This was the first time the derby had ended without any goals since 2010. United won the second derby of the season, hosted at the City of Manchester Stadium, after [[Marcus Rashford]] scored the only goal of the game at the 16-minute mark.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.goal.com/en-gb/match/manchester-city-vs-manchester-united/2043495?ICID=RE|title=Manchester City 0 - 1 Manchester United Match report - 20/03/2016 Premier League - Goal.com|access-date=10 September 2016}}</ref>

Both clubs had managerial changes prior to the start of the [[2016–17 in English football|2016–17 campaign]], with [[José Mourinho]] taking over Manchester United and [[Pep Guardiola]] taking over Manchester City. City arguably took the bragging rights that season, winning 2–1 at Old Trafford on 10 September in the league<ref>{{cite news |first=Phil |last=McNulty |title=Manchester United 1-2 Manchester City |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/37263921 |publisher=BBC Sport |date=10 September 2016 |access-date=18 April 2018 }}</ref> before United won the League Cup tie 1–0 at Old Trafford en route to the title on 26 October<ref>{{cite news |first=Luke |last=Reddy |title=Manchester United 1-0 Manchester City |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/37700029|publisher=BBC Sport |date=26 October 2016 |access-date=7 December 2019 }}</ref> and a goalless draw at the City of Manchester Stadium on 27 April in which [[Marouane Fellaini]] was sent off for headbutting Sergio Agüero.<ref>{{cite news |first=Phil |last=McNulty |title=Manchester City 0-0 Manchester United |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/39018821 |publisher=BBC Sport |date=27 April 2017 |access-date=18 April 2018 }}</ref> In the [[2017–18 in English football|2017–18 season]], City won 2–1 at Old Trafford for the second year in a row on 10 December,<ref>{{cite news |first=Phil |last=McNulty |title=Manchester United 1-2 Manchester City |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/42212593 |publisher=BBC Sport |date=10 December 2017 |access-date=18 April 2018 }}</ref> and had the chance to win the league with victory over United at the City of Manchester Stadium on 7 April. They led 2–0 at half-time, but two goals from [[Paul Pogba]] and one from [[Chris Smalling]] meant City had to wait to secure the title.<ref>{{cite news |first=Phil |last=McNulty |title=Manchester City 2-3 Manchester United |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/43602492 |publisher=BBC Sport |date=7 April 2018 |access-date=18 April 2018 }}</ref> City did the double over United the [[2018–19 in English football|following season]], winning 3–1 at the City of Manchester Stadium – their first home derby win since 2014 – and 2–0 at Old Trafford – their third away derby win in a row. In the [[2019–20 in English football|2019–20 campaign]], United was again travelling first; goals from Marcus Rashford and [[Anthony Martial]] secured their first win in the first derby fixture of the season for the first time since 2012–13.<ref>{{Cite news |first=Chris |last=Bevan |title=Manchester City 1-2 Manchester United: Ole Gunnar Solskjaer's side dent City's title hopes |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/50611309|website=BBC Sport |date=7 December 2019 |access-date=9 March 2020 }}</ref>

===2020s===
The late 2010s and early 2020s saw City reach unprecedented levels of success, winning the league in six out of seven seasons under the management of [[Pep Guardiola]]. Most of these seasons were characterised by closely fought title battles between [[Liverpool F.C.|Liverpool]] and City, however the derby games between United and City continued to be competitive and mostly unpredictable.

The first derbies of the 2020s came in a [[2019–20 EFL Cup]] semi-final tie in January 2020. City's 3–1 win in the first leg at Old Trafford was enough to send them to their third successive EFL Cup final,<ref>{{cite news |first=Chris |last=Bevan |title=Carabao Cup - Man Utd 1-3 Man City: Holders overwhelm rivals in semi-final first leg |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/50953053 |website=BBC Sport |date=7 January 2020 |access-date=30 January 2020 }}</ref> as United were only able to produce a 1–0 win in the second leg at the City of Manchester Stadium.<ref>{{cite news |first=Chris |last=Bevan |title=Manchester City 0-1 Manchester United (agg: 3-2): Blues into EFL Cup final despite defeat |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/51201817 |website=BBC Sport |date=29 January 2020 |access-date=30 January 2020 }}</ref>

The first league derby in this decade came exactly a week after City's EFL Cup triumph in March 2020. Played at Old Trafford, goals from Anthony Martial and [[Scott McTominay]] completed United's first league double over City since [[2009–10 Premier League|2009–10]] and proved to be their last home match to be watched by spectators before the restrictions caused by the [[COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom|COVID-19 pandemic]] started.<ref>{{cite news |first=Phil |last=McNulty |title=Man Utd 2-0 Man City: Anthony Martial and Scott McTominay score in derby win |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/51693762|work=BBC Sport |date=8 March 2020 |access-date=9 March 2020 }}</ref>

The following [[COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom|COVID-19]] affected season, the two clubs met once more in a [[2020–21 EFL Cup|EFL Cup]] semi-final. This was the fourth time the clubs had met at this stage of the competition and the third time in eleven years. For the second consecutive season, City came out on top, winning 2–0 at Old Trafford in a single-legged spectator-less fixture, thanks to goals from [[John Stones]] and [[Fernandinho (footballer, born May 1985)|Fernandinho]].<ref>{{cite news |first=Simon|last=Stone |title=Manchester Utd 0-2 Manchester City |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/55481278|work=BBC Sport |date=6 Jan 2021 |access-date=8 Jan 2021 }}</ref> In March 2021, United had their second successive league win at City for the first time since 2010, with another 2–0 victory and goals from [[Bruno Fernandes]] and [[Luke Shaw]].<ref>{{cite news |first=Phil|last=McNulty|title=Man City 0-2 Man Utd: Bruno Fernandes & Luke Shaw seal derby win|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/56227458|work=BBC Sport|date=7 March 2021|access-date=7 March 2021}}</ref>

In [[2021–22 Premier League|2021–22]], City were able to end their run of derby league home defeats and complete their first double over United in three seasons, with a 2–0 victory at Old Trafford in November 2021 and a convincing 4–1 win at the City of Manchester Stadium in March 2022, with [[Hat-trick#Braces|braces]] from both [[Kevin De Bruyne]] and [[Riyad Mahrez]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Man City v Man Utd, 2021/22 {{!}} Premier League |url=https://www.premierleague.com/match/66616 |access-date=23 September 2022|date=6 March 2022 |website=PremierLeague.com|publisher=Premier League}}</ref>
In the first derby of the [[2022–23 Premier League|2022–23 league season]] on 22 October 2022, City beat United at home 6–3, with two hat-tricks from [[Phil Foden]] and [[Erling Haaland]]. It was the highest-scoring Manchester derby of all time. On 14 January 2023, United beat City at home 2–1 in the second derby of the season, with goals from [[Bruno Fernandes]] and [[Marcus Rashford]].<ref>{{cite news |first=Phil |last=McNulty |title=Man City 6-3 Man Utd: Haaland and Foden hat-tricks as hosts hit six |url=https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/63024245|date=2 October 2022 |access-date=2 October 2022|work=BBC Sport |publisher=British Broadcasting Corporation}}</ref> The [[2023 FA Cup final]] was the first time a Manchester derby featured in a cup final, and Manchester City went on to win the occasion 2–1 where City captain [[İlkay Gündoğan]] scored after 12 seconds, the fastest goal in FA Cup Final history.

In the [[2023–24 Premier League|2023–24 season]], City beat United 3–0 away in October 2023 following goals from Haaland and Foden and then completed the double over their rivals by winning 3–1 at home in March.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Smyth |first=Rob |date=3 April 2024 |title=Manchester City 3-1 Manchester United: Premier League – as it happened |url=https://www.theguardian.com/football/live/2024/mar/03/manchester-city-v-manchester-united-premier-league-live |access-date=4 April 2024 |work=the Guardian |issn=0261-3077}}</ref> The two teams met again in the [[2024 FA Cup final|FA Cup final]] for the second year in a row, making it the first time since [[1885 FA Cup final|1885]] that the same two clubs have met in consecutive FA Cup finals, the second-ever Manchester derby FA Cup final, and the third FA Cup meeting between the two teams at the new Wembley Stadium. Manchester United secured a 2–1 victory over City in a reverse of the scoreline from the previous year.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Millar |first=Colin |date=2024-05-25 |title=Newcastle miss out on Europe, Chelsea in Conference League after Man Utd win FA Cup |url=https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/5519107/2024/05/25/newcastle-chelsea-manchester-united-europe/ |access-date=2024-05-25 |work=[[The Athletic]]}}</ref>

==Fans==
[[File:Manchester football clubs map.svg|250px|right|thumb|A map showing support for Manchester City and Manchester United in Manchester by borough.<ref>https://www.sportbible.com/football/manchestermapunitedcitysupporters-169820-20230602</ref><ref>https://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/sport/football/derby-day-map-shows-parts-15407574.amp</ref><ref>https://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/sport/football/football-news/manchester-united-city-football-map-26984740.amp</ref>

{{Legend|#88ccff|Manchester City}}
{{Legend|#e20e0e|Manchester United}}]]

Although United fans currently view [[Liverpool F.C.|Liverpool]] as their main rivals,<ref>{{cite web|date=27 August 2019|title=The top five rivals of English football's top 92 clubs have been revealed|url=https://www.givemesport.com/1500300-the-top-five-rivals-of-english-footballs-top-92-clubs-revealed|access-date=4 December 2020|website=GiveMeSport|archive-date=29 September 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190929205049/https://www.givemesport.com/1500300-the-top-five-rivals-of-english-footballs-top-92-clubs-revealed|url-status=live}}</ref> the rivalry between the two Manchester clubs intensified as football became tribal in the 1960s and 1970s, and strengthened again in the early 2010s with City's emergence as one of the top teams in England.<ref>{{Cite news|title=Stakes high for Manchester derby |url=http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/sp20100417cd.html |work=The Japan Times |date=17 April 2009 }}</ref>

Both Manchester clubs are regarded as among the best in the world, with both consistently progressing to the latter stages of UEFA competitions in recent years and both are in the top 5 of football clubs by revenue. The city is now viewed as a football city in similar vein to cities such as [[Madrid derby|Madrid]] and [[Derby della Madonnina|Milan]],<ref>{{Cite news |title=Man City best in world, says Tottenham boss Tim Sherwood |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/25956275 |work=BBC Sport |date=30 January 2014 |access-date=9 May 2015}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Man City 5–0 Blackburn: Gary Bowyer hails 'best in world' |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/25757726 |work=BBC Sport |date=16 January 2014 |access-date=9 May 2015}}</ref> although City's disappearance from the upper echelons of the league following their 1960s–70s heyday until their recent rise has led to the two teams being regarded as polar opposites, with City seen as the nouveau riche to United's old money.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Nouveau riche vs old school |url=http://www.thesundaily.my/news/1154763 |work=The Sun Daily (Malaysia) |date=29 August 2014 |access-date=19 January 2016}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Old money Real Madrid hold off nouveau riche Man City |url=http://edition.cnn.com/2012/09/18/sport/football/football-champions-league-real-madrid-manchester-city/ |work=[[CNN]] |date=19 September 2012 |access-date=19 January 2016}}</ref>

The two sets of fans are traditionally diametrically opposed to each other, with City's fans accusing United of arrogance and of attempting to turn the [[Premier League]] into a closed shop for elite clubs only via manipulation of the rules<ref>{{Cite web |title=Manchester United and Manchester City split by proposals on Premier League financial controls |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/competitions/premier-league/9493345/Manchester-United-and-Manchester-City-split-by-proposals-on-Premier-League-financial-controls.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220112/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/competitions/premier-league/9493345/Manchester-United-and-Manchester-City-split-by-proposals-on-Premier-League-financial-controls.html |archive-date=12 January 2022 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live |work=[[The Daily Telegraph|The Telegraph]] |date=22 August 2012 |access-date=19 January 2016}}{{cbignore}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Sam Wallace: Elite clubs seek to reinforce their closed shop at the top with new financial rules |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/news-and-comment/sam-wallace-elite-clubs-seek-to-reinforce-their-closed-shop-at-the-top-with-new-financial-rules-8486177.html |work=[[The Independent]] |date=7 February 2013 |access-date=19 January 2016}}</ref> and of the media<ref>{{Cite web |title=Mike Summerbee – media biased against Manchester City |url=http://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/sport/football/football-news/mike-summerbee---media-biased-854552 |work=[[Manchester Evening News]] |date=18 January 2013 |access-date=19 January 2016}}</ref> while they in turn are accused of using their "oil money" as a route to success.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Why Manchester City have destroyed the oil money jibe |url=http://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/sport/football/football-news/manchester-city-oil-money-profit-10260064 |work=[[Manchester Evening News]] |date=14 October 2015 |access-date=19 January 2016}}</ref>

Additionally, and in a unique twist on a cross-city rivalry, both clubs' fans accuse each other of not representing their city, with the blue half of the city observing that their adversaries do not actually play in the city of Manchester (in [[Trafford]]) and therefore do not warrant their name, while the red half instead argue over which team has more fans inside of the city. City fans often ridicule United fans for being tourists in a play towards United's global fan base, stating that City is the club for the locals and United fans travel up from [[London]] or fly in from [[Europe]] and [[Asia]] for a day out. Following on from this City fans have often called United ''"plastics"'' or ''"glory supporters"'' again in reference to their on the field dominance over several decades that made the club hugely popular with football supporters outside of Manchester, that even lead United captain [[Roy Keane]] to make a comment against his own supporters by calling them the ''"[[prawn sandwich brigade]]"''.<ref>{{Cite web |date=31 May 2021 |title=Plastic fans: Why are they hated and who are the worst culprits? |url=https://footballwhispers.com/blog/plastic-fans/ |access-date=8 August 2023 |website=footballwhispers.com }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=9 November 2022 |title=Roy Keane's infamous 'prawn sandwich brigade' rant at Man Utd fans is still incredible, 22 years on |url=https://www.sportbible.com/football/roy-keane-man-utd-prawn-sandwich-20221109 |access-date=8 August 2023 |website=SPORTbible }}</ref> In turn, owing to the growth of City's global status following their 2008 takeover which brought significant success on the field, United fans have said many "plastic" fans have jumped on City's bandwagon.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://tribuna.com/en/manutd/news/2020-03-06-how-many-plastic-fans-are-actually-there-among-united-supporters/|title=How many 'plastic fans' are actually there among United supporters?|website=Tribuna.com|access-date=18 January 2021|archive-date=24 January 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210124155051/https://tribuna.com/en/manutd/news/2020-03-06-how-many-plastic-fans-are-actually-there-among-united-supporters/|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.footballparadise.com/im-a-united-fan-and-im-not-a-plastic/|title=I'm a United fan and I'm not a Plastic!|date=7 April 2014}}</ref>

The most commonly used name by City fans to describe their cross-city rivals is the term ''"The Rags"'', this is due to a period after [[World War II]] where United were given use of City's [[Maine Road]] stadium after [[Old Trafford]] had been bombed by the [[Luftwaffe]]. United at the time were so poor that they had to wear old kits that after a while started to resemble old rags.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://mcivta.com/newbies/|title = Manchester City guide for Newbies – MCIVTA}}</ref> As well in the past sections of the City support have been known to use the term ''"Munichs"'' to describe fans of United, in reference to the [[Munich air disaster]], which has been described as both derogatory and insensitive.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Wilson |first=Paul |date=27 April 2011 |title=Why Manchester City fans must stop singing about Munich |work=The Guardian |url=https://www.theguardian.com/football/blog/2011/apr/27/manchester-city-fans-munich-chants |access-date=8 August 2023 |issn=0261-3077}}</ref> United often ridicule City by calling them ''"Citeh"'', which pokes fun at the way the word is pronounced phonetically with a Mancunian accent, City fans in turn have stated the fact that United are mocking the accent as a sign that their fanbase does not predominantly come from Manchester. United fans also refer to City supporters as ''"Bitters"'' or ''"Berties"'' after the character ''"Bertie Magoo the Bitter Blue"'' who appeared in a United fanzine in 1989.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Steve |date=23 August 2022 |title=Why Are Manchester City Fans Called Berties? (Solved) |url=https://classicfootballshirtscollection.com/why-are-manchester-city-fans-called-berties/ |access-date=8 August 2023 }}</ref> City fans refer to United's stadium as ''"The Swamp"'', which is said to originate from its position in an area which has a substantial man-made canal network,<ref>{{Cite web |date=7 September 2016 |title=Theatre Of Dreams aka The Swamp |url=https://manchestercity.vitalfootball.co.uk/theatre-of-dreams-aka-the-swamp/ |access-date=8 August 2023 |website=Vital Manchester City }}</ref> while United fans refer to the [[City of Manchester Stadium]] as the ''"Emptyhad"'', in reference to its sponsored name, Etihad Stadium, and the widely-held belief by some fans that there are many empty seats at some City home games due to a lack of devoted supporters, despite City being amongst the top five highest-attended teams in the League.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://talksport.com/football/718480/man-city-fans-emptyhad-joke-twitter-crowd-noise-premier-league-game-arsenal-liam-gallagher/|title=Man City's rivals cant wait to make Etihad gag and even Liam Gallagher has a dig|newspaper=Talksport |date=17 June 2020}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.worldfootball.net/attendance/eng-premier-league-2018-2019/1/|title=Premier League 2018/2019 - Attendance|website=worldfootball.net|date=10 June 2023 }}</ref>


==Statistics==
==Statistics==
As of 5th May, 2007 there have been 148 competitive meetings between the teams. United have won 60 and City 39, with the most recent game resulting in a 1-0 win for United.
As of 15 December 2024, there have been 195 competitive meetings between the teams. United have won 80, City have won 61, and the remaining 54 games finished as draws.


The biggest victory was 6-1 to City on January 23, 1926. Both teams have won 5-0 once (City in 1955, United in 1994). The largest attendance for a Manchester derby was 78,000 on September 20, 1947<ref>{{cite web | title=Opponents: Manchester United|work=Mcfcstats.com derby statistics| url=http://www.mcfcstats.com| accessdate=December 23 | accessyear=2005}}</ref>, a time when both clubs were playing at [[Maine Road]], as Old Trafford was being repaired following damage sustained in [[World War II]].
The biggest victories have been to City, who have won 6–1 on two occasions in the official league (both times in the away fixture at Old Trafford): on 23 January 1926 and [[Manchester United F.C. 1–6 Manchester City F.C.|23 October 2011]]. United beat City 7–1 in a War League match at Maine Road on 14 April 1941, but this is not considered an official fixture and thus the result is not counted as the biggest win in the derby.<ref name="mcfcstats">{{cite web |title=Opponents: Manchester United |work=Mcfcstats.com derby statistics |url=http://www.mcfcstats.com |access-date=23 December 2005 }}</ref> Both teams have won 5–0 once (City in 1955, United in 1994). The largest attendance for a Manchester derby was 78,000 on 20 September 1947,<ref name="mcfcstats" /> a time when both clubs were playing at [[Maine Road]], as Old Trafford was being repaired following bomb damage sustained in the [[World War II|Second World War]].
[[File:Manchester Derby chart.svg|thumb|450px|Manchester City and Manchester United league positions (1893–2023)]]


{{updated|15 December 2024}}
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"
{| class="sortable wikitable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center"
!
! City wins
! Draws
! United wins
|-
|-
!scope=col|Competition
| League
!scope=col|Played
| 35 || 48 || 52
!scope=col|City
!scope=col|Draw
!scope=col|United
!scope=col|City goals
!scope=col|United goals
|-
|-
!scope=row|[[Premier League]]
| FA Cup
|55
| 2 || 0 || 4
|20
|9
|26
|81
|79
|-
|-
!scope=row|[[Football League First Division]]
| League Cup
|104
| 2 || 1 || 1
|30
|39
|35
|147
|141
|-
|-
!scope=row|[[Football League Second Division]]
| Charity Shield
|12
| 0 || 0 || 1
|2
|4
|6
|13
|21
|-
|-
!scope=row|[[FA Cup]]
|11
|4
|0
|7
|15
|21
|-
!scope=row|[[EFL Cup]]
|10
|5
|1
|4
|16
|11
|-
!scope=row|[[FA Community Shield]]
|3
|0
|1
|2
|3
|5
|- class="sortbottom"
!scope=row|Total
!195
!61
!54
!80
!275
!278
|}

===Top goalscorers===
All statistics exclude the abandoned match from the 1960–61 season. Italics denote players still currently at either Manchester City or Manchester United.<ref>Julian Baskcomb & Julia Byrne (eds.) ''Manchester City Official Handbook 1997–98'' (Polar, 1997), pp. 99–101</ref>
{{updated|15 December 2024}}
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"
|-
! Player
! Club
! League
! FA Cup
! EFL Cup
! Community Shield
! Total
! Total
|-
! 39 !! 49 !! 58
| style="text-align:left;" | {{flagicon|ENG}} [[Wayne Rooney]]
| style="text-align:left;" | Manchester United
|8
|2
|1
|0
|11
|-
| style="text-align:left;" | {{flagicon|ENG}} [[Joe Hayes (footballer)|Joe Hayes]]
| style="text-align:left;" | Manchester City
|9
|1
|0
|0
|10
|-
| style="text-align:left;" | {{flagicon|ENG}} [[Francis Lee (footballer)|Francis Lee]]
| style="text-align:left;" | Manchester City
|9
|0
|1
|0
|10
|-
| style="text-align:left;" | {{flagicon|ARG}} [[Sergio Agüero]]
| style="text-align:left;" | Manchester City
|8
|1
|0
|0
|9
|-
| style="text-align:left;" | {{flagicon|ENG}} [[Bobby Charlton]]
| style="text-align:left;" | Manchester United
|7
|0
|2
|0
|9
|-
| style="text-align:left;" | {{flagicon|ENG}} [[Colin Bell (footballer, born 1946)|Colin Bell]]
| style="text-align:left;" | Manchester City
|7
|0
|1
|0
|8
|-
| style="text-align:left;" | {{flagicon|FRA}} [[Eric Cantona]]
| style="text-align:left;" | Manchester United
|7
|1
|0
|0
|8
|-
| style="text-align:left;" | {{flagicon|ENG}} [[Brian Kidd]]
| style="text-align:left;" | Manchester United (5)<br />Manchester City (3)
|6
|2
|0
|0
|8
|-
| style="text-align:left;" | {{flagicon|ENG}} [[Joe Spence (footballer, born 1898)|Joe Spence]]
| style="text-align:left;" | Manchester United
|8
|0
|0
|0
|8
|-
| style="text-align:left;" | {{flagicon|ENG}} [[Paul Scholes]]
| style="text-align:left;" | Manchester United
|5
|1
|1
|0
|7
|-
| style="text-align:left;" | {{flagicon|ENG}} [[Dennis Viollet]]
| style="text-align:left;" | Manchester United
|6
|0
|0
|1
|7
|-
|colspan="7"|''Leading current players''
|-
| style="text-align:left;" | {{flagicon|ENG}} ''[[Phil Foden]]''
| style="text-align:left;" | Manchester City
|6
|0
|0
|0
|6
|-
| style="text-align:left;" | {{flagicon|NOR}} ''[[Erling Haaland]]''
| style="text-align:left;" | Manchester City
|6
|0
|0
|0
|6
|-
| style="text-align:left;" | {{flagicon|ENG}} ''[[Marcus Rashford]]''
| style="text-align:left;" | Manchester United
|5
|0
|1
|0
|6
|}
|}


===Most appearances===
'''Top goalscorers'''<ref>Julian Baskcomb & Julia Byrne (eds.) ''Manchester City Official Handbook 1997-98'' (Polar, 1997), 99-101.</ref>
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: left;"
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
! Apps
! Player
! Player
! style="width:30%;" | Club
! Goals
|-
|-
| style="text-align:center;" | '''37'''
| [[Joe Hayes]], [[Francis Lee]]
| [[Ryan Giggs]]
| 10
| United
|-
|-
| style="text-align:center;" | '''28'''
| [[David de Gea]]
| United
|-
| style="text-align:center;" | '''27'''
| [[Bobby Charlton]]
| [[Bobby Charlton]]
| 9
| United
|-
|-
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | '''26'''
| [[Colin Bell]], [[Eric Cantona]], [[Brian Kidd]], [[Joe Spence]]
| [[Joe Corrigan]]
| 8
| City
|-
| [[Paul Scholes]]
| United
|-
|-
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | '''25'''
| [[Dennis Viollet]]
| [[Alan Oakes]]
| 7
| City
|-
|-
| [[Wayne Rooney]]
|}<small>all statistics exclude the abandoned match from the 1960/61 season</small>
| United
|-
| rowspan="4" style="text-align:center;" | '''24'''
| [[Mike Doyle (footballer)|Mike Doyle]]
| City
|-
| [[Rio Ferdinand]]
| United
|-
| [[Vincent Kompany]]
| City
|-
| [[Alex Stepney]]
| United
|-
|}

===Hat-tricks===
8 players have scored a [[Hat-trick#Association football|hat-trick]] in a competitive Manchester derby match.

{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
!Player!!For!!Score!!Date!!Competition!!Stadium
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG|1785}} [[Dick Smith (footballer, died 1909)|Dick Smith]]<sup>4</sup>
|Manchester United
|2–5 (A)
|3 November 1894
|[[1894–95 Football League#Second Division|1894–95 Second Division]]
|[[Hyde Road (stadium)|Hyde Road]]
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG|1785}} [[Horace Barnes]]
|Manchester City
|4–1 (H)
|22 October 1921
|[[1921–22 Football League#First Division|1921–22 First Division]]
|Hyde Road
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG|1785}} [[Joe Spence (footballer, born 1898)|Joe Spence]]
|Manchester United
|3–1 (H)
|29 October 1921
|[[1921–22 Football League#First Division|1921–22 First Division]]
|[[Old Trafford]]
|-
|{{Flagicon|SCO|1785}} [[Alex Dawson]]
|Manchester United
|5–1 (H)
|21 December 1960
|[[1960–61 Football League#First Division|1960–61 First Division]]
|Old Trafford
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG|1785}} [[Francis Lee (footballer)|Francis Lee]]
|Manchester City
|1–4 (A)
|12 December 1970
|[[1970–71 Football League#First Division|1970–71 First Division]]
|Old Trafford
|-
|{{Flagicon|RUS|1785}} [[Andrei Kanchelskis]]
|Manchester United
|5–0 (H)
|10 November 1994
|[[1994–95 FA Premier League|1994–95 Premier League]]
|Old Trafford
|-
|{{Flagicon|NOR|1785}} [[Erling Haaland]]
|Manchester City
|6–3 (H)
|2 October 2022
|[[2022–23 Premier League]]
|[[City of Manchester Stadium]]
|-
|{{Flagicon|ENG|1931}} [[Phil Foden]]
|Manchester City
|6–3 (H)
|2 October 2022
|[[2022–23 Premier League]]
|City of Manchester Stadium
|}
'''Notes'''
* <sup>4</sup> = 4 goals scored; (H) = Home, (A) = Away, (N) = [[Neutral venue|Neutral location]]; home team score listed first.
* Not including friendly matches.

==Records==
* ''Friendly matches are not included in the following records unless otherwise noted.''

===Results===
====Biggest wins (5+ goals)====
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"
! Winning margin
! style="width:30%;" | Result
! Date
! Competition
|-
| rowspan="4" | '''5'''
| United 1–6 '''City'''
| 23 January 1926
| [[1925–26 Football League#First Division|1925–26 First Division]]
|-
| United 0–5 '''City'''
| 12 February 1955
| [[1954–55 Football League#First Division|1954–55 First Division]]
|-
| '''United''' 5–0 City
| 10 November 1994
| [[1994–95 FA Premier League|1994–95 Premier League]]
|-
| United 1–6 '''City'''
| 23 October 2011
| [[2011–12 Premier League]]
|}

====Most total goals in a match====
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"
|-
! Goals !! style="width:30%;" | Result !! Date !! Competition
|-
| '''9''' || '''City''' 6–3 United || 2 October 2022 || [[2022–23 Premier League]]
|-
| rowspan="5" | '''7'''
| City 2–5 '''United''' || 3 November 1894 || [[1894–95 Football League#Second Division|1894–95 Second Division]]
|-
| United 1–6 '''City''' || 23 January 1926 || [[1925–26 Football League#First Division|1925–26 First Division]]
|-
| City 3–4 '''United''' || 5 May 1971 || [[1970–71 Football League#First Division|1970–71 First Division]]
|-
| '''United''' 4–3 City || 20 September 2009 || [[2009–10 Premier League]]
|-
| United 1–6 '''City''' || 23 October 2011 || [[2011–12 Premier League]]
|-
| rowspan="7" | '''6'''
| '''United''' 5–1 City || 3 October 1891 || [[1891–92 FA Cup]]
|-
| City 2–4 '''United''' || 2 January 1957 || [[1956–57 Football League#First Division|1956–57 First Division]]
|-
| '''United''' 5–1 City || 31 December 1960 || [[1960–61 Football League#First Division|1960–61 First Division]]
|-
| City 3–3 United || 6 November 1971 || [[1971–72 Football League#First Division|1971–72 First Division]]
|-
| '''City''' 5–1 United || 23 September 1989 || [[1989–90 Football League#First Division|1989–90 First Division]]
|-
| '''United''' 4–2 City || 14 February 2004 || [[2003–04 FA Cup]]
|-
| '''United''' 4–2 City || 12 April 2015 || [[2014–15 Premier League]]
|}

====Longest runs====
=====Most consecutive wins=====
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"
|-
! Games
! style="width"30%;" | Club
! Period
|-
| '''8''' || United || 7 November 1993 – 18 November 2000
|-
| '''5''' || United || 31 December 1955 – 31 August 1957
|-
| rowspan="3" | '''4''' || City || 25 September 1954 – 3 September 1955
|-
| United || 31 December 1960 – 10 February 1962
|-
| City || 8 April 2013 – 2 November 2014
|}

=====Most consecutive draws=====
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"
|-
! Games
! Period
|-
| '''4''' || 20 September 1947 – 22 January 1949
|}

=====Most consecutive matches without a draw=====
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"
|-
! Games
! Period
|-
| '''12''' || 12 February 2011 – 12 April 2015
|-
| '''11''' || 14 January 2006 – 17 April 2010
|-
| '''10''' || 6 January 2021 – 25 May 2024
|-
| '''9''' || 25 September 1954 – 31 August 1957
|-
| rowspan="2" | '''8'''|| 7 November 1993 – 18 November 2000
|-
| 10 December 2017 – 8 March 2020
|}

=====Longest undefeated runs=====
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"
|-
! Games
! style="width:30%;" | Club
! Period
|-
| '''16''' || United || 3 February 1990 – 21 April 2001
|-
| rowspan="3" | '''9''' || United || 6 April 1907 – 30 December 1911
|-
| City || 19 January 1952 – 3 September 1955
|-
| United || 10 October 1981 – 7 March 1987
|-
| rowspan="2" | '''8''' || United || 20 September 1947 – 19 January 1952
|-
| United || 31 December 1955 – 16 February 1959
|}

=====Most consecutive matches without conceding a goal=====
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"
|-
! Games
! style="width:30%;" | Club
! Period
|-
| rowspan="2" | '''4''' || City || 18 November 1972 – 27 April 1974
|-
| United || 23 April 1994 – 14 October 1995
|}

=====Most consecutive games scoring=====
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"
|-
! Games
! style="width:30%;"|Club
! Period
|-
| '''17''' || United || 7 April 1992 – 14 March 2004
|-
| '''13''' || City || 3 September 1949 – 31 December 1955
|-
| rowspan="2" | '''12''' || United || 27 February 1982 – 4 May 1991
|-
| City || 12 February 2011 – 14 April 2015
|-
| rowspan="3" | '''10''' || City || 20 November 1920 – 5 October 1929
|-
| United || 31 December 1960 – 27 March 1968
|-
| City || 6 November 2021 – present
|-
| rowspan="2" | '''8''' || United || 31 December 1955 – 14 February 1959
|-
| United || 3 December 1969 – 12 April 1972
|}

===Managers===
====Most appearances====
:''As of 15 December 2024''
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"
|-
! Rank
! Manager
! Team
! Matches
! Years
! Competition(s) <small>(matches)</small>
|-
| align=center | 1
| {{flagicon|SCO}} [[Alex Ferguson]]
| align=center | United
| align=center | 47
| align=center | {{nowrap|1986–2013}}
| [[Football League First Division|First Division]]/[[Premier League]] <small>(39)</small> <br />[[FA Cup]] <small>(5)</small><br />[[EFL Cup|League Cup]] <small>(2)</small><br />[[FA Community Shield|Community Shield]] <small>(1)</small>
|-
| align=center | 2
| {{flagicon|ENG}} [[Matt Busby]]
| align=center | United
| align=center | 39
| align=center | {{nowrap|1945–1969}}
| [[Football League First Division|First Division]] <small>(36)</small><br />[[FA Cup]] <small>(2)</small> <br />[[FA Community Shield|Community Shield]] <small>(1)</small>
|-
| align=center | 3
| {{flagicon|SCO}} [[Les McDowall]]
| align=center | City
| align=center | 26
| align=center | {{nowrap|1950–1963}}
| [[Football League First Division|First Division]] <small>(24)</small><br/>[[FA Cup]] <small>(1)</small><br/>[[FA Community Shield|Community Shield]] <small>(1)</small>
|-
| align=center | 4
| {{flagicon|ESP}} [[Pep Guardiola]]
| align=center | City
| align=center | 24
| align=center | {{nowrap|2016–present}}
| [[Premier League]] <small>(17)</small><br/>[[FA Cup]] <small>(2)</small><br/>[[EFL Cup]] <small>(4)</small> <br/>[[FA Community Shield|Community Shield]] <small>(1)</small>

|}

====Most wins====
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"
|-
! Rank !! style="width:25%;" | Manager !! style="width:25%;" | Club !! Period !! Wins
|-
| align=center | 1
|style="text-align:left;"|{{Flagicon|SCO}} [[Alex Ferguson]]
|United
|1986–2013
|26
|-
| align=center | 2
|style="text-align:left;"|{{Flagicon|ENG}} [[Matt Busby]]
|United
|1945–1969
|15
|-
| align=center | 3
|style="text-align:left;"|{{Flagicon|ESP}} [[Pep Guardiola]]
|City
|2016–present
|12
|-
| align=center | 4
|style="text-align:left;"|{{Flagicon|SCO}} [[Les McDowall]]
|City
|1950–1963
|8
|}

==Honours==
===Team honours===
[[File:Manchester football club honours.png|thumb|right|Season by season honours of both clubs]]
City won their first honour in [[1904 FA Cup final|1904]], with victory in the FA Cup, and United in [[1907–08 Football League#First Division|1908]], with the Football League First Division title. There have been five occasions where City and United finished as champions and runners-up in the league, during the [[1967–68 Football League#First Division|1967–68]], [[2011–12 Premier League|2011–12]], [[2012–13 Premier League|2012–13]], [[2017–18 Premier League|2017–18]] and [[2020–21 Premier League|2020–21]] seasons. On the first two occasions, City pipped United to the title in the last game of the season, with both teams going into their final games level on points. In 2013, United finished 11 points clear to clinch their 20th title. City finished 19 points clear in 2018, breaking a record set by United in the [[1999–2000 FA Premier League|1999–2000 season]]. Seven semi-finals (two in the FA Cup and five in the League Cup) have been played between the two clubs. The [[2023 FA Cup final]] became the first-ever Manchester derby in a major cup final, which City won. United are historically more successful in terms of overall titles, having won 68 trophies compared to City's 36.

:''Table correct as of 10 August 2024''
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|-
!Team
!width=100|League
!width=100|FA Cup
!width=100|League Cup
!width=100|Community<br />Shield
!width=100|Champions<br />League
!width=100|Europa League
!width=100|Cup Winners' Cup
!width=100|Super Cup
!width=100|Intercontinental<br />Cup
!width=100|Club<br />World Cup
!width=100|Total
|-
![[Manchester City F.C.|Manchester City]]<ref name="auto">{{cite web |url=https://www.mancity.com/fans-and-community/club/club-history |title=Club History {{!}} Manchester City FC |publisher=Manchester City |access-date=29 January 2020}}</ref>
|10
|7
|'''8'''
|7
|1
|0
|'''1'''
|'''1'''
|0
|'''1'''
|'''36'''
|-
![[Manchester United F.C.|Manchester United]]<ref name="auto1">{{cite web |url=https://www.manutd.com/en/history/trophy-room |title=Trophy Room |publisher=Manchester United |access-date=26 February 2023}}</ref>
|'''20'''
|'''13'''
|6
|'''21'''*
|'''3'''
|'''1'''
|'''1'''
|'''1'''
|'''1'''
|'''1'''
|'''68'''
|-
!Combined
|30
|20
|14
|28
|4
|1
|2
|2
|1
|2
|'''104'''
|}

(*) Community Shields include shared honours after a drawn match, as per competition regulations prior to 1993. Manchester United has 17 outright and 4 shared titles.

=== Awards ===
==== Ballon d'Or ====
The [[Ballon d'Or]] is an annual football award presented by French news magazine ''[[France Football]]'' since 1956. Between 2010 and 2015, in an agreement with FIFA, the award was known as the [[FIFA Ballon d'Or]].

{| class="wikitable" style="font-size:99%; width: 99%; text-align: center;"
|-
!Award
! style="color:black; background:#FF0000;"| Manchester United
! style="color:black; background:#87CEEB;"| Manchester City
|-
! scope="row" style="text-align:center" colspan=3 |[[Ballon d'Or]] (1956–2009, 2016–present) / [[FIFA Ballon d'Or]] (2010–2015)
|-
|scope=col style="background-color:gold"|'''1st'''
|align=center|4: [[Denis Law]] ([[1964 Ballon d'Or|1964]]), [[Bobby Charlton]] ([[1966 Ballon d'Or|1966]]),
[[George Best]] ([[1968 Ballon d'Or|1968]]), [[Cristiano Ronaldo]] ([[2008 FIFA Ballon d'Or|2008]])
|align=center|1: [[Rodri (footballer, born 1996)|Rodri]] ([[2024 Ballon d'Or|2024]])
|-
|scope=col style="background-color:silver"|2nd
|align=center|4: [[Bobby Charlton]] ([[1967 Ballon d'Or|1967]], [[1968 Ballon d'Or|1968]]), [[David Beckham]] ([[1999 Ballon d'Or|1999]]),
[[Cristiano Ronaldo]] ([[2007 Ballon d'Or|2007]])
|align=center|1: [[Erling Haaland]] ([[2023 Ballon d'Or|2023]])
|-
|scope=col style="background-color:#cc9966"|3rd
|align=center|3: [[Duncan Edwards]] ([[1957 Ballon d'Or|1957]]), [[George Best]] ([[1971 Ballon d'Or|1971]]),
[[Eric Cantona]] ([[1993 Ballon d'Or|1993]])
|align=center|1: [[Kevin De Bruyne]] ([[2022 Ballon d'Or|2022]])
|-
!align=center| Total
|align=center|'''11'''
|align=center|'''3'''
|}

==== UEFA Men's Player of the Year Award ====
The [[UEFA Men's Player of the Year Award]] is an award given to the footballer playing for a men's football club in Europe that is considered the best in the previous season of both club and national team competition. The award, created in 2011 by UEFA in partnership with [[European Sports Media]] (ESM) group, was initially aimed at reviving the European Footballer of the Year Award (Ballon d'Or).

{| class="wikitable" style="font-size:99%; width: 99%; text-align: center;"
|-
!Award
! style="color:black; background:#FF0000;"| Manchester United
! style="color:black; background:#87CEEB;"| Manchester City
|-
|scope=col style="background-color:gold"|'''1st'''
|align=center|0
|align=center|1: [[Erling Haaland]] ([[UEFA Men's Player of the Year Award#2022–23|2022–23]])
|-
|scope=col style="background-color:silver"|2nd
|align=center|0
|align=center|3: [[Kevin De Bruyne]] ([[UEFA Men's Player of the Year Award#2019–20|2019–20]], [[UEFA Men's Player of the Year Award#2020–21|2020–21]], [[UEFA Men's Player of the Year Award#2021–22|2021–22]])
|-
|scope=col style="background-color:#cc9966"|3rd
|align=center|0
|align=center|1: [[Kevin De Bruyne]] ([[UEFA Men's Player of the Year Award#2022–23|2022–23]])
|-
!align=center| Total
|align=center|'''0'''
|align=center|'''5'''
|}

==== League performances awards ====
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size:99%; width: 99%; text-align: center;"
|-
!Award
! style="color:black; background:#FF0000;"| Manchester United
! style="color:black; background:#87CEEB;"| Manchester City
|-
!align=center| [[Premier League Golden Boot]] or previous First Division equivalent
|align=center|7: [[Dennis Viollet]] ([[1959–60 Football League#First Division|1959–60]]), [[George Best]] ([[1967–68 Football League#First Division|1967–68]]), [[Dwight Yorke]] ([[1998–99 FA Premier League|1998–99]]), [[Ruud van Nistelrooy]] ([[2002–03 FA Premier League|2002–03]]), [[Cristiano Ronaldo]] ([[2007–08 Premier League|2007–08]]), [[Dimitar Berbatov]] ([[2010–11 Premier League|2010–11]]), [[Robin van Persie]] ([[2012–13 Premier League|2012–13]])
|align=center|6: [[Frank Roberts (footballer, born 1893)|Frank Roberts]] ([[1924–25 Football League#First Division|1924–25]]), [[Francis Lee (footballer)|Francis Lee]] ([[1971–72 Football League#First Division|1971–72]]), [[Carlos Tevez]] ([[2010–11 Premier League|2010–11]]), [[Sergio Agüero]] ([[2014–15 Premier League|2014–15]]), [[Erling Haaland]] ([[2022–23 Premier League|2022–23]], [[2023–24 Premier League|2023–24]])
|-
!align=center| [[European Golden Shoe]]
|align=center|1: [[Cristiano Ronaldo]] (2007–08)
|align=center|1: [[Erling Haaland]] (2022–23)
|-
!align=center| [[Premier League Playmaker of the Season]]
|align=center|0
|align=center|3: [[Kevin De Bruyne]] ([[2017–18 Premier League|2017–18]], [[2019–20 Premier League|2019–20]], [[2022–23 Premier League|2022–23]])
|-
!align=center| [[Premier League Golden Glove]]
|align=center|3: [[David de Gea]] ([[2017–18 Premier League|2017–18]], [[2022–23 Premier League|2022–23]]), [[Edwin van der Sar]] ([[2008–09 Premier League|2008–09]])
|align=center|7: [[Joe Hart]] ([[2010–11 Premier League|2010–11]], [[2011–12 Premier League|2011–12]], [[2012–13 Premier League|2012–13]], [[2014–15 Premier League|2014–15]]), [[Ederson (footballer, born 1993)|Ederson]] ([[2019–20 Premier League|2019–20]], [[2020–21 Premier League|2020–21]], [[2021–22 Premier League|2021–22]])
|-
!align=center| [[Premier League Player of the Season]]
|align=center|8: [[Cristiano Ronaldo]] ([[2006–07 FA Premier League|2006–07]], [[2007–08 Premier League|2007–08]]), [[Nemanja Vidić]] ([[2008–09 Premier League|2008–09]], [[2010–11 Premier League|2010–11]]), [[Peter Schmeichel]] ([[1995–96 FA Premier League|1995–96]]), [[Dwight Yorke]] ([[1998–99 FA Premier League|1998–99]]), [[Ruud van Nistelrooy]] ([[2002–03 FA Premier League|2002–03]]), [[Wayne Rooney]] ([[2009–10 Premier League|2009–10]])
|align=center|6: [[Kevin De Bruyne]] ([[2019–20 Premier League|2019–20]], [[2021–22 Premier League|2021–22]]), [[Vincent Kompany]] ([[2011–12 Premier League|2011–12]]), [[Rúben Dias]] ([[2020–21 Premier League|2020–21]]), [[Erling Haaland]] ([[2022–23 Premier League|2022–23]]), [[Phil Foden]] ([[2023–24 Premier League|2023–24]])

|-
!align=center| [[PFA Players' Player of the Year]]
|align=center|11: [[Mark Hughes]] ([[1988–89 Football League#First Division|1988–89]], [[1990–91 Football League#First Division|1990–91]]), [[Cristiano Ronaldo]] ([[2006–07 FA Premier League|2006–07]], [[2007–08 Premier League|2007–08]]), [[Gary Pallister]] ([[1991–92 Football League#First Division|1991–92]]), [[Eric Cantona]] ([[1993–94 FA Premier League|1993–94]]), [[Roy Keane]] ([[1999–2000 FA Premier League|1999–2000]]), [[Teddy Sheringham]] ([[2000–01 FA Premier League|2000–01]]), [[Ruud van Nistelrooy]] ([[2001–02 FA Premier League|2001–02]]), [[Ryan Giggs]] ([[2008–09 Premier League|2008–09]]), [[Wayne Rooney]] ([[2009–10 Premier League|2009–10]])
|align=center|4: [[Kevin De Bruyne]] ([[2019–20 Premier League|2019–20]], [[2020–21 Premier League|2020–21]]), [[Erling Haaland]] ([[2022–23 Premier League|2022–23]]), [[Phil Foden]] ([[2023–24 Premier League|2023–24]])
|-
!align=center| [[Premier League Young Player of the Season]]
|align=center|0
|align=center|3: [[Phil Foden]] ([[2020–21 Premier League|2020–21]], [[2021–22 Premier League|2021–22]]), [[Erling Haaland]] ([[2022–23 Premier League|2022–23]])
|-
!align=center| [[Premier League Manager of the Season]]
|align=center|11: [[Alex Ferguson|Sir Alex Ferguson]] ([[1993–94 FA Premier League|1993–94]], [[1995–96 FA Premier League|1995–96]], [[1996–97 FA Premier League|1996–97]], [[1998–99 FA Premier League|1998–99]], [[1999–2000 FA Premier League|1999–2000]], [[2002–03 FA Premier League|2002–03]], [[2006–07 FA Premier League|2006–07]], [[2007–08 Premier League|2007–08]], [[2008–09 Premier League|2008–09]], [[2010–11 Premier League|2010–11]], [[2012–13 Premier League|2012–13]])
|align=center|5: [[Pep Guardiola]] ([[2017–18 Premier League|2017–18]], [[2018–19 Premier League|2018–19]], [[2020–21 Premier League|2020–21]], [[2022–23 Premier League|2022–23]], [[2023–24 Premier League|2023–24]])
|-
!Total
!41
!34
|}


==Non-competitive derbies==
==Non-competitive derbies==
A large number of non-competitive Manchester derbies have taken place. The majority of these occurred during World War II, when a total of 44 matches were played between the teams. In recent years, non-competitive matches between the teams have generally been [[testimonial match|testimonials]], such as those for [[Paul Lake]] and [[Denis Irwin]]. Matches between non-first team sides representing the Manchester clubs also have an element of rivalry, with occasions when the reserve teams meet sometimes referred to as "mini-derbies".<ref>{{cite web | title=Reds mini derby revenge mission|work=Manchester Evening News| url=http://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/sport/football/manchesterunited/s/116/116319_reds_mini_derbyrevenge_mission.html| accessdate=November 2 | accessyear=2006}}.</ref>
A large number of non-competitive Manchester derbies have taken place, including the first match between the two sides' precursors, Newton Heath and St Mark's, in November 1881. The majority of these occurred during the Second World War, when a total of 44 matches were played between the teams. In recent years, non-competitive matches between the teams have generally been [[testimonial match|testimonials]], such as those for [[Paul Lake]] and [[Denis Irwin]]. In 1978, for [[Colin Bell (footballer, born 1946)|Colin Bell]]'s testimonial, players from City and United lined up side by side against a combined Liverpool and Everton team in a Manchester v Merseyside fixture.

Matches between non-first-team sides representing the Manchester clubs also have an element of rivalry, with occasions when the reserve teams meet sometimes referred to as "mini-derbies".<ref>{{cite news |title=Reds mini derby revenge mission |url=http://menmedia.co.uk/manchestereveningnews/sport/football/manchester_united/s/116/116319_reds_mini_derbyrevenge_mission.html |work=Manchester Evening News |publisher=MEN Media |date=11 May 2004 |access-date=17 January 2011 |archive-date=12 November 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121112171102/http://menmedia.co.uk/manchestereveningnews/sport/football/manchester_united/s/116/116319_reds_mini_derbyrevenge_mission.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> This term is also used in reference to when supporters' offshoot clubs ([[Maine Road F.C.]] and [[F.C. United of Manchester]]) meet. The two clubs have met twice, in the 2006–07 season, with FC United winning the inaugural match 2–1 away at [[Bower Fold]], [[Stalybridge]], in front of 3,181 spectators.<ref>{{cite web |title=Match Report1 |publisher=fc-utd.co.uk |url=http://www.fc-utd.co.uk/m_report.php?match_id=81|access-date=27 December 2010 }}</ref> United also won the second game 3–0 at [[Gigg Lane]], [[Bury, Greater Manchester|Bury]] in a game watched by 3,605.<ref>{{cite web |title=Match Report2 |publisher=fc-utd.co.uk |url=http://www.fc-utd.co.uk/m_report.php?match_id=103|access-date=27 December 2010 }}</ref> A friendly in 2009 saw Maine Road win {{nowrap|2–1}}. F.C. United's games against [[Salford City F.C.|Salford City]] have also been referred to as a "mini Manchester derby", especially since Salford's takeover by the [[Class of '92]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/news/greater-manchester-news/salford-city-fc-united-manchester-12517633|title=Club owned by United fans take on Class of 92's side in 'mini Manchester derby'|work=Manchester Evening News|date=28 January 2017}}</ref>

A friendly match played on 20 July 2017 in [[Houston]], [[Texas]], [[United States]] marked the first Manchester derby to be contested outside the United Kingdom.<ref>{{cite magazine |date=19 July 2017 |title=Man United vs. Man City Preview: Houston Hosts First Overseas Manchester Derby |url=https://www.si.com/soccer/2017/07/19/man-utd-vs-man-city-preview-houston-awaits-first-ever-overseas-manchester-derby |magazine=[[Sports Illustrated]] |access-date=27 July 2017}}</ref> The match, part of the [[2017 International Champions Cup]], ended with United winning 2–0 in front of 67,401 spectators.<ref>{{cite news |last=Jackson |first=Jamie |date=21 July 2017 |title=Ederson makes inglorious start as Manchester United account for City |url=https://www.theguardian.com/football/2017/jul/21/ederson-makes-inglorious-start-as-manchester-united-account-for-city |work=The Guardian |access-date=27 July 2017}}</ref> A Manchester derby had been scheduled to take place in [[Beijing]], China a year earlier as part of the [[2016 International Champions Cup]], but was cancelled due to extreme weather conditions.<ref name="Postponed Match">{{cite web |url=http://www.mancity.com/news/first-team/2016/07/25/match-decision-manchester-derby-birds-nest-beijing/1469428457403 |title=Official Statement: 25 July |publisher=Manchester City FC |date=25 July 2016 |access-date=16 July 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160728115720/http://www.mancity.com/news/first-team/2016/07/25/match-decision-manchester-derby-birds-nest-beijing/1469428457403 |archive-date=28 July 2016 |url-status=dead }}</ref>

==All-time results==

===League===
{|
|valign="top" width=33%|

{| class="wikitable"
|+Manchester City vs Manchester United
!Date
!Venue
!Score
!Competition
!Attendance
|-
|3 November 1894
|[[Hyde Road (stadium)|Hyde Road]]
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|2–5
|{{nowrap|[[Football League Second Division|Second Division]]}}
|14,000
|-
|7 December 1895
|Hyde Road
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|2–1
|Second Division
|18,000
|-
|3 October 1896
|Hyde Road
|align="center"|0–0
|Second Division
|20,000
|-
|25 December 1897
|Hyde Road
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|0–1
|Second Division
|16,000
|-
|26 December 1898
|Hyde Road
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|4–0
|Second Division
|25,000
|-
|10 April 1903
|Hyde Road
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|0–2
|Second Division
|30,000
|-
|1 December 1906
|Hyde Road
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|3–0
|[[Football League First Division|First Division]]
|40,000
|-
|18 April 1908
|Hyde Road
|align="center"|0–0
|First Division
|40,000
|-
|{{nowrap|19 September 1908}}
|Hyde Road
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|1–2
|First Division
|40,000
|-
|21 January 1911
|Hyde Road
|align="center"|1–1
|First Division
|40,000
|-
|2 September 1911
|Hyde Road
|align="center"|0–0
|First Division
|35,000
|-
|28 December 1912
|Hyde Road
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|0–2
|First Division
|38,000
|-
|6 December 1913
|Hyde Road
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|0–2
|First Division
|40,000
|-
|2 January 1915
|Hyde Road
|align="center"|1–1
|First Division
|30,000
|-
|11 October 1919
|Hyde Road
|align="center"|3–3
|First Division
|30,000
|-
|27 November 1920
|Hyde Road
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|3–0
|First Division
|35,000
|-
|22 October 1921
|Hyde Road
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|4–1
|First Division
|24,000
|-
|12 September 1925
|[[Maine Road]]
|align="center"|1–1
|First Division
|62,994
|-
|12 September 1928
|Maine Road
|align="center"|2–2
|First Division
|61,007
|-
|8 February 1930
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|0–1
|First Division
|64,472
|-
|4 October 1930
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|4–1
|First Division
|41,757
|-
|9 January 1937
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|1–0
|First Division
|64,862
|-
|20 September 1947
|Maine Road
|align="center"|0–0
|First Division
|71,364
|-
|11 September 1948
|Maine Road
|align="center"|0–0
|First Division
|64,502
|-
|31 December 1949
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|1–2
|First Division
|63,704
|-
|15 September 1951
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|1–2
|First Division
|52,571
|-
|30 August 1952
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|2–1
|First Division
|56,140
|-
|5 September 1953
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|2–0
|First Division
|53,097
|-
|25 September 1954
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|3–2
|First Division
|54,105
|-
|3 September 1955
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|1–0
|First Division
|59,162
|-
|2 February 1957
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|2–4
|First Division
|63,872
|-
|28 December 1957
|Maine Road
|align="center"|2–2
|First Division
|70,483
|-
|27 September 1958
|Maine Road
|align="center"|1–1
|First Division
|62,912
|-
|19 September 1959
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|3–0
|First Division
|58,300
|-
|4 March 1961
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|1–3
|First Division
|50,479
|-
|10 February 1962
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|0–2
|First Division
|49,959
|-
|15 May 1963
|Maine Road
|align="center"|1–1
|First Division
|52,424
|-
|21 January 1967
|Maine Road
|align="center"|1–1
|First Division
|62,983
|-
|30 September 1967
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|1–2
|First Division
|62,942
|-
|17 August 1968
|Maine Road
|align="center"|0–0
|First Division
|63,052
|-
|15 November 1969
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|4–0
|First Division
|63,013
|-
|5 May 1971
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|3–4
|First Division
|43,626
|-
|6 November 1971
|Maine Road
|align="center"|3–3
|First Division
|63,326
|-
|18 November 1972
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|3–0
|First Division
|52,050
|-
|13 March 1974
|Maine Road
|align="center"|0–0
|First Division
|51,331
|-
|27 September 1975
|Maine Road
|align="center"|2–2
|First Division
|50,182
|-
|25 September 1976
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|1–3
|First Division
|48,861
|-
|10 September 1977
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|3–1
|First Division
|50,856
|-
|10 February 1979
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|0–3
|First Division
|46,151
|-
|10 November 1979
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|2–0
|First Division
|50,067
|-
|21 February 1981
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|1–0
|First Division
|50,014
|-
|10 October 1981
|Maine Road
|align="center"|0–0
|First Division
|52,037
|-
|5 March 1983
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|1–2
|First Division
|45,400
|-
|14 September 1985
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|0–3
|First Division
|48,773
|-
|26 October 1986
|Maine Road
|align="center"|1–1
|First Division
|32,440
|-
|23 September 1989
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|5–1
|First Division
|43,246
|-
|27 October 1990
|Maine Road
|align="center"|3–3
|First Division
|36,427
|-
|16 November 1991
|Maine Road
|align="center"|0–0
|First Division
|38,180
|-
|20 March 1993
|Maine Road
|align="center"|1–1
|[[Premier League]]
|37,136
|-
|7 November 1993
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|2–3
|Premier League
|35,155
|-
|11 February 1995
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|0–3
|Premier League
|26,368
|-
|6 April 1996
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|2–3
|Premier League
|29,668
|-
|18 November 2000
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|0–1
|Premier League
|34,429
|-
|9 November 2002
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|3–1
|Premier League
|34,649
|-
|14 March 2004
|{{nowrap|[[City of Manchester Stadium|City of Manchester]]}}
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|4–1
|Premier League
|47,284
|-
|13 February 2005
|City of Manchester
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|0–2
|Premier League
|47,111
|-
|14 January 2006
|City of Manchester
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|3–1
|Premier League
|47,192
|-
|5 May 2007
|City of Manchester
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|0–1
|Premier League
|47,244
|-
|19 August 2007
|City of Manchester
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|1–0
|Premier League
|44,955
|-
|30 November 2008
|City of Manchester
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|0–1
|Premier League
|47,320
|-
|17 April 2010
|City of Manchester
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|0–1
|Premier League
|47,019
|-
|10 November 2010
|City of Manchester
|align="center"|0–0
|Premier League
|47,679
|-
|30 April 2012
|City of Manchester
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|1–0
|Premier League
|47,253
|-
|9 December 2012
|City of Manchester
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|2–3
|Premier League
|47,166
|-
|22 September 2013
|City of Manchester
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|4–1
|Premier League
|47,156
|-
|2 November 2014
|City of Manchester
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|1–0
|Premier League
|45,358
|-
|20 March 2016
|City of Manchester
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|0–1
|Premier League
|54,557
|-
|27 April 2017
|City of Manchester
|align="center"|0–0
|Premier League
|54,176
|-
|7 April 2018
|City of Manchester
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|2–3
|Premier League
|54,259
|-
|11 November 2018
|City of Manchester
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|3–1
|Premier League
|54,316
|-
|7 December 2019
|City of Manchester
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|1–2
|Premier League
|54,403
|-
|7 March 2021
|City of Manchester
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|0–2
|Premier League
|0{{efn|name="COVID"}}
|-
|6 March 2022
|City of Manchester
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|4–1
|Premier League
|53,165
|-
|2 October 2022
|City of Manchester
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|6–3
|Premier League
|53,475
|-
|3 March 2024
|City of Manchester
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|3–1
|Premier League
|55,097
|-
|15 December 2024
|City of Manchester
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|1–2
|Premier League
|
|}

{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|-
!City wins
!Draws
!United wins
|-
|29
|25
|32
|}
|valign="top" width=33%|

{| class="wikitable"
|+Manchester United vs Manchester City
!Date
!Venue
!Score
!Competition
!Attendance
|-
|1 January 1895
|[[Bank Street (football ground)|Bank Street]]
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|4–1
|{{nowrap|Second Division}}
|12,000
|-
|5 October 1895
|Bank Street
|align="center"|1–1
|Second Division
|18,000
|-
|25 December 1896
|Bank Street
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|2–1
|Second Division
|20,000
|-
|16 October 1897
|Bank Street
|align="center"|1–1
|Second Division
|40,000
|-
|{{nowrap|10 September 1898}}
|Bank Street
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|3–0
|Second Division
|40,000
|-
|25 December 1902
|Bank Street
|align="center"|1–1
|Second Division
|35,000
|-
|6 April 1907
|Bank Street
|align="center"|1–1
|First Division
|40,000
|-
|21 December 1907
|Bank Street
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|3–1
|First Division
|35,000
|-
|23 January 1909
|Bank Street
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|3–1
|First Division
|40,000
|-
|17 September 1910
|{{nowrap|[[Old Trafford]]}}
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|2–1
|First Division
|60,000
|-
|30 December 1911
|Old Trafford
|align="center"|0–0
|First Division
|50,000
|-
|7 September 1912
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|0–1
|First Division
|40,000
|-
|11 April 1914
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|0–1
|First Division
|36,000
|-
|5 September 1914
|Old Trafford
|align="center"|0–0
|First Division
|20,000
|-
|18 October 1919
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|1–0
|First Division
|40,000
|-
|20 November 1920
|Old Trafford
|align="center"|1–1
|First Division
|63,000
|-
|29 October 1921
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|3–1
|First Division
|56,000
|-
|23 January 1926
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|1–6
|First Division
|48,657
|-
|23 January 1929
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|1–2
|First Division
|42,255
|-
|5 October 1929
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|1–3
|First Division
|57,201
|-
|7 February 1931
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|1–3
|First Division
|39,876
|-
|12 September 1936
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|3–2
|First Division
|68,796
|-
|7 April 1948
|Maine Road
|align="center"|1–1
|First Division
|71,690
|-
|22 January 1949
|Maine Road
|align="center"|0–0
|First Division
|66,485
|-
|3 September 1949
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|2–1
|First Division
|47,760
|-
|19 January 1952
|Old Trafford
|align="center"|1–1
|First Division
|54,245
|-
|3 January 1953
|Old Trafford
|align="center"|1–1
|First Division
|47,883
|-
|16 January 1954
|Old Trafford
|align="center"|1–1
|First Division
|46,379
|-
|12 February 1955
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|0–5
|First Division
|47,914
|-
|31 December 1955
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|2–1
|First Division
|60,956
|-
|22 September 1956
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|2–0
|First Division
|53,525
|-
|31 August 1957
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|4–1
|First Division
|63,347
|-
|14 February 1959
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|4–1
|First Division
|59,846
|-
|6 February 1960
|Old Trafford
|align="center"|0–0
|First Division
|59,450
|-
|31 December 1960
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|5–1
|First Division
|61,213
|-
|23 September 1961
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|3–2
|First Division
|56,345
|-
|15 September 1962
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|2–3
|First Division
|49,193
|-
|17 September 1966
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|1–0
|First Division
|62,085
|-
|27 March 1968
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|1–3
|First Division
|63,004
|-
|8 March 1969
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|0–1
|First Division
|63,264
|-
|28 March 1970
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|1–2
|First Division
|59,777
|-
|12 December 1970
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|1–4
|First Division
|52,636
|-
|12 April 1972
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|1–3
|First Division
|56,362
|-
|21 April 1973
|Old Trafford
|align="center"|0–0
|First Division
|61,676
|-
|27 April 1974
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|0–1
|First Division
|56,996
|-
|4 May 1976
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|2–0
|First Division
|59,517
|-
|5 March 1977
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|3–1
|First Division
|58,595
|-
|15 March 1978
|Old Trafford
|align="center"|2–2
|First Division
|58,398
|-
|30 September 1978
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|1–0
|First Division
|55,301
|-
|22 March 1980
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|1–0
|First Division
|56,387
|-
|27 September 1980
|Old Trafford
|align="center"|2–2
|First Division
|55,918
|-
|27 February 1982
|Old Trafford
|align="center"|1–1
|First Division
|57,830
|-
|23 October 1982
|Old Trafford
|align="center"|2–2
|First Division
|57,334
|-
|22 March 1986
|Old Trafford
|align="center"|2–2
|First Division
|51,274
|-
|7 March 1987
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|2–0
|First Division
|48,619
|-
|3 February 1990
|Old Trafford
|align="center"|1–1
|First Division
|40,274
|-
|4 May 1991
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|1–0
|First Division
|45,286
|-
|7 April 1992
|Old Trafford
|align="center"|1–1
|First Division
|46,781
|-
|6 December 1992
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|2–1
|Premier League
|35,408
|-
|23 April 1994
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|2–0
|Premier League
|44,333
|-
|10 November 1994
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|5–0
|Premier League
|43,738
|-
|14 October 1995
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|1–0
|Premier League
|35,707
|-
|21 April 2001
|Old Trafford
|align="center"|1–1
|Premier League
|67,535
|-
|9 February 2003
|Old Trafford
|align="center"|1–1
|Premier League
|67,646
|-
|13 December 2003
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|3–1
|Premier League
|67,643
|-
|7 November 2004
|Old Trafford
|align="center"|0–0
|Premier League
|67,863
|-
|10 September 2005
|Old Trafford
|align="center"|1–1
|Premier League
|67,839
|-
|9 December 2006
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|3–1
|Premier League
|75,858
|-
|10 February 2008
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|1–2
|Premier League
|75,970
|-
|10 May 2009
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|2–0
|Premier League
|75,464
|-
|[[Manchester United F.C. 4–3 Manchester City F.C. (2009)|20 September 2009]]
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|4–3
|Premier League
|75,066
|-
|12 February 2011
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|2–1
|Premier League
|75,322
|-
|[[Manchester United F.C. 1–6 Manchester City F.C.|23 October 2011]]
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|1–6
|Premier League
|75,487
|-
|8 April 2013
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|1–2
|Premier League
|75,498
|-
|25 March 2014
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|0–3
|Premier League
|75,203
|-
|12 April 2015
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|4–2
|Premier League
|75,313
|-
|25 October 2015
|Old Trafford
|align="center"|0–0
|Premier League
|75,329
|-
|10 September 2016
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|1–2
|Premier League
|75,272
|-
|10 December 2017
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|1–2
|Premier League
|74,487
|-
|24 April 2019
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|0–2
|Premier League
|74,431
|-
|8 March 2020
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|2–0
|Premier League
|73,288
|-
|12 December 2020
|Old Trafford
|align="center"|0–0
|Premier League
|0{{efn|name="COVID"}}
|-
|6 November 2021
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|0–2
|Premier League
|73,086
|-
|14 January 2023
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|2–1
|Premier League
|75,546
|-
|29 October 2023
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|0–3
|Premier League
|73,502
|-
|5 April 2025
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:"|
|Premier League
|
|}

{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|-
!United wins
!Draws
!City wins
|-
|35
|27
|23
|}
|}

===Cup===
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;margin-left:1em;float:right" width=60%;
|-
!Date
!Venue
!Score
!Competition
!Attendance
|-
|3 October 1891
|[[North Road (Manchester)|North Road]]
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|5–1
|[[FA Cup]] first qualifying round
|11,000
|-
|27 March 1926
|[[Bramall Lane]]
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|0–3
|FA Cup semi-final
|46,450
|-
|24 February 1955
|[[Maine Road]]
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|2–0
|FA Cup 4th round
|75,000
|-
|[[1956 FA Charity Shield|24 October 1956]]
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|0–1
|[[FA Community Shield|FA Charity Shield]]
|30,495
|-
|3 December 1969
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|2–1
|[[EFL Cup|League Cup]] semi-final 1st leg
|55,799
|-
|17 December 1969
|[[Old Trafford]]
|align="center"|2–2
|{{nowrap|League Cup semi-final 2nd leg}}
|63,418
|-
|24 January 1970
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|3–0
|FA Cup 4th round
|63,417
|-
|9 October 1974
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|1–0
|League Cup 3rd round
|55,169
|-
|{{nowrap|12 November 1975}}
|Maine Road
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|4–0
|League Cup 4th round
|50,182
|-
|10 January 1987
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|1–0
|FA Cup 3rd round
|54,294
|-
|18 February 1996
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|2–1
|FA Cup 5th round
|42,692
|-
|14 February 2004
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|4–2
|FA Cup 5th round
|67,228
|-
|19 January 2010
|[[City of Manchester Stadium|City of Manchester]]
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|2–1
|League Cup semi-final 1st leg
|46,067
|-
|27 January 2010
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|3–1
|League Cup semi-final 2nd leg
|74,576
|-
|16 April 2011
|[[Wembley Stadium]]
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|1–0
|FA Cup semi-final
|86,549
|-
|[[2011 FA Community Shield|7 August 2011]]
|Wembley Stadium
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|2–3
|FA Community Shield
|77,169
|-
|8 January 2012
|{{nowrap|City of Manchester}}
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|2–3
|FA Cup 3rd round
|46,808
|-
|26 October 2016
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|1–0
|League Cup 4th round
|75,196
|-
|7 January 2020
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|1–3
|League Cup semi-final 1st leg
|69,023
|-
|29 January 2020
|City of Manchester
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|0–1
|League Cup semi-final 2nd leg
|51,000
|-
|6 January 2021
|Old Trafford
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|0–2
|League Cup semi-final
|0{{efn|name="COVID"}}
|-
|[[2023 FA Cup final|3 June 2023]]
|Wembley Stadium
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|2–1
|FA Cup final
|83,179
|-
|[[2024 FA Cup final|25 May 2024]]
|Wembley Stadium
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|1–2
|FA Cup final
|84,814
|-
|[[2024 FA Community Shield|10 August 2024]]
|Wembley Stadium
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|1–1 {{pso|7–6}}
|FA Community Shield
|78,146
|}

{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;margin-left:1em;float:right" width=50%
|-
!width=100|United wins
!width=100|Draws
!width=100|City wins
|-
|13
|2
|9
|}

The first meeting between the sides in a national competition occurred in the first qualifying round of the 1891–92 FA Cup. In their early years the Manchester clubs sometimes regarded the FA Cup as a low priority. In the previous season Newton Heath named a reserve team for their tie against [[Bootle F.C.|Bootle]],<ref>Cowley & James, ''The Pride of Manchester'', p. 290.</ref> and Ardwick withdrew from their second-round tie at [[Haliwell F.C.|Haliwell]], opting to play a friendly against [[Higher Walton F.C.|Higher Walton]] instead.<ref>Toovey, "Manchester City – The Birth of the Blues 1880–1894", p. 109.</ref> This time both clubs treated the match as a senior fixture. Newton Heath won 5–1 at North Road.

The second FA Cup derby was a far more prestigious occasion – a semi-final at [[Sheffield United F.C.|Sheffield United]]'s [[Bramall Lane]] in 1926. City won 3–0, but were beaten in the final by [[Bolton Wanderers F.C.|Bolton Wanderers]].<ref>Heatley & Welch, ''The Great Derby Matches – Manchester United v Manchester City'', p. 33.</ref> 29 years later City overcame United 2–0 in the fourth round, and again reached the final only to be runners-up.

The first League Cup derby was in the 1969–70 season. City won a two-legged semi-final 4–3 on aggregate, and this win went on to win the competition. One month later the teams met once more, in the FA Cup fourth round. United avenged their earlier defeat with a 3–0 win.<ref>Cowley & James, ''The Pride of Manchester'', p. 297.</ref> The clubs met in the League Cup twice more in the 1970s, both in the fourth round. In 1974–75 United won 1–0 at Old Trafford. This match is the only competitive derby to have occurred while the clubs were in different divisions.<ref>Cowley & James, ''The Pride of Manchester'', p. 304.</ref> Manchester United were in the Second Division, having been relegated the previous season. The following season the teams met in the competition again, with United a First Division team once more. City won 4–0 at Maine Road, and went on to win the competition.<ref>Heatley & Welch, ''The Great Derby Matches – Manchester United v Manchester City'', p. 59.</ref> However, the match also saw [[Colin Bell (footballer, born 1946)|Colin Bell]] suffer a knee injury that eventually led to his retirement.<ref>whitell, ''Manchester City Greats'', p. 95.</ref>

In the 34 years following City's triumph in 1975, only three cup fixtures occurred perhaps symbolising City's worst decline of their 130-year history. All three cup fixtures were in the FA Cup, all at Old Trafford and all won by United. The only cup derby of the 1980s was a 1–0 United win in the 1987 FA Cup third round.<ref>Cowley & James, ''The Pride of Manchester'', p. 298.</ref> The next cup meeting was at Old Trafford in 1996, was decided by a hotly disputed penalty for United, described by ''The Independent'' as "like prosecuting someone for littering during a riot".<ref>{{cite news |first=Glenn |last=Moore |title=Sharpe rounds off United's lucky day |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football-sharpe-rounds-off-uniteds-lucky-day-1319729.html |work=The Independent |location=London |date=15 February 1996 |access-date=31 March 2011 }}</ref> Eight years later the next cup meeting was at Old Trafford in the FA Cup with United emerging victorious in an eventful 4–2 victory which saw [[Gary Neville]] sent-off for head-butting [[Steve McManaman]].<ref>{{cite news |title=Man Utd 4–2 Man City |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/fa_cup/3468365.stm |publisher=BBC Sport |date=14 February 2004 |access-date=29 April 2011 }}</ref>

More recently, the clubs met in the [[2023 FA Cup final]], notable not only for being the first-ever major cup final pitting City against United, but also for featuring the fastest goal ever scored in an FA Cup final, as [[İlkay Gündoğan]]'s volley gave City a 1–0 lead only 12 seconds into the match. City went on to win 2–1 en route to finish [[2022–23 Manchester City F.C. season|their season]] with the [[Treble (association football)|treble]], emulating United's success [[1998–99 Manchester United F.C. season|24 years earlier]]. They met in the [[2024 FA Cup final|following season's cup final]], the second ever FA Cup final to have two same sides in consecutive seasons. This time, United prevailed by the same scoreline; [[Alejandro Garnacho]] and [[Kobbie Mainoo]] put United 2–0 at half time, before [[Jérémy Doku]] pulled one back.

==Shared player history==
===Players who have played for both clubs===
The first transfers of note between the clubs occurred in 1906. During the 1905–06 season City became embroiled in a financial scandal, which resulted in the suspension of seventeen players,<ref>James, ''Manchester – A Football History'', p.116.</ref> including most of the team that had won the [[1904 FA Cup final]]. United signed four of these players: [[Billy Meredith]], [[Sandy Turnbull]], [[Herbert Burgess]] and [[Jimmy Bannister]]. All four were subsequently part of the team which won United's first major trophy, the [[1907–08 Football League#First Division|1908 league championship]].

Scottish striker [[Denis Law]] had several spells with City sandwiching an eleven-year spell with United, which saw him become a club legend, between 1962 and 1973. In 1974, he scored the winner for City at Old Trafford in a game that condemned United to relegation, Law did not celebrate the goal and walked off the field with his head down when substituted.

[[Brian Kidd]] began his career with United in 1967 and went on to make 203 appearances before leaving in 1974. Two years later, he joined City and made 98 appearances over a three-year stretch. Following retirement, Kidd became assistant manager to [[Alex Ferguson|Sir Alex Ferguson]] at United and won four [[Premier League]] titles and numerous domestic trophies. In 2009, he became [[Mark Hughes]]' assistant at City and would remain in the position under the next three managers, serving as assistant manager to [[Roberto Mancini]], [[Manuel Pellegrini]] before leaving [[Pep Guardiola]]'s coaching staff at the end of the 2020–21 season, having won numerous titles with City.

During the 1980s to early 2000s, when the gulf between the two clubs was arguably at its biggest, the majority of players who had played for both were largely former United youngsters such as [[Shaun Goater]], [[Jonathan Macken]] and [[Terry Cooke]] who had moved across to City either directly or later in their career, or former United club legends such as [[Peter Schmeichel]], [[Andy Cole]] and [[Andrei Kanchelskis]] who had joined City towards the end of their respected playing careers. Midway through the 1995–96 season, United signed City goalkeeper [[Tony Coton]] who recently lost his place in the Blues team; he lasted six months at Old Trafford but failed to make a single appearance for the Reds before joining [[Sunderland A.F.C.|Sunderland]] in the summer.

In recent years, direct transfers between the clubs have been rare as both sides are now Premier League title challengers. [[Carlos Tevez]] joined City in 2009, having spent the previous two seasons at United. City then produced billboard posters featuring Tevez and the slogan "Welcome to Manchester".<ref>{{cite news |first=Steve |last=Wilson |title=Manchester City taunt Manchester United with Carlos Tevez 'welcome' poster |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/teams/manchester-city/5857213/Manchester-City-taunt-Manchester-United-with-Carlos-Tevez-welcome-poster.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220112/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/teams/manchester-city/5857213/Manchester-City-taunt-Manchester-United-with-Carlos-Tevez-welcome-poster.html |archive-date=12 January 2022 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live |work=Daily Telegraph |date=18 July 2009 |access-date=3 November 2010 |location=London}}{{cbignore}}</ref> Tevez had been a first-team regular and had won a variety of trophies under Sir Alex Ferguson and later went on to captain to City in their 2011 [[FA Cup]] triumph as well as playing a part in helping the Blues win their first Premier League title in 2012.

In 2012, United signed defender [[Frederic Veseli]] from City midway through the 2011–12 season, with the player disappointed that he had been unable to break into Roberto Mancini's first team. He would eventually leave United in 2013, having failed to make any first team appearances for either Manchester side over a three-year period.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/sport/football/football-news/man-united-city-veseli-25026449 | title="Man City released me... So I drove around the corner and signed for Man United" | date=October 2022 }}</ref>

On 23 July 2021, United confirmed the signing of former City [[Manchester City F.C. EDS and Academy|EDS]] player [[Jadon Sancho]] from [[Borussia Dortmund]] for £73&nbsp;million.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/57827831 |title=Man Utd announce £73m Sancho signing |work=BBC Sport }}</ref> In 2017, Sancho had been omitted from City's pre-season squad as he was seen to be trying to engineer a move away from the club.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/transfers/jadon-sancho-arsenal-tottenham-withdraws-manchester-city-training-force-move-a7873771.html |title=Arsenal and Tottenham target Jadon Sancho withdraws from Manchester City training in bid to force move |website=[[Independent.co.uk]] |date=2 August 2017 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/football/2017/07/31/jadon-sanchos-manchester-city-future-doubt-fails-turn-training/ |title=Exclusive: Jadon Sancho's Manchester City future in doubt after he fails to turn up to training on 'several occasions' |newspaper=The Telegraph |date=31 July 2017 |last1=Ducker |first1=James }}</ref> He later rejected a new contract from City and moved to Dortmund in order to chase more first-team opportunities without ever making a first-team appearance at City.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.bvb.de/eng/News/Overview/Borussia-Dortmund-sign-top-talent-Jadon-Sancho |title=Borussia Dortmund sign top talent Jadon Sancho |date=10 June 2023 }}</ref>

{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center"
!rowspan="2" scope="col"|Player
!colspan="3" scope="col"|Manchester City career
!colspan="3" scope="col"|Manchester United career
|-
!scope="col"|Span
!scope="col"|League<br />apps
!scope="col"|League<br />goals
!scope="col"|Span
!scope="col"|League<br />apps
!scope="col"|League<br />goals
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|SCO}} [[William Douglas (footballer, fl. 1890s)|William Douglas]]
|1890–1894
|36
|0
|1894–1896
|56
|0
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|SCO}} [[Bob Milarvie]]
|1891–1896
|69
|12
|1890–1891
|22
|4
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|SCO}} [[Adam Carson (footballer)|Adam Carson]]
|1893–1894
|7
|3
|1892–1893
|13
|3
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[Alf Edge]]
|1894
|1
|0
|1891–1892
|19
|7
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|WAL|1807}} [[Billy Meredith]]
|1894–1906<br />1921–1924
|339<br />28
|129<br />0
|1906–1921
|303
|35
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[Bert Read]]
|1895–1902
|115
|2
|1902–1908
|35
|0
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[Fred Williams (footballer, born 1873)|Fred Williams]]
|1896–1902
|124
|38
|1902–1903
|8
|0
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[Stockport Smith]]
|1897–1900
|54
|22
|1901–1902
|16
|0
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|SCO}} [[Joe Cassidy (footballer, born 1872)|Joe Cassidy]]
|1900–1901
|32
|14
|1893<br />1895–1900
|174
|100
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|SCO}} [[Frank Barrett (footballer)|Frank Barrett]]
|1901–1902
|5
|0
|1896–1900
|118
|0
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|SCO}} [[Hugh Morgan (footballer, born 1875)|Hugh Morgan]]
|1901–1902
|12
|1
|1900–1901
|20
|4
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[Daniel Hurst]]
|1901–1902
|15
|0
|1902–1903
|16
|4
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|SCO}} [[John Christie (footballer, born 1881)|John Christie]]
|1904–1907
|10
|0
|1902–1904
|1
|0
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[Jimmy Bannister]]
|1902–1906
|45
|21
|1906–1909
|57
|7
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|SCO}} [[Sandy Turnbull]]
|1902–1906
|110
|53
|1906–1915
|220
|90
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[Herbert Burgess]]
|1903–1906
|85
|2
|1906–1910
|49
|0
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{nowrap|{{flagicon|SCO}} [[George Livingstone]]}}
|1903–1906
|81
|19
|1909–1915
|43
|4
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|WAL|1807}} [[Horace Blew]]
|1906
|1
|0
|1906
|1
|0
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[Herbert Broomfield]]
|1908–1910
|4
|0
|1907–1908
|9
|0
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|IRE|1783}} [[Mickey Hamill]]
|1920–1924
|118
|1
|1911–1914
|57
|2
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[Wilf Woodcock]]
|1920–1922
|15
|2
|1912–1920
|58
|20
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[George Albinson]]
|1921–1922
|3
|0
|1920–1921
|1
|0
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[Len Langford]]
|1930–1934
|112
|0
|1934–1937
|15
|0
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[Bill Ridding]]
|1930–1931
|9
|4
|1931–1934
|42
|14
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[Bill Dale (footballer)|Bill Dale]]
|1931–1938
|237
|0
|1925–1931
|64
|0
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[Harry Rowley]]
|1932–1933
|18
|4
|{{nowrap|1928–1932<br />1934–1937}}
|95<br />78
|24<br />27
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|SCO}} [[Denis Law]]
|{{nowrap|1960–1961<br />1973–1974}}
|44<br />24
|21<br />9
|1962–1973
|309
|171
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[Brian Kidd]]
|1976–1979
|98
|44
|1963–1974
|203
|52
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|WAL}} [[Wyn Davies]]
|1971–1972
|45
|8
|1972–1973
|16
|4
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|NIR}} [[Sammy McIlroy]]
|1985–1986
|13
|1
|1971–1982
|342
|57
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[Peter Barnes (footballer)|Peter Barnes]]
|1974–1979<br />1987–1988
|115<br />8
|15<br />0
|1985–1987
|20
|2
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[John Gidman]]
|1986–1988
|53
|1
|1981–1986
|95
|4
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[Mark Robins]]
|1999
|2
|0
|1986–1992
|48
|11
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|RUS}} [[Andrei Kanchelskis]]
|2001
|10
|0
|1991–1995
|123
|28
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|DEN}} [[Peter Schmeichel]]
|2002–2003
|29
|0
|1991–1999
|292
|0
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[Terry Cooke]]
|1999–2002
|37
|8
|1994–1999
|4
|0
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[Andrew Cole|Andy Cole]]
|2005–2006
|22
|9
|1995–2001
|195
|93
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ARG}} [[Carlos Tevez]]
|2009–2013
|105
|57
|2007–2009
|63
|19
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[Owen Hargreaves]]
|2011–2012
|1
|0
|2007–2011
|27
|2
|}

===Played for one, managed the other===
[[File:Matt Busby cropped.jpg|thumb|[[Matt Busby]] played for Manchester City and managed Manchester United]]

[[Matt Busby]] made more than 200 appearances for Manchester City in the 1920s and 1930s, winning an FA Cup medal in 1934.<ref>James, ''Manchester City – The Complete Record'', pp. 202–3.</ref> Immediately after the Second World War, Busby became Manchester United manager, completely transforming the club in a 24-year tenure. With United he won a European Cup, five league titles, five Charity Shields and two FA Cups, and he rebuilt the team after eight players were killed in the [[Munich air disaster]] in 1958.

[[Steve Coppell]] played over 300 games as a right winger for United, winning the FA Cup in 1977. He became City manager in 1996, but resigned after only 32 days,<ref>Buckley and Burgess, ''Blue Moon Rising'', p. 132.</ref> becoming the shortest serving manager in the club's history.<ref>{{cite news |title=Roller-coaster years |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/teams/m/man_city/1317152.stm |publisher=BBC Sport |date=7 May 2001 |access-date=14 October 2007 }}</ref>

{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center"
!rowspan="2" scope="col"|Manager
!colspan="4" scope="col"|Played for
!colspan="7" scope="col"|Managed
|-
!scope="col"|Team
!scope="col"|Span
!scope="col"|League<br />apps
!scope="col"|League<br />goals
!scope="col"|Team
!scope="col"|Span
!scope="col"|G
!scope="col"|W
!scope="col"|D
!scope="col"|L
!scope="col"|Win %
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|SCO}} [[Matt Busby]]
|[[Manchester City F.C.|Manchester City]]
|1928–1936
|226
|14
|{{nowrap|[[Manchester United F.C.|Manchester United]]}}
|{{nowrap|1945–1969<br />1970–1971}}
|1120<br />21
|565<br />11
|263<br />3
|292<br />7
|{{#expr: 565/1120 * 100 round 2}}<br />{{#expr: 11/21 * 100 round 2}}
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{nowrap|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[Steve Coppell]]}}
|{{nowrap|[[Manchester United F.C.|Manchester United]]}}
|1975–1983
|322
|53
|[[Manchester City F.C.|Manchester City]]
|1996
|6
|2
|1
|3
|{{#expr: 2/6 * 100 round 2}}
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|WAL}} [[Mark Hughes]]
|[[Manchester United F.C.|Manchester United]]
|{{nowrap|1980–1986<br />1988–1995}}
|89<br />256
|37<br />82
|[[Manchester City F.C.|Manchester City]]
|2008–2009
|77
|36
|15
|26
|{{#expr: 36/77 * 100 round 2}}
|}

===Managed both clubs===
[[Ernest Mangnall]] is the only man to have managed both clubs. He oversaw United's first national trophy wins, gaining two league titles, one FA Cup and two Charity Shields.<ref>Penney, ''The Maine Road Encyclopedia'', p. 129.</ref> In September 1912, Mangnall agreed to join City, but remained in charge of United for two more games. His final match in charge of United was a derby, which his new employers City won 1–0.<ref>James, ''Manchester City – The Complete Record'', p. 238.</ref> He signed Billy Meredith for United from City in 1906, and did the same again in 1921, but in the opposite direction. Off the field, he played an important role in both United's move to Old Trafford in 1910 and City's move to Maine Road in 1923.<ref>James, ''Manchester – A Football History'', p. 384.</ref>

{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center"
!rowspan="2" scope="col"|Manager
!colspan="6" scope="col"|Manchester City career
!colspan="6" scope="col"|Manchester United career
|-
!scope="col"|Span
!scope="col"|G
!scope="col"|W
!scope="col"|D
!scope="col"|L
!scope="col"|Win %
!scope="col"|Span
!scope="col"|G
!scope="col"|W
!scope="col"|D
!scope="col"|L
!scope="col"|Win %
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{nowrap|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[Ernest Mangnall]]}}
|{{nowrap|1912–1924}}
|350
|151
|117
|82
|{{#expr: 151/350 * 100 round 2}}
|{{nowrap|1903–1912}}
|471
|242
|139
|90
|{{#expr: 242/471 * 100 round 2}}
|}

==Women's football==
Despite prior meetings between various teams with some level of affiliation to their respective clubs,{{Citation needed|date=September 2019}} the first meeting between the clubs' two professional direct affiliate senior women's teams was on the opening weekend of the [[2019–20 FA WSL|2019–20 FA WSL season]]. Following [[Manchester United W.F.C.|Manchester United]]'s promotion from the [[Women's Championship (England)|FA Women's Championship]] in their [[2018–19 Manchester United W.F.C. season|debut season]],<ref>{{cite web |last1=Wrack |first1=Suzanne |title=Manchester United win to secure promotion to Women's Super League |url=https://www.theguardian.com/football/2019/apr/17/manchester-united-promotion-womens-super-league-aston-villa-casey-stoney |website=The Guardian |date=17 April 2019}}</ref> both Manchester clubs had professional senior women's football teams in the same league for the first time, with [[Manchester City W.F.C.|Manchester City]] having been in the division since [[2014 FA WSL|2014]].<ref>{{cite news |title=Manchester City to compete in WSL top tier after restructure |work=BBC Sport |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/22314500 |date=26 April 2013}}</ref> The two teams had not met in either domestic cup competition the season prior, so the first derby between the sides was United's first-ever WSL game. In response to the record viewing figures during the [[2019 FIFA Women's World Cup]], it was announced on 8 July 2019 that the fixture would be played at the [[City of Manchester Stadium]] instead of the much smaller [[Academy Stadium]] City's women's team usually plays at.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Duncker |first1=Charlotte |title=Man City vs Manchester United women's game to be played at the Etihad |url=https://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/sport/football/man-city-women-man-utd-16549416 |website=Manchester Evening News |date=8 July 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Etihad Stadium to host first FA WSL Derby |url=https://www.mancity.com/news/mcwfc/mcwfc-news/2019/july/man-city-fa-wsl-manchester-derby-man-united-women-fixture-etihad-stadium |website=Manchester City }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=WSL: Etihad Stadium & Stamford Bridge to host 2019–20 season openers |work=BBC Sport |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/48912097 |date=8 July 2019}}</ref> The game set a new FA WSL attendance record of 31,213 spectators.<ref>{{cite news |title=Manchester City Women 1-0 Manchester United Women: Weir seals win in front of record WSL crowd |work=BBC Sport |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/49533282 |date=7 September 2019}}</ref>

===Honours===
:''Table correct as of 12 May 2024''.

{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|-
!Team
!width=140|Women's Super League
!width=140|Women's FA Cup
!width=140|FA Women's League Cup
!width=140|FA Women's Community Shield
!width=140|UEFA Women's Cup/<br />Champions League
!width=140|Total
|-
![[Manchester City W.F.C.|Manchester City]]<ref name="auto"/>
|1
|3
|4
|0
|0
|8
|-
![[Manchester United W.F.C.|Manchester United]]<ref name="auto1"/>
|0
|1
|0
|0
|0
|1
|-
!Combined
|1
|4
|4
|0
|0
|9
|}

===Statistics===
{{updated|23 March 2024}}
{|class="sortable wikitable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center"
|-
!scope=col|Competition
!scope=col|Played
!scope=col|City
!scope=col|Draw
!scope=col|United
!scope=col|City goals
!scope=col|United goals
|-
!scope=row|League, including [[Women's Super League|WSL]]
|25
|12
|5
|8
|53
|46
|-
!scope=row|[[Women's FA Cup]]
|4
|4
|0
|0
|13
|4
|-
!scope=row|[[FA Women's League Cup]]
|3
|0
|1
|2
|1
|4
|-
!scope=row|[[North West Women's Regional League Divisional Cup|NW Women's Regional League Cup]]
|2
|1
|1
|0
|5
|4
|- class="sortbottom"
!scope=row|Total
!34
!17
!7
!10
!72
!58
|}

===All-time results===

====League====
{|
|valign="top" width=33%|
{| class="wikitable"
|+Manchester City vs Manchester United
!Date
!Venue
!Score
!Competition
!Attendance
|-
|colspan="5"{{N/A|Manchester City W.F.C. vs Manchester United Supporters Club Ladies era}}
|-
|30 September 1990
|{{nowrap|[[University of Manchester|Wythenshawe Sports Ground]]}}
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|4–3
|{{nowrap|[[North West Women's Regional Football League Division Two|NW Women's Regional League Div. 2]]}}
|
|-
|12 January 1991
|Wythenshawe Sports Ground
|align="center"|2–2
|[[North West Women's Regional Football League Division One|NW Women's Regional League Div. 1]]
|
|-
|7 March 1993
|Wythenshawe Sports Ground
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|2–1
|NW Women's Regional League Div. 1
|
|-
|10 October 1993
|Wythenshawe Sports Ground
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|5–1
|NW Women's Regional League Div. 1
|
|-
|8 January 1995
|Wythenshawe Sports Ground
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|3–2
|NW Women's Regional League Div. 1
|
|-
|19 November 1995
|Wythenshawe Sports Ground
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|1–2
|NW Women's Regional League Div. 1
|
|-
|1 December 1996
|Wythenshawe Sports Ground
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|3–5
|NW Women's Regional League Div. 1
|
|-
|{{nowrap|''Date unknown, 2000–01''}}
|[[Flixton F.C.|Valley Road]]
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|4–1
|[[Northern Combination Women's Football League|Northern Combination]]
|
|-
|colspan="5"{{N/A|Manchester City W.F.C. vs Manchester United W.F.C. era}}
|-
|7 September 2019
|[[City of Manchester Stadium]]
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|1–0
|[[Women's Super League|FA WSL]]
|align="center"|31,213
|-
|10 February 2021
|[[Academy Stadium]]
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|3–0
|FA WSL
|align="center"|0{{efn|name="COVID"}}
|-
|13 February 2022
|Academy Stadium
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|1–0
|FA WSL
|align="center"|5,317
|-
|11 December 2022
|City of Manchester Stadium
|align=center|1–1
|WSL
|align=center|44,259
|-
|23 March 2024
|City of Manchester Stadium
|align=center style="background:#88CCFF"|3–1
|WSL
|align=center|40,086
|}
|valign="top" width=33%|
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|-
!City wins
!Draws
!United wins
|-
|9
|2
|2
|}
|}

{|
|valign="top" width=33%|
{| class="wikitable"
|+Manchester United vs Manchester City
!Date
!Venue
!Score
!Competition
!Attendance
|-
|colspan="5"{{N/A|Manchester United Supporters Club Ladies vs Manchester City W.F.C. era}}
|-
|5 May 1991
|
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|4–1
|{{nowrap|[[North West Women's Regional Football League Division Two|NW Women's Regional League Div. 2]]}}
|
|-
|26 January 1992
|
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|1–0
|[[North West Women's Regional Football League Division One|NW Women's Regional League Div. 1]]
|
|-
|{{nowrap|29 November 1992}}
|
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|5–2
|NW Women's Regional League Div. 1
|
|-
|16 January 1994
|
|align="center"|2–2
|NW Women's Regional League Div. 1
|
|-
|27 November 1994
|
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|0–1
|NW Women's Regional League Div. 1
|
|-
|22 October 1995
|
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|3–0
|NW Women's Regional League Div. 1
|
|-
|2 March 1997
|
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|4–1
|NW Women's Regional League Div. 1
|
|-
|1 October 2000
|
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|0–4
|[[Northern Combination Women's Football League|Northern Combination]]
|
|-
|colspan="5"{{N/A|Manchester United W.F.C. vs Manchester City W.F.C. era}}
|-
|29 March 2020
|{{nowrap|[[Leigh Sports Village]]}}
|align="center" style="background:#B0B0B0"|C–C
|[[Women's Super League|FA WSL]]
|{{N/A}}
|-
|14 November 2020
|Leigh Sports Village
|align="center"|2–2
|FA WSL
|align="center"|0{{efn|name="COVID"|Held [[Behind closed doors (sport)|behind closed doors]] due to the [[COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom]].}}
|-
|9 October 2021
|Leigh Sports Village
|align="center"|2–2
|FA WSL
|align="center"|3,797
|-
|21 May 2023
|Leigh Sports Village
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|2–1
|WSL
|align="center"|7,864
|-
|19 November 2023
|[[Old Trafford]]
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|1–3
|WSL
|align="center"|43,615
|}
|valign="top" width=33%|
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|-
!United wins
!Draws
!City wins
|-
|6
|3
|3
|}
|}

====Cup====
{|
|valign="top" width=33%|
{| class="wikitable"
!Date
!Venue
!Score
!Competition
!Attendance
|-
|colspan="5"{{N/A|Manchester City W.F.C. vs Manchester United Supporters Club Ladies era}}
|-
|31 January 1993
|[[University of Manchester|Wythenshawe Sports Ground]]
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|2–1
|[[North West Women's Regional League Divisional Cup|NW Women's Regional League Cup]]
|
|-
|12 September 1993
|Wythenshawe Sports Ground
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|2–0
|[[FA Women's Cup|Women's Cup]]
|
|-
|1 March 1998
|
|align="center"|3–3
|NW Women's Regional League Cup
|
|-
|10 November 2000
|[[Flixton F.C.|Valley Road]]
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|4–1
|Women's Cup
|
|-
|colspan="5"{{N/A|Manchester City W.F.C. vs Manchester United W.F.C. era}}
|-
|20 October 2019
|[[Leigh Sports Village]]
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|0–2
|[[FA Women's League Cup|League Cup]] group stage
|align="center"|4,042
|-
|26 January 2020
|Leigh Sports Village
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|3–2
|[[Women's FA Cup|FA Cup]] 4th round
|align="center"|1,948
|-
|19 November 2020
|Leigh Sports Village
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|0–0<br />{{pso|3–4}}
|League Cup group stage
|align="center"|0{{efn|name="COVID"}}
|-
|17 November 2021
|Leigh Sports Village
|align="center" style="background:#E20E0E; color:#FFFFFF"|1–2
|League Cup group stage
|align="center"|2,369
|-
|27 February 2022
|Leigh Sports Village
|align="center" style="background:#88CCFF"|4–1
|FA Cup fourth round
|align="center"|2,335
|}
|valign="top" width=33%|
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|-
!City wins
!Draws
!United wins
|-
|5
|2
|2
|}
|}

===Shared player history===
With no senior team at Manchester United following their disbandment in 2005 shortly after [[Malcolm Glazer]]'s completed takeover,<ref>{{cite web |title=United gave us a water bottle and then they dumped us |url=https://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/news/local-news/united-gave-us-a-water-bottle-and-then-they-dumped-1063381 |publisher=[[Manchester Evening News]] |website=ManchesterEveningNews.co.uk |date=20 June 2005}}</ref> it was not uncommon for players coming up through Manchester United's academy to join one of United's North West rivals, including Manchester City. [[Northern Ireland women's national football team|Northern Ireland]] international [[Lynda Shepherd]]<ref>{{cite web |title=Lynda Shepherd - Midfielder - Profiles - Blackburn Rovers |url=https://www.rovers.co.uk/teams/ladies/profiles/midfielder/lynda-shepherd/ |website=rovers.co.uk}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=What's in a name? Lynda Shepherd |url=https://www.mancity.com/citytv/behind%20the%20scenes/general/2014/april/wian%20lynda%20shepherd |website=MCFC}}</ref> and [[England women's national football team|England]] international [[Izzy Christiansen]]<ref>{{cite web |last1=Wrack |first1=Suzanne |title=Manchester United's women's football move is better late than never {{!}} Suzanne Wrack |url=https://www.theguardian.com/football/blog/2018/mar/22/manchester-united-womens-football-move-better-late-than-never |website=The Guardian |date=23 March 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Greer |first1=Stuart |title=England star Izzy urges fans to roar Macclesfield to FA Trophy victory |url=https://www.macclesfield-live.co.uk/news/england-star-izzy-urges-fans-12884868 |website=Macclesfield Live |date=13 April 2017}}</ref> are two such examples of Manchester United academy products that departed when United did not have a women's team and subsequently played professionally for Manchester City.

With the establishment of a professional team in 2018, [[Ella Toone]] was the first player to make professional appearances for both clubs, having joined Manchester City from United in 2016 before returning for United's debut season. [[Fran Bentley]] was the other member of Manchester United's inaugural squad to join from City, having also originally moved from United, although she never made a senior appearance for City.<ref>{{cite web |last1=McKeegan |first1=Alice |title=Manchester United Women announce squad including Liverpool and Man City signings |url=https://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/sport/football/transfer-news/man-utd-women-city-liverpool-14905518 |website=Manchester Evening News |date=13 July 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Wrack |first1=Suzanne |title=Manchester United include England stars in unveiled women's squad |url=https://www.theguardian.com/football/2018/jul/13/manchester-united-women-squad-unveiled-england-liverpool-casey-stoney |website=The Guardian |date=13 July 2018}}</ref> In preparation for their first WSL campaign, Manchester United signed two former City players with no previous affiliation to United: [[Abbie McManus]] joined directly from City,<ref>{{cite web |title=Abbie McManus agrees to sign for Manchester United Women |url=https://www.manutd.com/en/news/detail/abbie-mcmanus-agrees-to-sign-for-manchester-united-women |website=ManUtd.com }}</ref> while [[Jane Ross (footballer)|Jane Ross]] joined from [[West Ham United F.C. Women|West Ham United]], where she had spent the previous season following her departure from City.<ref>{{cite web |title=United Women sign Scotland striker Ross |url=https://www.manutd.com/en/news/detail/scotland-striker-jane-ross-signs-for-manchester-united-women |website=ManUtd.com }}</ref> In September 2020, former United captain [[Alex Greenwood]] joined City following a one-year spell with French side [[Olympique Lyonnais Féminin|Lyon]], the first player to join City after appearing for United.<ref>{{cite news |title=Alex Greenwood: Manchester City sign England left-back from Lyon |work=BBC Sport |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/54058956 }}</ref> The following summer, [[Aoife Mannion]] joined United, having been released by City after an injury-struck two-year spell.<ref>{{cite web |title=Aoife Mannion signs for United Women |url=https://www.manutd.com/en/news/detail/man-utd-women-announce-signing-of-aoife-mannion |website=ManUtd.com }}</ref>

'''Players who have played for both clubs'''
{{updated|19 November 2023}}
{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center"
!rowspan="2" scope="col"|Player
!colspan="3" scope="col"|Manchester City career
!colspan="3" scope="col"|Manchester United career
|-
!scope="col"|Span
!scope="col"|League<br />apps
!scope="col"|League<br />goals
!scope="col"|Span
!scope="col"|League<br />apps
!scope="col"|League<br />goals
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[Ella Toone]]
|2016–2018
|5
|0
|2018–present
|106
|35
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[Abbie McManus]]
|2009–2013<br />2014–2019
|127
|8
|2019–2021
|16
|0
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|SCO}} [[Jane Ross (footballer)|Jane Ross]]
|2015–2018
|32
|13
|2019–2021
|23
|3
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[Alex Greenwood]]
|2020–present
|65
|4
|2018–2019
|18
|4
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|IRL}} [[Aoife Mannion]]
|2019–2021
|7
|0
|2021–present
|17
|0
|-
!scope="row" align="left"|{{flagicon|ENG}} [[Nikita Parris]]
|2015–2019
|72
|37
|2022–present
|27
|7
|}

==Notes==
{{notelist}}


==References==
==References==
;Bibliography
<div class="references-small">
*{{cite book |last1=Buckley |first1=Andy |last2=Burgess |first2=Richard |title=Blue Moon Rising: The Fall and Rise of Manchester City |publisher=Milo |location=Bury |year=2000 |isbn=0-9530847-4-4 }}
<references/>
*{{cite book |last1=Cawley |first1=Steve |last2=James |first2=Gary |title=The Pride of Manchester – A history of the Manchester derby matches |publisher=ACL Polar |location=Leicester |year=1991 |isbn=0-9514862-1-7 }}
*{{cite book |last1=Heatley |first1=Michael |last2=Welch |first2=Ian |title=The Great Derby Matches – Manchester United v Manchester City |publisher=Dial House |location=Shepperton |year=1996 |isbn=0-7110-2390-5 }}
*{{cite book |last1=James |first1=Gary |last2=Mellor |first2=Keith |title=From Maine Men To Banana Citizens |publisher=Temple Press |year=1989 }}
*{{cite book |last=James |first=Gary |title=Manchester City – The Complete Record |publisher=Breedon |location=Derby |year=2006 |isbn=1-85983-512-0 }}
*{{cite book |last=James |first=Gary |title=Manchester – A Football History |publisher=James Ward |location=Halifax |year=2008 |isbn=978-0-9558127-0-5 }}
*{{cite book |last=Penney |first=Ian |title=The Maine Road Encyclopedia |publisher=Mainstream |location=Edinburgh |year=1995 |isbn=1-85158-710-1 }}
*{{cite book |last=Whittell |first=Ian |title=Manchester City Greats |publisher=John Donald |location=Edinburgh |year=1994 |isbn=0-85976-352-8 }}
*{{cite book |last=James |first=Gary |title=Manchester City Women: An Oral History |publisher=James Ward |location=Halifax |year=2019 |isbn=978-0-95581-279-8 }}


;Notes
{{Manchester United}}
{{Reflist}}
[[Category:Manchester United F.C.]]
[[Category:Manchester City F.C.]]
[[Category:Sport in Greater Manchester]]
[[Category:United Kingdom football derbies]]


==External links==
[[zh:曼徹斯特德比]]
{{commons category}}
[[ja:マンチェスター・ダービー]]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20090803142957/http://www.fifa.com/classicfootball/stories/classicderby/news/newsid=1055098.html Manchester: A City United] at FIFA.com
*[https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/premier-league/derby-with-more-history-than-antipathy-624661.html Derby with more history than antipathy] at ''independent.co.uk''

{{Manchester City F.C.}}
{{Manchester United F.C.}}
{{United Kingdom football derbies}}
{{Football in Greater Manchester}}

[[Category:Manchester City F.C.]]
[[Category:Manchester United F.C.]]
[[Category:Football in Greater Manchester]]
[[Category:Football derbies in England]]
[[Category:1881 establishments in England]]
[[Category:Recurring sporting events established in 1881]]

Latest revision as of 10:50, 21 December 2024

Manchester derby
Manchester derby, Premier League, 6 November 2021
LocationGreater Manchester
Teams
First meeting12 November 1881
St. Mark's (West Gorton) 0–3 Newton Heath LYR
Latest meeting15 December 2024
Premier League
Manchester City 1–2 Manchester United
Next meeting5 April 2025
Premier League
Manchester United v Manchester City
StadiumsCity of Manchester Stadium (City)
Old Trafford (United)
Statistics
Meetings total195
Most winsManchester United (80)
Most player appearancesRyan Giggs (36)
Top scorerWayne Rooney (11)
All-time seriesCity: 61
Drawn: 54
United: 81
Largest victoryUnited 1–6 City (1926)
United 0–5 City (1955)
United 5–0 City (1994)
United 1–6 City (2011)
Largest goal scoringCity 6–3 United (2022)
Longest win streak8 games
Manchester United
(1993–2000)
Longest unbeaten streak16 games
Manchester United
(1990–2001)
Current unbeaten streak3 games
Manchester United
(2024–present)
Manchester derby is located in Greater Manchester
Manchester City
Manchester City
Manchester United
Manchester United

The Manchester derby refers to football matches between Manchester City and Manchester United, first contested in 1881. City play at the City of Manchester Stadium in Bradford, east Manchester, while United play at Old Trafford in the borough of Trafford, Greater Manchester; the two grounds are separated by approximately 4 miles (6.4 km). The teams have played 195 matches in all competitions; United winning 80, City 61 and the remaining 54 have been drawn. Amongst the most successful clubs in England, they have won a combined 104 honours: 68 for Manchester United and 36 for Manchester City. They are also the first two English clubs and first cross-city rivals to have won the treble; United's success came in 1999, while City's occurred 24 years later.

History

[edit]
Map of Manchester showing the current and former home grounds of the clubs.
City: Hyde Road (1887–1923), Maine Road (1923–2003), City of Manchester (2003–present).
United: North Road (1878–1893), Bank Street (1893–1910), Old Trafford (1910–present).

The first meeting between the two teams occurred on 12 November 1881, when St. Mark's (West Gorton) – who would later become Manchester City – hosted Newton Heath LYR – who would later become Manchester United. The game finished 3–0 in favour of Newton Heath and was described by the Ashton Reporter as "a pleasant game".[1] At this time, the clubs were just two of many fledgling sides in the Manchester area, and the fixture had no special significance. Both clubs grew in stature as the 1880s progressed, leading to their first meeting of the 1890s being billed as "a meeting of two local clubs, [Ardwick (City)] just rising to the highest standard in the football world whilst [Newton Heath] are nearly in the front rank".[2] The pair became the dominant teams in the Manchester area; the winner of the Manchester Cup was either Newton Heath or Ardwick every year between 1888 and 1893. Both teams joined the Football Alliance, a short-lived rival to the Football League. During this period both clubs made unsuccessful attempts to gain election to the League (Newton Heath in 1889, 1890 and 1891; Ardwick in 1891). Admission to the Football League finally came in 1892. Newton Heath joined the First Division, and Ardwick the new Second Division.[3]

Early years

[edit]

The first Football League meeting between the teams came in the 1894–95 season, Newton Heath beating Manchester City 5–2 at Hyde Road. In the late 1890s, Scottish brothers Billy and Matthew Gillespie played on opposite sides in the fixture on three occasions.[4][5] The first meeting between the clubs to take place at the highest level of English football occurred in December 1906, a 3–0 City win in a First Division match for which the gate receipts exceeded £1,000, a very large figure for the era.[6] At this time City were suffering the after-effects of a financial scandal in which the club were found guilty of making off-balance sheet payments to players. As a result, seventeen players were suspended and banned from ever representing the club again,[7] including the core of the team which had won the 1904 FA Cup. When the suspensions ended in January 1907, four players (Jimmy Bannister, Herbert Burgess, Billy Meredith and Sandy Turnbull) joined United, where they helped United gain their first league title in 1908. In contrast to modern antipathy, the transfers were generally welcomed for helping a fellow Manchester club.[8] The following season Turnbull became the first player to be sent off in a derby.[9]

Before the Second World War, many football supporters in Manchester watched City one week and United the next. After the war, a stronger rivalry developed and following both teams became uncommon.

Floodlights

[edit]

The first floodlit Manchester derby was played on 26 February 1889 at the Belle Vue Athletic Ground. Wells electric lights were placed around the ground and a crowd of 10,000 watched Newton Heath defeat Ardwick 3–2. The match was played in aid of the Hyde Coal Mine disaster.[10]

The first competitive floodlit derby was the 1956 FA Charity Shield match, as Manchester United were defending league champions and Manchester City were FA Cup holders.[11] The game was a break with tradition as Charity Shield games were typically played at the home ground of the League Champions, but as Old Trafford had yet to install lights, the game was played at Maine Road.

1970s

[edit]

Manchester derbies in the 1970s saw two controversial incidents. In the December 1970 derby, a tackle by United's George Best broke the leg of City's Glyn Pardoe; the severity of the injury almost resulted in the City defender losing his leg.[12] The following season, an entertaining 3–3 draw saw Francis Lee accuse Best of diving and emphasised the point to the referee by throwing himself theatrically to the floor. The first derby of the 1973–74 season saw Mike Doyle and Lou Macari each receive a red card in a dour contest which finished 0–0 at Maine Road. Both players refused to leave the pitch, leading the referee to take both teams back to the dressing room until the two players accepted their dismissals.[13]

Denis Law game

[edit]
Denis Law scored the winning goal for Manchester City at Old Trafford near the end of the 1973–74 season.

The return fixture came at Old Trafford on the penultimate day of the season (United still had an away game to play at Stoke) with United trying to avoid relegation with a win, although they were also relying on Norwich beating Birmingham that day for their result to matter. After 80 minutes, with no score, Francis Lee played the ball towards former United player Denis Law who was standing with his back to goal. Law back-heeled the ball past goalkeeper Alex Stepney into the net. This was Law's last appearance in league football, announcing his retirement soon after. In the closing minutes of the match, United supporters invaded the pitch and forced an abandonment. However, the result stood, and other results meant that United would have still been relegated if the match had ended in a United win or a draw.

United returned to the First Division a year later. The rest of the decade brought generally good fortunes for the two sides, as City won the League Cup in 1976 and were league runners-up a year later, while United reached three FA Cup finals in four seasons, although they had only one win in the competition.

1980s

[edit]

The 1980's began with a 2–2 draw at Old Trafford between the two sides on 27 September 1980. It was the beginning of a relatively frustrating season in the league for United, who sacked manager Dave Sexton at the end of the campaign, while City dismissed manager Malcolm Allison soon afterwards and improved in the league under his successor John Bond, also reaching the FA Cup final.[14]

By 1982–83, however, any suggestions that City were a better side than United were silenced as United finished third in the league and won the FA Cup, while City were relegated. The Old Trafford derby on 23 October 1982 ended in a 2–2 draw, but United won the return game at Maine Road 2–1 on 5 March 1983.[15]

City regained their First Division status for the 1985–86 season, and hosted United at Maine Road on 14 September 1985. United won this game 3–0, to extend their winning start to the league season to eight games. They would go on to win all of their opening 10 games and lead the First Division table into the new year, but eventually finished fourth. Although City finished 15th in the league this season, they did come to Old Trafford on 22 March 1986 and hold the hosts to a 2–2 draw, costing them two vital points as their title hopes continued to fade.[16]

1986–87 brought relegation for City, while United finished 11th in a season which saw them replace Ron Atkinson with Alex Ferguson as manager on 6 November 1986. One of Atkinson's last games in charge of United was the visit to Maine Road in the league on 25 October, which ended in a 1–1 draw. Alex Ferguson first faced City as United manager on 10 January 1987 in the third round of the FA Cup, which United won 1–0. The league clash at Old Trafford came on 7 March 1987, which United won 2–0 to continue their improvement in form under Ferguson and push City closer to eventual relegation.[17]

The 1980s ended on a high note for City as they won promotion back to the First Division in 1989 and were paired with United for the derby match at Maine Road on 23 September 1989, just weeks into the 1989–90 season. City defeated United 5–1, but this would be their last win over United for 13 years.[18]

1990s

[edit]

Goalkeeper Peter Schmeichel, who played for both United and City, can claim an unbeaten record in derby games – United were unbeaten during his 10 matches keeping goal for them against City, while in his single season at Maine Road, City beat United at home and picked up a point at Old Trafford.

However, in the 1990s, United dominated the fixture, going unbeaten in derbies for the full decade. In 1990–91, with both Manchester clubs competing in the top half of the table but not looking like real title contenders, the Maine Road clash in October delivered a pulsating 3–3 draw, but the return match at Old Trafford in early May saw United win 1–0 and the only goal of the game came from 17-year-old winger Ryan Giggs, scoring the first senior goal of what would prove to be an illustrious and uniquely successful career. The 1991–92 derbies were uneventful – a goalless draw at Maine Road in mid-November and a 1–1 draw at Old Trafford in early April. United finished the season runners-up after leading the league for much of the season, finally buckling under fixture congestion and a shortage of goals in the second half of the campaign.

The first Manchester derby following the creation of the Premier League for the 1992–93 season was a 2–1 win for United at Old Trafford on 6 December 1992. Making his United debut on that day was new signing Eric Cantona, who would go on to score eight goals in Manchester derbies over the next four seasons – the first in the return match at Maine Road that March which ended in a 1–1 draw. 1993–94 saw one of the finest Manchester derbies ever, when United overturned a 2–0 deficit at Maine Road to win 3–2, with Eric Cantona scoring twice. Cantona scored a double on St George's Day as United won 2–0 at Old Trafford. Cantona was on target again in the next Manchester derby in November 1994, though it was Andrei Kanchelskis who stole the show with a hat-trick in a 5–0 win. United won the return game 3–0 at Maine Road three months later. 1995–96 was the last season of the millennium which brought a Manchester derby, as City were relegated at the end of the season. The first derby of the season came at Old Trafford in mid-October with a 1–0 win for United in which Paul Scholes, still only 20, scored the only goal of the game and only a string of superb saves from United goalkeeper Peter Schmeichel prevented City from gaining a surprise win. The return game in early April saw United win 3–2 at Maine Road, with yet another goal from Cantona, who had netted a highly controversial penalty after Uwe Rosler had put City 1–0 FA Cup fifth round two months earlier, which United went on to win 2–1.

2000s

[edit]

Three years later, in the first Old Trafford derby of the new millennium in April 2001, saw the culmination of a long-standing feud between Roy Keane and Alfie Haaland, which Keane received a red card for making a knee-high tackle on Haaland. The feud started in 1997, when United captain Keane suffered a cruciate ligament injury when he fouled Haaland (then playing for Leeds, a team that also have an unpleasant rivalry with United). As Keane lay on the ground, Haaland accused him of feigning injury. The game ended in a 1–1 draw; United were already league champions and City's two dropped points brought them closer to eventual relegation, which was confirmed in the penultimate game of the season. It was the first time in nine years that City had come away from Old Trafford unbeaten, and the first time in eight years that they had been unbeaten by United home or away in any competition.

In his autobiography, published in 2002, Keane admitted that the challenge was a premeditated attempt to injure, an admission which resulted in a £150,000 fine and a five-match ban during the autumn of that year.

Commemorative scarves given out for the 50th anniversary of the Munich air disaster which coincided with the Manchester derby in February 2008. Blue scarves were also given to Manchester City supporters.

On 9 November 2002, City, managed by Kevin Keegan, won the last derby at Maine Road 3–1, with Shaun Goater scoring his 100th and 101st goals for the club, and Nicolas Anelka scoring the other. This was City's first win over United since the 5–1 victory in 1989, ending a 13-year barren run for the blue half of Manchester. City would later go on to draw at Old Trafford in the same season 1–1, Shaun Goater again scoring the goal. This was the first season since 1991–92 that City had been unbeaten by United in either of their league meetings.

Goater also had a second goal disallowed for handball, which would have handed City their first derby double over United since 1970 and their first win at Old Trafford since the "Denis Law game" of 1974. City followed this up by winning the first ever derby match at their new stadium, the City of Manchester Stadium, 4–1, with goals from Robbie Fowler, Jon Macken, Trevor Sinclair and Shaun Wright-Phillips.

The 2007–08 derby games were both won by Manchester City, 1–0 at the City of Manchester Stadium on 19 August 2007, and 2–1 at Old Trafford on 10 February 2008 (four days after the 50th anniversary of the Munich air disaster; a well-observed one-minute silence preceded the match). Darius Vassell and Benjani scored for City in the 24th and 45th minutes respectively, and Michael Carrick scored a consolation goal for United in the 90th minute. It was the first time since April 1974 that City had beaten United in the league at Old Trafford and the first time they had won both league derby games since the 1969–70 season. United prevented City from winning a third consecutive derby match in the first derby of the 2008–09 season, Wayne Rooney scoring the game's only goal. Cristiano Ronaldo was sent off in the same game for a bizarre handball. Ronaldo and Carlos Tevez then scored in the return match at Old Trafford to give United a 2–0 win.

2010s

[edit]
Wembley pictured before the 2010–11 FA Cup semi-final – only the second semi-final between both clubs and the first ever meeting at Wembley (new or old).

The seasons following City's takeover in 2008–09, saw two well-contested semi-final fixtures (League Cup and FA Cup) between the clubs. Controversy was generated prior to the start of the 2009–10 season, when City signed Carlos Tevez after his contract with United ended and erected a billboard reading "Welcome to Manchester" at the top of Deansgate. The billboard provoked Alex Ferguson into claiming City were a "small club with a small mentality"[19] and subsequently called them "noisy neighbours"[20] during the season.

The 2009–10 season featured some tense matches, including two League Cup semi-final legs. Sir Alex Ferguson proclaimed the 2009–10 Manchester derby at Old Trafford as "probably [...] the best derby of all time".[21] Manchester United won this game 4–3 after Manchester City had equalised three times only for Michael Owen to score the winning goal after 95 minutes.[22] The match was voted the greatest Premier League game at the Premier League 20 Seasons Awards in 2012.[23] The sides were drawn against each other in the League Cup semi-finals, meaning a further two games. City won the first leg 2–1 after overturning a 1–0 deficit made by Ryan Giggs with goals from Carlos Tevez. United went 2–0 up in the second leg via Paul Scholes and Michael Carrick before Tevez made it 2–1, levelling the tie and setting the game up for extra time. However, Rooney scored a stoppage time header which won the tie for United and took them to their second consecutive League Cup final. On 17 April 2010, United beat City 1–0 thanks to a 90th minute Scholes goal, but the victory was to little avail as it was not enough to help United chase Chelsea down to win the Premier League title, pipping United by a point.

The 2010–11 season featured three Manchester derbies, with one victory for United, one draw and one victory for City. The victory for United was at Old Trafford, where Wayne Rooney defined the game through a spectacular bicycle kick, this game gave United some space to overcome the rest of the season and get their 19th league title. City's win came in the FA Cup semi-final, knocking United out on the way to their ninth FA Cup final, and their first trophy since 1976. Consequently, the Community Shield that began the 2011–12 season was a Manchester derby, as United won the league the same day City won the FA Cup, 14 May. United won the Community Shield 3–2 at Wembley, coming from two goals behind to clinch the Shield in stoppage time.

On 23 October 2011, Manchester City beat United 6–1 at Old Trafford, giving the latter their first defeat of the season. Jonny Evans was sent off in the 47th minute after fouling Mario Balotelli, with the score at 1–0 to City. United pulled a goal back at 3–0 down before three goals for City sealed their victory. The 6–1 score was the biggest defeat suffered by Manchester United against City at Old Trafford since the 5–0 loss in 1955. It was also the first time since 1926 that City had scored six at Old Trafford, when the score that day also finished 6–1.

United and City met for the third time in the season in the third round of the FA Cup, resulting in a 3–2 win for United. The scoring opened in the tenth minute as Wayne Rooney headed neatly past stand-in keeper Costel Pantilimon, before Vincent Kompany received a red card in the 12th minute for a challenge on Nani. United went 3–0 up by half time, and successfully battled off a second half comeback from City in which they scored twice. The game was notable for the re-emergence of Paul Scholes, who came out of retirement and replaced Nani in the 59th minute.

City beat United 1–0 at the City of Manchester Stadium on 30 April 2012, with Vincent Kompany scoring a header just before the half-time whistle.[24] There was also a spat between City boss Roberto Mancini and Sir Alex Ferguson after a challenge on Danny Welbeck by Nigel de Jong. Ferguson claimed that Mancini harangued the fourth official Mike Jones throughout the match, while Mancini laughed off the incident, sarcastically claiming Ferguson never talks to, or harangues the referee –[25] an offence Ferguson has been found guilty of on numerous occasions, most recently in 2011 for which he received a five-match ban.[26] Consequently, the win put City top of the league on goal difference after being 8 points behind in the league in March.[27] Only two wins against Newcastle United and Queens Park Rangers were required for City to win the league, which they subsequently achieved. City ultimately won the last six league matches to clinch the league title on goal difference – the first time a tie-breaker was used to decide the championship since 1988–89, and repeated the 1967–68 league season, when City pipped United to the title after both teams went into their final games level on points.

The first Manchester derby of the 2012–13 season was won by Manchester United in the dying minutes of the game. United went ahead with two early goals from Wayne Rooney, before City came back and levelled the match with goals from Yaya Touré and the equaliser from Pablo Zabaleta in the 86th minute. Robin van Persie scored from a free kick that took a deflection off of Samir Nasri in the 92nd minute, to seal the win and three points in the league. Manchester United's victory ended Manchester City's run of being unbeaten in 37 games.[28] During the celebrations following the late winner by Robin van Persie, Rio Ferdinand was hit by a coin thrown by a fan, causing Ferdinand to suffer an injury near his left eye. Another fan invaded the pitch and attempted to confront Ferdinand, only to be restrained by Joe Hart. City won the second derby of the season at Old Trafford, the first time they had won two away derbies in a row since the 1970s.[citation needed]

The first Manchester derby of the 2013–14 season was won by City 4–1 at the City of Manchester Stadium on 22 September 2013. Sergio Agüero opened the scoring on the 16th minute followed by a goal from Yaya Touré just before half-time. In the second half, Agüero scored his second followed by a Samir Nasri goal three minutes later. Wayne Rooney scored a late free kick for United as a consolation goal. It was the first time in 26 years that the Derby had been contested by two new managers: Manuel Pellegrini for Manchester City and David Moyes for Manchester United. Manchester City went on to do the double over United with a third consecutive win at Old Trafford on 25 March 2014. During the 2014–15 season, City defeated United 1–0 at City of Manchester Stadium in November 2014,[29] but United won their next encounter at Old Trafford in April 2015 with a final score of 4–2, a game which City goalkeeper Joe Hart dubbed "one of my worst days in a Man City shirt".[30]

The first derby of the 2015–16 campaign, contested at Old Trafford, ended in a 0–0 draw. This was the first time the derby had ended without any goals since 2010. United won the second derby of the season, hosted at the City of Manchester Stadium, after Marcus Rashford scored the only goal of the game at the 16-minute mark.[31]

Both clubs had managerial changes prior to the start of the 2016–17 campaign, with José Mourinho taking over Manchester United and Pep Guardiola taking over Manchester City. City arguably took the bragging rights that season, winning 2–1 at Old Trafford on 10 September in the league[32] before United won the League Cup tie 1–0 at Old Trafford en route to the title on 26 October[33] and a goalless draw at the City of Manchester Stadium on 27 April in which Marouane Fellaini was sent off for headbutting Sergio Agüero.[34] In the 2017–18 season, City won 2–1 at Old Trafford for the second year in a row on 10 December,[35] and had the chance to win the league with victory over United at the City of Manchester Stadium on 7 April. They led 2–0 at half-time, but two goals from Paul Pogba and one from Chris Smalling meant City had to wait to secure the title.[36] City did the double over United the following season, winning 3–1 at the City of Manchester Stadium – their first home derby win since 2014 – and 2–0 at Old Trafford – their third away derby win in a row. In the 2019–20 campaign, United was again travelling first; goals from Marcus Rashford and Anthony Martial secured their first win in the first derby fixture of the season for the first time since 2012–13.[37]

2020s

[edit]

The late 2010s and early 2020s saw City reach unprecedented levels of success, winning the league in six out of seven seasons under the management of Pep Guardiola. Most of these seasons were characterised by closely fought title battles between Liverpool and City, however the derby games between United and City continued to be competitive and mostly unpredictable.

The first derbies of the 2020s came in a 2019–20 EFL Cup semi-final tie in January 2020. City's 3–1 win in the first leg at Old Trafford was enough to send them to their third successive EFL Cup final,[38] as United were only able to produce a 1–0 win in the second leg at the City of Manchester Stadium.[39]

The first league derby in this decade came exactly a week after City's EFL Cup triumph in March 2020. Played at Old Trafford, goals from Anthony Martial and Scott McTominay completed United's first league double over City since 2009–10 and proved to be their last home match to be watched by spectators before the restrictions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic started.[40]

The following COVID-19 affected season, the two clubs met once more in a EFL Cup semi-final. This was the fourth time the clubs had met at this stage of the competition and the third time in eleven years. For the second consecutive season, City came out on top, winning 2–0 at Old Trafford in a single-legged spectator-less fixture, thanks to goals from John Stones and Fernandinho.[41] In March 2021, United had their second successive league win at City for the first time since 2010, with another 2–0 victory and goals from Bruno Fernandes and Luke Shaw.[42]

In 2021–22, City were able to end their run of derby league home defeats and complete their first double over United in three seasons, with a 2–0 victory at Old Trafford in November 2021 and a convincing 4–1 win at the City of Manchester Stadium in March 2022, with braces from both Kevin De Bruyne and Riyad Mahrez.[43]

In the first derby of the 2022–23 league season on 22 October 2022, City beat United at home 6–3, with two hat-tricks from Phil Foden and Erling Haaland. It was the highest-scoring Manchester derby of all time. On 14 January 2023, United beat City at home 2–1 in the second derby of the season, with goals from Bruno Fernandes and Marcus Rashford.[44] The 2023 FA Cup final was the first time a Manchester derby featured in a cup final, and Manchester City went on to win the occasion 2–1 where City captain İlkay Gündoğan scored after 12 seconds, the fastest goal in FA Cup Final history.

In the 2023–24 season, City beat United 3–0 away in October 2023 following goals from Haaland and Foden and then completed the double over their rivals by winning 3–1 at home in March.[45] The two teams met again in the FA Cup final for the second year in a row, making it the first time since 1885 that the same two clubs have met in consecutive FA Cup finals, the second-ever Manchester derby FA Cup final, and the third FA Cup meeting between the two teams at the new Wembley Stadium. Manchester United secured a 2–1 victory over City in a reverse of the scoreline from the previous year.[46]

Fans

[edit]
A map showing support for Manchester City and Manchester United in Manchester by borough.[47][48][49]
  Manchester City
  Manchester United

Although United fans currently view Liverpool as their main rivals,[50] the rivalry between the two Manchester clubs intensified as football became tribal in the 1960s and 1970s, and strengthened again in the early 2010s with City's emergence as one of the top teams in England.[51]

Both Manchester clubs are regarded as among the best in the world, with both consistently progressing to the latter stages of UEFA competitions in recent years and both are in the top 5 of football clubs by revenue. The city is now viewed as a football city in similar vein to cities such as Madrid and Milan,[52][53] although City's disappearance from the upper echelons of the league following their 1960s–70s heyday until their recent rise has led to the two teams being regarded as polar opposites, with City seen as the nouveau riche to United's old money.[54][55]

The two sets of fans are traditionally diametrically opposed to each other, with City's fans accusing United of arrogance and of attempting to turn the Premier League into a closed shop for elite clubs only via manipulation of the rules[56][57] and of the media[58] while they in turn are accused of using their "oil money" as a route to success.[59]

Additionally, and in a unique twist on a cross-city rivalry, both clubs' fans accuse each other of not representing their city, with the blue half of the city observing that their adversaries do not actually play in the city of Manchester (in Trafford) and therefore do not warrant their name, while the red half instead argue over which team has more fans inside of the city. City fans often ridicule United fans for being tourists in a play towards United's global fan base, stating that City is the club for the locals and United fans travel up from London or fly in from Europe and Asia for a day out. Following on from this City fans have often called United "plastics" or "glory supporters" again in reference to their on the field dominance over several decades that made the club hugely popular with football supporters outside of Manchester, that even lead United captain Roy Keane to make a comment against his own supporters by calling them the "prawn sandwich brigade".[60][61] In turn, owing to the growth of City's global status following their 2008 takeover which brought significant success on the field, United fans have said many "plastic" fans have jumped on City's bandwagon.[62][63]

The most commonly used name by City fans to describe their cross-city rivals is the term "The Rags", this is due to a period after World War II where United were given use of City's Maine Road stadium after Old Trafford had been bombed by the Luftwaffe. United at the time were so poor that they had to wear old kits that after a while started to resemble old rags.[64] As well in the past sections of the City support have been known to use the term "Munichs" to describe fans of United, in reference to the Munich air disaster, which has been described as both derogatory and insensitive.[65] United often ridicule City by calling them "Citeh", which pokes fun at the way the word is pronounced phonetically with a Mancunian accent, City fans in turn have stated the fact that United are mocking the accent as a sign that their fanbase does not predominantly come from Manchester. United fans also refer to City supporters as "Bitters" or "Berties" after the character "Bertie Magoo the Bitter Blue" who appeared in a United fanzine in 1989.[66] City fans refer to United's stadium as "The Swamp", which is said to originate from its position in an area which has a substantial man-made canal network,[67] while United fans refer to the City of Manchester Stadium as the "Emptyhad", in reference to its sponsored name, Etihad Stadium, and the widely-held belief by some fans that there are many empty seats at some City home games due to a lack of devoted supporters, despite City being amongst the top five highest-attended teams in the League.[68][69]

Statistics

[edit]

As of 15 December 2024, there have been 195 competitive meetings between the teams. United have won 80, City have won 61, and the remaining 54 games finished as draws.

The biggest victories have been to City, who have won 6–1 on two occasions in the official league (both times in the away fixture at Old Trafford): on 23 January 1926 and 23 October 2011. United beat City 7–1 in a War League match at Maine Road on 14 April 1941, but this is not considered an official fixture and thus the result is not counted as the biggest win in the derby.[70] Both teams have won 5–0 once (City in 1955, United in 1994). The largest attendance for a Manchester derby was 78,000 on 20 September 1947,[70] a time when both clubs were playing at Maine Road, as Old Trafford was being repaired following bomb damage sustained in the Second World War.

Manchester City and Manchester United league positions (1893–2023)
As of 15 December 2024
Competition Played City Draw United City goals United goals
Premier League 55 20 9 26 81 79
Football League First Division 104 30 39 35 147 141
Football League Second Division 12 2 4 6 13 21
FA Cup 11 4 0 7 15 21
EFL Cup 10 5 1 4 16 11
FA Community Shield 3 0 1 2 3 5
Total 195 61 54 80 275 278

Top goalscorers

[edit]

All statistics exclude the abandoned match from the 1960–61 season. Italics denote players still currently at either Manchester City or Manchester United.[71]

As of 15 December 2024
Player Club League FA Cup EFL Cup Community Shield Total
England Wayne Rooney Manchester United 8 2 1 0 11
England Joe Hayes Manchester City 9 1 0 0 10
England Francis Lee Manchester City 9 0 1 0 10
Argentina Sergio Agüero Manchester City 8 1 0 0 9
England Bobby Charlton Manchester United 7 0 2 0 9
England Colin Bell Manchester City 7 0 1 0 8
France Eric Cantona Manchester United 7 1 0 0 8
England Brian Kidd Manchester United (5)
Manchester City (3)
6 2 0 0 8
England Joe Spence Manchester United 8 0 0 0 8
England Paul Scholes Manchester United 5 1 1 0 7
England Dennis Viollet Manchester United 6 0 0 1 7
Leading current players
England Phil Foden Manchester City 6 0 0 0 6
Norway Erling Haaland Manchester City 6 0 0 0 6
England Marcus Rashford Manchester United 5 0 1 0 6

Most appearances

[edit]
Apps Player Club
37 Ryan Giggs United
28 David de Gea United
27 Bobby Charlton United
26 Joe Corrigan City
Paul Scholes United
25 Alan Oakes City
Wayne Rooney United
24 Mike Doyle City
Rio Ferdinand United
Vincent Kompany City
Alex Stepney United

Hat-tricks

[edit]

8 players have scored a hat-trick in a competitive Manchester derby match.

Player For Score Date Competition Stadium
England Dick Smith4 Manchester United 2–5 (A) 3 November 1894 1894–95 Second Division Hyde Road
England Horace Barnes Manchester City 4–1 (H) 22 October 1921 1921–22 First Division Hyde Road
England Joe Spence Manchester United 3–1 (H) 29 October 1921 1921–22 First Division Old Trafford
Scotland Alex Dawson Manchester United 5–1 (H) 21 December 1960 1960–61 First Division Old Trafford
England Francis Lee Manchester City 1–4 (A) 12 December 1970 1970–71 First Division Old Trafford
Russia Andrei Kanchelskis Manchester United 5–0 (H) 10 November 1994 1994–95 Premier League Old Trafford
Norway Erling Haaland Manchester City 6–3 (H) 2 October 2022 2022–23 Premier League City of Manchester Stadium
England Phil Foden Manchester City 6–3 (H) 2 October 2022 2022–23 Premier League City of Manchester Stadium

Notes

  • 4 = 4 goals scored; (H) = Home, (A) = Away, (N) = Neutral location; home team score listed first.
  • Not including friendly matches.

Records

[edit]
  • Friendly matches are not included in the following records unless otherwise noted.

Results

[edit]

Biggest wins (5+ goals)

[edit]
Winning margin Result Date Competition
5 United 1–6 City 23 January 1926 1925–26 First Division
United 0–5 City 12 February 1955 1954–55 First Division
United 5–0 City 10 November 1994 1994–95 Premier League
United 1–6 City 23 October 2011 2011–12 Premier League

Most total goals in a match

[edit]
Goals Result Date Competition
9 City 6–3 United 2 October 2022 2022–23 Premier League
7 City 2–5 United 3 November 1894 1894–95 Second Division
United 1–6 City 23 January 1926 1925–26 First Division
City 3–4 United 5 May 1971 1970–71 First Division
United 4–3 City 20 September 2009 2009–10 Premier League
United 1–6 City 23 October 2011 2011–12 Premier League
6 United 5–1 City 3 October 1891 1891–92 FA Cup
City 2–4 United 2 January 1957 1956–57 First Division
United 5–1 City 31 December 1960 1960–61 First Division
City 3–3 United 6 November 1971 1971–72 First Division
City 5–1 United 23 September 1989 1989–90 First Division
United 4–2 City 14 February 2004 2003–04 FA Cup
United 4–2 City 12 April 2015 2014–15 Premier League

Longest runs

[edit]
Most consecutive wins
[edit]
Games Club Period
8 United 7 November 1993 – 18 November 2000
5 United 31 December 1955 – 31 August 1957
4 City 25 September 1954 – 3 September 1955
United 31 December 1960 – 10 February 1962
City 8 April 2013 – 2 November 2014
Most consecutive draws
[edit]
Games Period
4 20 September 1947 – 22 January 1949
Most consecutive matches without a draw
[edit]
Games Period
12 12 February 2011 – 12 April 2015
11 14 January 2006 – 17 April 2010
10 6 January 2021 – 25 May 2024
9 25 September 1954 – 31 August 1957
8 7 November 1993 – 18 November 2000
10 December 2017 – 8 March 2020
Longest undefeated runs
[edit]
Games Club Period
16 United 3 February 1990 – 21 April 2001
9 United 6 April 1907 – 30 December 1911
City 19 January 1952 – 3 September 1955
United 10 October 1981 – 7 March 1987
8 United 20 September 1947 – 19 January 1952
United 31 December 1955 – 16 February 1959
Most consecutive matches without conceding a goal
[edit]
Games Club Period
4 City 18 November 1972 – 27 April 1974
United 23 April 1994 – 14 October 1995
Most consecutive games scoring
[edit]
Games Club Period
17 United 7 April 1992 – 14 March 2004
13 City 3 September 1949 – 31 December 1955
12 United 27 February 1982 – 4 May 1991
City 12 February 2011 – 14 April 2015
10 City 20 November 1920 – 5 October 1929
United 31 December 1960 – 27 March 1968
City 6 November 2021 – present
8 United 31 December 1955 – 14 February 1959
United 3 December 1969 – 12 April 1972

Managers

[edit]

Most appearances

[edit]
As of 15 December 2024
Rank Manager Team Matches Years Competition(s) (matches)
1 Scotland Alex Ferguson United 47 1986–2013 First Division/Premier League (39)
FA Cup (5)
League Cup (2)
Community Shield (1)
2 England Matt Busby United 39 1945–1969 First Division (36)
FA Cup (2)
Community Shield (1)
3 Scotland Les McDowall City 26 1950–1963 First Division (24)
FA Cup (1)
Community Shield (1)
4 Spain Pep Guardiola City 24 2016–present Premier League (17)
FA Cup (2)
EFL Cup (4)
Community Shield (1)

Most wins

[edit]
Rank Manager Club Period Wins
1 Scotland Alex Ferguson United 1986–2013 26
2 England Matt Busby United 1945–1969 15
3 Spain Pep Guardiola City 2016–present 12
4 Scotland Les McDowall City 1950–1963 8

Honours

[edit]

Team honours

[edit]
Season by season honours of both clubs

City won their first honour in 1904, with victory in the FA Cup, and United in 1908, with the Football League First Division title. There have been five occasions where City and United finished as champions and runners-up in the league, during the 1967–68, 2011–12, 2012–13, 2017–18 and 2020–21 seasons. On the first two occasions, City pipped United to the title in the last game of the season, with both teams going into their final games level on points. In 2013, United finished 11 points clear to clinch their 20th title. City finished 19 points clear in 2018, breaking a record set by United in the 1999–2000 season. Seven semi-finals (two in the FA Cup and five in the League Cup) have been played between the two clubs. The 2023 FA Cup final became the first-ever Manchester derby in a major cup final, which City won. United are historically more successful in terms of overall titles, having won 68 trophies compared to City's 36.

Table correct as of 10 August 2024
Team League FA Cup League Cup Community
Shield
Champions
League
Europa League Cup Winners' Cup Super Cup Intercontinental
Cup
Club
World Cup
Total
Manchester City[72] 10 7 8 7 1 0 1 1 0 1 36
Manchester United[73] 20 13 6 21* 3 1 1 1 1 1 68
Combined 30 20 14 28 4 1 2 2 1 2 104

(*) Community Shields include shared honours after a drawn match, as per competition regulations prior to 1993. Manchester United has 17 outright and 4 shared titles.

Awards

[edit]

Ballon d'Or

[edit]

The Ballon d'Or is an annual football award presented by French news magazine France Football since 1956. Between 2010 and 2015, in an agreement with FIFA, the award was known as the FIFA Ballon d'Or.

Award Manchester United Manchester City
Ballon d'Or (1956–2009, 2016–present) / FIFA Ballon d'Or (2010–2015)
1st 4: Denis Law (1964), Bobby Charlton (1966),

George Best (1968), Cristiano Ronaldo (2008)

1: Rodri (2024)
2nd 4: Bobby Charlton (1967, 1968), David Beckham (1999),

Cristiano Ronaldo (2007)

1: Erling Haaland (2023)
3rd 3: Duncan Edwards (1957), George Best (1971),

Eric Cantona (1993)

1: Kevin De Bruyne (2022)
Total 11 3

UEFA Men's Player of the Year Award

[edit]

The UEFA Men's Player of the Year Award is an award given to the footballer playing for a men's football club in Europe that is considered the best in the previous season of both club and national team competition. The award, created in 2011 by UEFA in partnership with European Sports Media (ESM) group, was initially aimed at reviving the European Footballer of the Year Award (Ballon d'Or).

Award Manchester United Manchester City
1st 0 1: Erling Haaland (2022–23)
2nd 0 3: Kevin De Bruyne (2019–20, 2020–21, 2021–22)
3rd 0 1: Kevin De Bruyne (2022–23)
Total 0 5

League performances awards

[edit]
Award Manchester United Manchester City
Premier League Golden Boot or previous First Division equivalent 7: Dennis Viollet (1959–60), George Best (1967–68), Dwight Yorke (1998–99), Ruud van Nistelrooy (2002–03), Cristiano Ronaldo (2007–08), Dimitar Berbatov (2010–11), Robin van Persie (2012–13) 6: Frank Roberts (1924–25), Francis Lee (1971–72), Carlos Tevez (2010–11), Sergio Agüero (2014–15), Erling Haaland (2022–23, 2023–24)
European Golden Shoe 1: Cristiano Ronaldo (2007–08) 1: Erling Haaland (2022–23)
Premier League Playmaker of the Season 0 3: Kevin De Bruyne (2017–18, 2019–20, 2022–23)
Premier League Golden Glove 3: David de Gea (2017–18, 2022–23), Edwin van der Sar (2008–09) 7: Joe Hart (2010–11, 2011–12, 2012–13, 2014–15), Ederson (2019–20, 2020–21, 2021–22)
Premier League Player of the Season 8: Cristiano Ronaldo (2006–07, 2007–08), Nemanja Vidić (2008–09, 2010–11), Peter Schmeichel (1995–96), Dwight Yorke (1998–99), Ruud van Nistelrooy (2002–03), Wayne Rooney (2009–10) 6: Kevin De Bruyne (2019–20, 2021–22), Vincent Kompany (2011–12), Rúben Dias (2020–21), Erling Haaland (2022–23), Phil Foden (2023–24)
PFA Players' Player of the Year 11: Mark Hughes (1988–89, 1990–91), Cristiano Ronaldo (2006–07, 2007–08), Gary Pallister (1991–92), Eric Cantona (1993–94), Roy Keane (1999–2000), Teddy Sheringham (2000–01), Ruud van Nistelrooy (2001–02), Ryan Giggs (2008–09), Wayne Rooney (2009–10) 4: Kevin De Bruyne (2019–20, 2020–21), Erling Haaland (2022–23), Phil Foden (2023–24)
Premier League Young Player of the Season 0 3: Phil Foden (2020–21, 2021–22), Erling Haaland (2022–23)
Premier League Manager of the Season 11: Sir Alex Ferguson (1993–94, 1995–96, 1996–97, 1998–99, 1999–2000, 2002–03, 2006–07, 2007–08, 2008–09, 2010–11, 2012–13) 5: Pep Guardiola (2017–18, 2018–19, 2020–21, 2022–23, 2023–24)
Total 41 34

Non-competitive derbies

[edit]

A large number of non-competitive Manchester derbies have taken place, including the first match between the two sides' precursors, Newton Heath and St Mark's, in November 1881. The majority of these occurred during the Second World War, when a total of 44 matches were played between the teams. In recent years, non-competitive matches between the teams have generally been testimonials, such as those for Paul Lake and Denis Irwin. In 1978, for Colin Bell's testimonial, players from City and United lined up side by side against a combined Liverpool and Everton team in a Manchester v Merseyside fixture.

Matches between non-first-team sides representing the Manchester clubs also have an element of rivalry, with occasions when the reserve teams meet sometimes referred to as "mini-derbies".[74] This term is also used in reference to when supporters' offshoot clubs (Maine Road F.C. and F.C. United of Manchester) meet. The two clubs have met twice, in the 2006–07 season, with FC United winning the inaugural match 2–1 away at Bower Fold, Stalybridge, in front of 3,181 spectators.[75] United also won the second game 3–0 at Gigg Lane, Bury in a game watched by 3,605.[76] A friendly in 2009 saw Maine Road win 2–1. F.C. United's games against Salford City have also been referred to as a "mini Manchester derby", especially since Salford's takeover by the Class of '92.[77]

A friendly match played on 20 July 2017 in Houston, Texas, United States marked the first Manchester derby to be contested outside the United Kingdom.[78] The match, part of the 2017 International Champions Cup, ended with United winning 2–0 in front of 67,401 spectators.[79] A Manchester derby had been scheduled to take place in Beijing, China a year earlier as part of the 2016 International Champions Cup, but was cancelled due to extreme weather conditions.[80]

All-time results

[edit]

League

[edit]
Manchester City vs Manchester United
Date Venue Score Competition Attendance
3 November 1894 Hyde Road 2–5 Second Division 14,000
7 December 1895 Hyde Road 2–1 Second Division 18,000
3 October 1896 Hyde Road 0–0 Second Division 20,000
25 December 1897 Hyde Road 0–1 Second Division 16,000
26 December 1898 Hyde Road 4–0 Second Division 25,000
10 April 1903 Hyde Road 0–2 Second Division 30,000
1 December 1906 Hyde Road 3–0 First Division 40,000
18 April 1908 Hyde Road 0–0 First Division 40,000
19 September 1908 Hyde Road 1–2 First Division 40,000
21 January 1911 Hyde Road 1–1 First Division 40,000
2 September 1911 Hyde Road 0–0 First Division 35,000
28 December 1912 Hyde Road 0–2 First Division 38,000
6 December 1913 Hyde Road 0–2 First Division 40,000
2 January 1915 Hyde Road 1–1 First Division 30,000
11 October 1919 Hyde Road 3–3 First Division 30,000
27 November 1920 Hyde Road 3–0 First Division 35,000
22 October 1921 Hyde Road 4–1 First Division 24,000
12 September 1925 Maine Road 1–1 First Division 62,994
12 September 1928 Maine Road 2–2 First Division 61,007
8 February 1930 Maine Road 0–1 First Division 64,472
4 October 1930 Maine Road 4–1 First Division 41,757
9 January 1937 Maine Road 1–0 First Division 64,862
20 September 1947 Maine Road 0–0 First Division 71,364
11 September 1948 Maine Road 0–0 First Division 64,502
31 December 1949 Maine Road 1–2 First Division 63,704
15 September 1951 Maine Road 1–2 First Division 52,571
30 August 1952 Maine Road 2–1 First Division 56,140
5 September 1953 Maine Road 2–0 First Division 53,097
25 September 1954 Maine Road 3–2 First Division 54,105
3 September 1955 Maine Road 1–0 First Division 59,162
2 February 1957 Maine Road 2–4 First Division 63,872
28 December 1957 Maine Road 2–2 First Division 70,483
27 September 1958 Maine Road 1–1 First Division 62,912
19 September 1959 Maine Road 3–0 First Division 58,300
4 March 1961 Maine Road 1–3 First Division 50,479
10 February 1962 Maine Road 0–2 First Division 49,959
15 May 1963 Maine Road 1–1 First Division 52,424
21 January 1967 Maine Road 1–1 First Division 62,983
30 September 1967 Maine Road 1–2 First Division 62,942
17 August 1968 Maine Road 0–0 First Division 63,052
15 November 1969 Maine Road 4–0 First Division 63,013
5 May 1971 Maine Road 3–4 First Division 43,626
6 November 1971 Maine Road 3–3 First Division 63,326
18 November 1972 Maine Road 3–0 First Division 52,050
13 March 1974 Maine Road 0–0 First Division 51,331
27 September 1975 Maine Road 2–2 First Division 50,182
25 September 1976 Maine Road 1–3 First Division 48,861
10 September 1977 Maine Road 3–1 First Division 50,856
10 February 1979 Maine Road 0–3 First Division 46,151
10 November 1979 Maine Road 2–0 First Division 50,067
21 February 1981 Maine Road 1–0 First Division 50,014
10 October 1981 Maine Road 0–0 First Division 52,037
5 March 1983 Maine Road 1–2 First Division 45,400
14 September 1985 Maine Road 0–3 First Division 48,773
26 October 1986 Maine Road 1–1 First Division 32,440
23 September 1989 Maine Road 5–1 First Division 43,246
27 October 1990 Maine Road 3–3 First Division 36,427
16 November 1991 Maine Road 0–0 First Division 38,180
20 March 1993 Maine Road 1–1 Premier League 37,136
7 November 1993 Maine Road 2–3 Premier League 35,155
11 February 1995 Maine Road 0–3 Premier League 26,368
6 April 1996 Maine Road 2–3 Premier League 29,668
18 November 2000 Maine Road 0–1 Premier League 34,429
9 November 2002 Maine Road 3–1 Premier League 34,649
14 March 2004 City of Manchester 4–1 Premier League 47,284
13 February 2005 City of Manchester 0–2 Premier League 47,111
14 January 2006 City of Manchester 3–1 Premier League 47,192
5 May 2007 City of Manchester 0–1 Premier League 47,244
19 August 2007 City of Manchester 1–0 Premier League 44,955
30 November 2008 City of Manchester 0–1 Premier League 47,320
17 April 2010 City of Manchester 0–1 Premier League 47,019
10 November 2010 City of Manchester 0–0 Premier League 47,679
30 April 2012 City of Manchester 1–0 Premier League 47,253
9 December 2012 City of Manchester 2–3 Premier League 47,166
22 September 2013 City of Manchester 4–1 Premier League 47,156
2 November 2014 City of Manchester 1–0 Premier League 45,358
20 March 2016 City of Manchester 0–1 Premier League 54,557
27 April 2017 City of Manchester 0–0 Premier League 54,176
7 April 2018 City of Manchester 2–3 Premier League 54,259
11 November 2018 City of Manchester 3–1 Premier League 54,316
7 December 2019 City of Manchester 1–2 Premier League 54,403
7 March 2021 City of Manchester 0–2 Premier League 0[a]
6 March 2022 City of Manchester 4–1 Premier League 53,165
2 October 2022 City of Manchester 6–3 Premier League 53,475
3 March 2024 City of Manchester 3–1 Premier League 55,097
15 December 2024 City of Manchester 1–2 Premier League
City wins Draws United wins
29 25 32
Manchester United vs Manchester City
Date Venue Score Competition Attendance
1 January 1895 Bank Street 4–1 Second Division 12,000
5 October 1895 Bank Street 1–1 Second Division 18,000
25 December 1896 Bank Street 2–1 Second Division 20,000
16 October 1897 Bank Street 1–1 Second Division 40,000
10 September 1898 Bank Street 3–0 Second Division 40,000
25 December 1902 Bank Street 1–1 Second Division 35,000
6 April 1907 Bank Street 1–1 First Division 40,000
21 December 1907 Bank Street 3–1 First Division 35,000
23 January 1909 Bank Street 3–1 First Division 40,000
17 September 1910 Old Trafford 2–1 First Division 60,000
30 December 1911 Old Trafford 0–0 First Division 50,000
7 September 1912 Old Trafford 0–1 First Division 40,000
11 April 1914 Old Trafford 0–1 First Division 36,000
5 September 1914 Old Trafford 0–0 First Division 20,000
18 October 1919 Old Trafford 1–0 First Division 40,000
20 November 1920 Old Trafford 1–1 First Division 63,000
29 October 1921 Old Trafford 3–1 First Division 56,000
23 January 1926 Old Trafford 1–6 First Division 48,657
23 January 1929 Old Trafford 1–2 First Division 42,255
5 October 1929 Old Trafford 1–3 First Division 57,201
7 February 1931 Old Trafford 1–3 First Division 39,876
12 September 1936 Old Trafford 3–2 First Division 68,796
7 April 1948 Maine Road 1–1 First Division 71,690
22 January 1949 Maine Road 0–0 First Division 66,485
3 September 1949 Old Trafford 2–1 First Division 47,760
19 January 1952 Old Trafford 1–1 First Division 54,245
3 January 1953 Old Trafford 1–1 First Division 47,883
16 January 1954 Old Trafford 1–1 First Division 46,379
12 February 1955 Old Trafford 0–5 First Division 47,914
31 December 1955 Old Trafford 2–1 First Division 60,956
22 September 1956 Old Trafford 2–0 First Division 53,525
31 August 1957 Old Trafford 4–1 First Division 63,347
14 February 1959 Old Trafford 4–1 First Division 59,846
6 February 1960 Old Trafford 0–0 First Division 59,450
31 December 1960 Old Trafford 5–1 First Division 61,213
23 September 1961 Old Trafford 3–2 First Division 56,345
15 September 1962 Old Trafford 2–3 First Division 49,193
17 September 1966 Old Trafford 1–0 First Division 62,085
27 March 1968 Old Trafford 1–3 First Division 63,004
8 March 1969 Old Trafford 0–1 First Division 63,264
28 March 1970 Old Trafford 1–2 First Division 59,777
12 December 1970 Old Trafford 1–4 First Division 52,636
12 April 1972 Old Trafford 1–3 First Division 56,362
21 April 1973 Old Trafford 0–0 First Division 61,676
27 April 1974 Old Trafford 0–1 First Division 56,996
4 May 1976 Old Trafford 2–0 First Division 59,517
5 March 1977 Old Trafford 3–1 First Division 58,595
15 March 1978 Old Trafford 2–2 First Division 58,398
30 September 1978 Old Trafford 1–0 First Division 55,301
22 March 1980 Old Trafford 1–0 First Division 56,387
27 September 1980 Old Trafford 2–2 First Division 55,918
27 February 1982 Old Trafford 1–1 First Division 57,830
23 October 1982 Old Trafford 2–2 First Division 57,334
22 March 1986 Old Trafford 2–2 First Division 51,274
7 March 1987 Old Trafford 2–0 First Division 48,619
3 February 1990 Old Trafford 1–1 First Division 40,274
4 May 1991 Old Trafford 1–0 First Division 45,286
7 April 1992 Old Trafford 1–1 First Division 46,781
6 December 1992 Old Trafford 2–1 Premier League 35,408
23 April 1994 Old Trafford 2–0 Premier League 44,333
10 November 1994 Old Trafford 5–0 Premier League 43,738
14 October 1995 Old Trafford 1–0 Premier League 35,707
21 April 2001 Old Trafford 1–1 Premier League 67,535
9 February 2003 Old Trafford 1–1 Premier League 67,646
13 December 2003 Old Trafford 3–1 Premier League 67,643
7 November 2004 Old Trafford 0–0 Premier League 67,863
10 September 2005 Old Trafford 1–1 Premier League 67,839
9 December 2006 Old Trafford 3–1 Premier League 75,858
10 February 2008 Old Trafford 1–2 Premier League 75,970
10 May 2009 Old Trafford 2–0 Premier League 75,464
20 September 2009 Old Trafford 4–3 Premier League 75,066
12 February 2011 Old Trafford 2–1 Premier League 75,322
23 October 2011 Old Trafford 1–6 Premier League 75,487
8 April 2013 Old Trafford 1–2 Premier League 75,498
25 March 2014 Old Trafford 0–3 Premier League 75,203
12 April 2015 Old Trafford 4–2 Premier League 75,313
25 October 2015 Old Trafford 0–0 Premier League 75,329
10 September 2016 Old Trafford 1–2 Premier League 75,272
10 December 2017 Old Trafford 1–2 Premier League 74,487
24 April 2019 Old Trafford 0–2 Premier League 74,431
8 March 2020 Old Trafford 2–0 Premier League 73,288
12 December 2020 Old Trafford 0–0 Premier League 0[a]
6 November 2021 Old Trafford 0–2 Premier League 73,086
14 January 2023 Old Trafford 2–1 Premier League 75,546
29 October 2023 Old Trafford 0–3 Premier League 73,502
5 April 2025 Old Trafford Premier League
United wins Draws City wins
35 27 23

Cup

[edit]
Date Venue Score Competition Attendance
3 October 1891 North Road 5–1 FA Cup first qualifying round 11,000
27 March 1926 Bramall Lane 0–3 FA Cup semi-final 46,450
24 February 1955 Maine Road 2–0 FA Cup 4th round 75,000
24 October 1956 Maine Road 0–1 FA Charity Shield 30,495
3 December 1969 Maine Road 2–1 League Cup semi-final 1st leg 55,799
17 December 1969 Old Trafford 2–2 League Cup semi-final 2nd leg 63,418
24 January 1970 Old Trafford 3–0 FA Cup 4th round 63,417
9 October 1974 Old Trafford 1–0 League Cup 3rd round 55,169
12 November 1975 Maine Road 4–0 League Cup 4th round 50,182
10 January 1987 Old Trafford 1–0 FA Cup 3rd round 54,294
18 February 1996 Old Trafford 2–1 FA Cup 5th round 42,692
14 February 2004 Old Trafford 4–2 FA Cup 5th round 67,228
19 January 2010 City of Manchester 2–1 League Cup semi-final 1st leg 46,067
27 January 2010 Old Trafford 3–1 League Cup semi-final 2nd leg 74,576
16 April 2011 Wembley Stadium 1–0 FA Cup semi-final 86,549
7 August 2011 Wembley Stadium 2–3 FA Community Shield 77,169
8 January 2012 City of Manchester 2–3 FA Cup 3rd round 46,808
26 October 2016 Old Trafford 1–0 League Cup 4th round 75,196
7 January 2020 Old Trafford 1–3 League Cup semi-final 1st leg 69,023
29 January 2020 City of Manchester 0–1 League Cup semi-final 2nd leg 51,000
6 January 2021 Old Trafford 0–2 League Cup semi-final 0[a]
3 June 2023 Wembley Stadium 2–1 FA Cup final 83,179
25 May 2024 Wembley Stadium 1–2 FA Cup final 84,814
10 August 2024 Wembley Stadium 1–1 (7–6 p) FA Community Shield 78,146
United wins Draws City wins
13 2 9

The first meeting between the sides in a national competition occurred in the first qualifying round of the 1891–92 FA Cup. In their early years the Manchester clubs sometimes regarded the FA Cup as a low priority. In the previous season Newton Heath named a reserve team for their tie against Bootle,[81] and Ardwick withdrew from their second-round tie at Haliwell, opting to play a friendly against Higher Walton instead.[82] This time both clubs treated the match as a senior fixture. Newton Heath won 5–1 at North Road.

The second FA Cup derby was a far more prestigious occasion – a semi-final at Sheffield United's Bramall Lane in 1926. City won 3–0, but were beaten in the final by Bolton Wanderers.[83] 29 years later City overcame United 2–0 in the fourth round, and again reached the final only to be runners-up.

The first League Cup derby was in the 1969–70 season. City won a two-legged semi-final 4–3 on aggregate, and this win went on to win the competition. One month later the teams met once more, in the FA Cup fourth round. United avenged their earlier defeat with a 3–0 win.[84] The clubs met in the League Cup twice more in the 1970s, both in the fourth round. In 1974–75 United won 1–0 at Old Trafford. This match is the only competitive derby to have occurred while the clubs were in different divisions.[85] Manchester United were in the Second Division, having been relegated the previous season. The following season the teams met in the competition again, with United a First Division team once more. City won 4–0 at Maine Road, and went on to win the competition.[86] However, the match also saw Colin Bell suffer a knee injury that eventually led to his retirement.[87]

In the 34 years following City's triumph in 1975, only three cup fixtures occurred perhaps symbolising City's worst decline of their 130-year history. All three cup fixtures were in the FA Cup, all at Old Trafford and all won by United. The only cup derby of the 1980s was a 1–0 United win in the 1987 FA Cup third round.[88] The next cup meeting was at Old Trafford in 1996, was decided by a hotly disputed penalty for United, described by The Independent as "like prosecuting someone for littering during a riot".[89] Eight years later the next cup meeting was at Old Trafford in the FA Cup with United emerging victorious in an eventful 4–2 victory which saw Gary Neville sent-off for head-butting Steve McManaman.[90]

More recently, the clubs met in the 2023 FA Cup final, notable not only for being the first-ever major cup final pitting City against United, but also for featuring the fastest goal ever scored in an FA Cup final, as İlkay Gündoğan's volley gave City a 1–0 lead only 12 seconds into the match. City went on to win 2–1 en route to finish their season with the treble, emulating United's success 24 years earlier. They met in the following season's cup final, the second ever FA Cup final to have two same sides in consecutive seasons. This time, United prevailed by the same scoreline; Alejandro Garnacho and Kobbie Mainoo put United 2–0 at half time, before Jérémy Doku pulled one back.

Shared player history

[edit]

Players who have played for both clubs

[edit]

The first transfers of note between the clubs occurred in 1906. During the 1905–06 season City became embroiled in a financial scandal, which resulted in the suspension of seventeen players,[91] including most of the team that had won the 1904 FA Cup final. United signed four of these players: Billy Meredith, Sandy Turnbull, Herbert Burgess and Jimmy Bannister. All four were subsequently part of the team which won United's first major trophy, the 1908 league championship.

Scottish striker Denis Law had several spells with City sandwiching an eleven-year spell with United, which saw him become a club legend, between 1962 and 1973. In 1974, he scored the winner for City at Old Trafford in a game that condemned United to relegation, Law did not celebrate the goal and walked off the field with his head down when substituted.

Brian Kidd began his career with United in 1967 and went on to make 203 appearances before leaving in 1974. Two years later, he joined City and made 98 appearances over a three-year stretch. Following retirement, Kidd became assistant manager to Sir Alex Ferguson at United and won four Premier League titles and numerous domestic trophies. In 2009, he became Mark Hughes' assistant at City and would remain in the position under the next three managers, serving as assistant manager to Roberto Mancini, Manuel Pellegrini before leaving Pep Guardiola's coaching staff at the end of the 2020–21 season, having won numerous titles with City.

During the 1980s to early 2000s, when the gulf between the two clubs was arguably at its biggest, the majority of players who had played for both were largely former United youngsters such as Shaun Goater, Jonathan Macken and Terry Cooke who had moved across to City either directly or later in their career, or former United club legends such as Peter Schmeichel, Andy Cole and Andrei Kanchelskis who had joined City towards the end of their respected playing careers. Midway through the 1995–96 season, United signed City goalkeeper Tony Coton who recently lost his place in the Blues team; he lasted six months at Old Trafford but failed to make a single appearance for the Reds before joining Sunderland in the summer.

In recent years, direct transfers between the clubs have been rare as both sides are now Premier League title challengers. Carlos Tevez joined City in 2009, having spent the previous two seasons at United. City then produced billboard posters featuring Tevez and the slogan "Welcome to Manchester".[92] Tevez had been a first-team regular and had won a variety of trophies under Sir Alex Ferguson and later went on to captain to City in their 2011 FA Cup triumph as well as playing a part in helping the Blues win their first Premier League title in 2012.

In 2012, United signed defender Frederic Veseli from City midway through the 2011–12 season, with the player disappointed that he had been unable to break into Roberto Mancini's first team. He would eventually leave United in 2013, having failed to make any first team appearances for either Manchester side over a three-year period.[93]

On 23 July 2021, United confirmed the signing of former City EDS player Jadon Sancho from Borussia Dortmund for £73 million.[94] In 2017, Sancho had been omitted from City's pre-season squad as he was seen to be trying to engineer a move away from the club.[95][96] He later rejected a new contract from City and moved to Dortmund in order to chase more first-team opportunities without ever making a first-team appearance at City.[97]

Player Manchester City career Manchester United career
Span League
apps
League
goals
Span League
apps
League
goals
Scotland William Douglas 1890–1894 36 0 1894–1896 56 0
Scotland Bob Milarvie 1891–1896 69 12 1890–1891 22 4
Scotland Adam Carson 1893–1894 7 3 1892–1893 13 3
England Alf Edge 1894 1 0 1891–1892 19 7
Wales Billy Meredith 1894–1906
1921–1924
339
28
129
0
1906–1921 303 35
England Bert Read 1895–1902 115 2 1902–1908 35 0
England Fred Williams 1896–1902 124 38 1902–1903 8 0
England Stockport Smith 1897–1900 54 22 1901–1902 16 0
Scotland Joe Cassidy 1900–1901 32 14 1893
1895–1900
174 100
Scotland Frank Barrett 1901–1902 5 0 1896–1900 118 0
Scotland Hugh Morgan 1901–1902 12 1 1900–1901 20 4
England Daniel Hurst 1901–1902 15 0 1902–1903 16 4
Scotland John Christie 1904–1907 10 0 1902–1904 1 0
England Jimmy Bannister 1902–1906 45 21 1906–1909 57 7
Scotland Sandy Turnbull 1902–1906 110 53 1906–1915 220 90
England Herbert Burgess 1903–1906 85 2 1906–1910 49 0
Scotland George Livingstone 1903–1906 81 19 1909–1915 43 4
Wales Horace Blew 1906 1 0 1906 1 0
England Herbert Broomfield 1908–1910 4 0 1907–1908 9 0
Ireland Mickey Hamill 1920–1924 118 1 1911–1914 57 2
England Wilf Woodcock 1920–1922 15 2 1912–1920 58 20
England George Albinson 1921–1922 3 0 1920–1921 1 0
England Len Langford 1930–1934 112 0 1934–1937 15 0
England Bill Ridding 1930–1931 9 4 1931–1934 42 14
England Bill Dale 1931–1938 237 0 1925–1931 64 0
England Harry Rowley 1932–1933 18 4 1928–1932
1934–1937
95
78
24
27
Scotland Denis Law 1960–1961
1973–1974
44
24
21
9
1962–1973 309 171
England Brian Kidd 1976–1979 98 44 1963–1974 203 52
Wales Wyn Davies 1971–1972 45 8 1972–1973 16 4
Northern Ireland Sammy McIlroy 1985–1986 13 1 1971–1982 342 57
England Peter Barnes 1974–1979
1987–1988
115
8
15
0
1985–1987 20 2
England John Gidman 1986–1988 53 1 1981–1986 95 4
England Mark Robins 1999 2 0 1986–1992 48 11
Russia Andrei Kanchelskis 2001 10 0 1991–1995 123 28
Denmark Peter Schmeichel 2002–2003 29 0 1991–1999 292 0
England Terry Cooke 1999–2002 37 8 1994–1999 4 0
England Andy Cole 2005–2006 22 9 1995–2001 195 93
Argentina Carlos Tevez 2009–2013 105 57 2007–2009 63 19
England Owen Hargreaves 2011–2012 1 0 2007–2011 27 2

Played for one, managed the other

[edit]
Matt Busby played for Manchester City and managed Manchester United

Matt Busby made more than 200 appearances for Manchester City in the 1920s and 1930s, winning an FA Cup medal in 1934.[98] Immediately after the Second World War, Busby became Manchester United manager, completely transforming the club in a 24-year tenure. With United he won a European Cup, five league titles, five Charity Shields and two FA Cups, and he rebuilt the team after eight players were killed in the Munich air disaster in 1958.

Steve Coppell played over 300 games as a right winger for United, winning the FA Cup in 1977. He became City manager in 1996, but resigned after only 32 days,[99] becoming the shortest serving manager in the club's history.[100]

Manager Played for Managed
Team Span League
apps
League
goals
Team Span G W D L Win %
Scotland Matt Busby Manchester City 1928–1936 226 14 Manchester United 1945–1969
1970–1971
1120
21
565
11
263
3
292
7
50.45
52.38
England Steve Coppell Manchester United 1975–1983 322 53 Manchester City 1996 6 2 1 3 33.33
Wales Mark Hughes Manchester United 1980–1986
1988–1995
89
256
37
82
Manchester City 2008–2009 77 36 15 26 46.75

Managed both clubs

[edit]

Ernest Mangnall is the only man to have managed both clubs. He oversaw United's first national trophy wins, gaining two league titles, one FA Cup and two Charity Shields.[101] In September 1912, Mangnall agreed to join City, but remained in charge of United for two more games. His final match in charge of United was a derby, which his new employers City won 1–0.[102] He signed Billy Meredith for United from City in 1906, and did the same again in 1921, but in the opposite direction. Off the field, he played an important role in both United's move to Old Trafford in 1910 and City's move to Maine Road in 1923.[103]

Manager Manchester City career Manchester United career
Span G W D L Win % Span G W D L Win %
England Ernest Mangnall 1912–1924 350 151 117 82 43.14 1903–1912 471 242 139 90 51.38

Women's football

[edit]

Despite prior meetings between various teams with some level of affiliation to their respective clubs,[citation needed] the first meeting between the clubs' two professional direct affiliate senior women's teams was on the opening weekend of the 2019–20 FA WSL season. Following Manchester United's promotion from the FA Women's Championship in their debut season,[104] both Manchester clubs had professional senior women's football teams in the same league for the first time, with Manchester City having been in the division since 2014.[105] The two teams had not met in either domestic cup competition the season prior, so the first derby between the sides was United's first-ever WSL game. In response to the record viewing figures during the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, it was announced on 8 July 2019 that the fixture would be played at the City of Manchester Stadium instead of the much smaller Academy Stadium City's women's team usually plays at.[106][107][108] The game set a new FA WSL attendance record of 31,213 spectators.[109]

Honours

[edit]
Table correct as of 12 May 2024.
Team Women's Super League Women's FA Cup FA Women's League Cup FA Women's Community Shield UEFA Women's Cup/
Champions League
Total
Manchester City[72] 1 3 4 0 0 8
Manchester United[73] 0 1 0 0 0 1
Combined 1 4 4 0 0 9

Statistics

[edit]
As of 23 March 2024
Competition Played City Draw United City goals United goals
League, including WSL 25 12 5 8 53 46
Women's FA Cup 4 4 0 0 13 4
FA Women's League Cup 3 0 1 2 1 4
NW Women's Regional League Cup 2 1 1 0 5 4
Total 34 17 7 10 72 58

All-time results

[edit]

League

[edit]
Manchester City vs Manchester United
Date Venue Score Competition Attendance
Manchester City W.F.C. vs Manchester United Supporters Club Ladies era
30 September 1990 Wythenshawe Sports Ground 4–3 NW Women's Regional League Div. 2
12 January 1991 Wythenshawe Sports Ground 2–2 NW Women's Regional League Div. 1
7 March 1993 Wythenshawe Sports Ground 2–1 NW Women's Regional League Div. 1
10 October 1993 Wythenshawe Sports Ground 5–1 NW Women's Regional League Div. 1
8 January 1995 Wythenshawe Sports Ground 3–2 NW Women's Regional League Div. 1
19 November 1995 Wythenshawe Sports Ground 1–2 NW Women's Regional League Div. 1
1 December 1996 Wythenshawe Sports Ground 3–5 NW Women's Regional League Div. 1
Date unknown, 2000–01 Valley Road 4–1 Northern Combination
Manchester City W.F.C. vs Manchester United W.F.C. era
7 September 2019 City of Manchester Stadium 1–0 FA WSL 31,213
10 February 2021 Academy Stadium 3–0 FA WSL 0[a]
13 February 2022 Academy Stadium 1–0 FA WSL 5,317
11 December 2022 City of Manchester Stadium 1–1 WSL 44,259
23 March 2024 City of Manchester Stadium 3–1 WSL 40,086
City wins Draws United wins
9 2 2
Manchester United vs Manchester City
Date Venue Score Competition Attendance
Manchester United Supporters Club Ladies vs Manchester City W.F.C. era
5 May 1991 4–1 NW Women's Regional League Div. 2
26 January 1992 1–0 NW Women's Regional League Div. 1
29 November 1992 5–2 NW Women's Regional League Div. 1
16 January 1994 2–2 NW Women's Regional League Div. 1
27 November 1994 0–1 NW Women's Regional League Div. 1
22 October 1995 3–0 NW Women's Regional League Div. 1
2 March 1997 4–1 NW Women's Regional League Div. 1
1 October 2000 0–4 Northern Combination
Manchester United W.F.C. vs Manchester City W.F.C. era
29 March 2020 Leigh Sports Village C–C FA WSL
14 November 2020 Leigh Sports Village 2–2 FA WSL 0[a]
9 October 2021 Leigh Sports Village 2–2 FA WSL 3,797
21 May 2023 Leigh Sports Village 2–1 WSL 7,864
19 November 2023 Old Trafford 1–3 WSL 43,615
United wins Draws City wins
6 3 3

Cup

[edit]
Date Venue Score Competition Attendance
Manchester City W.F.C. vs Manchester United Supporters Club Ladies era
31 January 1993 Wythenshawe Sports Ground 2–1 NW Women's Regional League Cup
12 September 1993 Wythenshawe Sports Ground 2–0 Women's Cup
1 March 1998 3–3 NW Women's Regional League Cup
10 November 2000 Valley Road 4–1 Women's Cup
Manchester City W.F.C. vs Manchester United W.F.C. era
20 October 2019 Leigh Sports Village 0–2 League Cup group stage 4,042
26 January 2020 Leigh Sports Village 3–2 FA Cup 4th round 1,948
19 November 2020 Leigh Sports Village 0–0
(3–4 p)
League Cup group stage 0[a]
17 November 2021 Leigh Sports Village 1–2 League Cup group stage 2,369
27 February 2022 Leigh Sports Village 4–1 FA Cup fourth round 2,335
City wins Draws United wins
5 2 2

Shared player history

[edit]

With no senior team at Manchester United following their disbandment in 2005 shortly after Malcolm Glazer's completed takeover,[110] it was not uncommon for players coming up through Manchester United's academy to join one of United's North West rivals, including Manchester City. Northern Ireland international Lynda Shepherd[111][112] and England international Izzy Christiansen[113][114] are two such examples of Manchester United academy products that departed when United did not have a women's team and subsequently played professionally for Manchester City.

With the establishment of a professional team in 2018, Ella Toone was the first player to make professional appearances for both clubs, having joined Manchester City from United in 2016 before returning for United's debut season. Fran Bentley was the other member of Manchester United's inaugural squad to join from City, having also originally moved from United, although she never made a senior appearance for City.[115][116] In preparation for their first WSL campaign, Manchester United signed two former City players with no previous affiliation to United: Abbie McManus joined directly from City,[117] while Jane Ross joined from West Ham United, where she had spent the previous season following her departure from City.[118] In September 2020, former United captain Alex Greenwood joined City following a one-year spell with French side Lyon, the first player to join City after appearing for United.[119] The following summer, Aoife Mannion joined United, having been released by City after an injury-struck two-year spell.[120]

Players who have played for both clubs

As of 19 November 2023
Player Manchester City career Manchester United career
Span League
apps
League
goals
Span League
apps
League
goals
England Ella Toone 2016–2018 5 0 2018–present 106 35
England Abbie McManus 2009–2013
2014–2019
127 8 2019–2021 16 0
Scotland Jane Ross 2015–2018 32 13 2019–2021 23 3
England Alex Greenwood 2020–present 65 4 2018–2019 18 4
Republic of Ireland Aoife Mannion 2019–2021 7 0 2021–present 17 0
England Nikita Parris 2015–2019 72 37 2022–present 27 7

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]
Bibliography
  • Buckley, Andy; Burgess, Richard (2000). Blue Moon Rising: The Fall and Rise of Manchester City. Bury: Milo. ISBN 0-9530847-4-4.
  • Cawley, Steve; James, Gary (1991). The Pride of Manchester – A history of the Manchester derby matches. Leicester: ACL Polar. ISBN 0-9514862-1-7.
  • Heatley, Michael; Welch, Ian (1996). The Great Derby Matches – Manchester United v Manchester City. Shepperton: Dial House. ISBN 0-7110-2390-5.
  • James, Gary; Mellor, Keith (1989). From Maine Men To Banana Citizens. Temple Press.
  • James, Gary (2006). Manchester City – The Complete Record. Derby: Breedon. ISBN 1-85983-512-0.
  • James, Gary (2008). Manchester – A Football History. Halifax: James Ward. ISBN 978-0-9558127-0-5.
  • Penney, Ian (1995). The Maine Road Encyclopedia. Edinburgh: Mainstream. ISBN 1-85158-710-1.
  • Whittell, Ian (1994). Manchester City Greats. Edinburgh: John Donald. ISBN 0-85976-352-8.
  • James, Gary (2019). Manchester City Women: An Oral History. Halifax: James Ward. ISBN 978-0-95581-279-8.
Notes
  1. ^ Gary James, Manchester: The Greatest City (Polar Publishing, 2002), p.12.
  2. ^ Manchester City – The Birth of the Blues 1880–1894. Stockport: Paul Toovey. 2009. p. 90. ISBN 978-0-9561910-0-7.
  3. ^ James, Gary (2008). Manchester – A Football History. Halifax: James Ward. pp. 71–72. ISBN 978-0-9558127-0-5.
  4. ^ Billy Gillespie, BlueMoon. Retrieved 1 January 2022.
  5. ^ MUFCInfo.com MUFCInfo.com. Retrieved 1 January 2022.
  6. ^ ""A quick look back"". Manchester City v Manchester United match programme. 30 September 1967. p. 17.
  7. ^ Ward, The Manchester City Story, p. 14.
  8. ^ James, Manchester – A Football History, pp. 117–9
  9. ^ Cawley & James, The Pride of Manchester, p. 41.
  10. ^ Gary James & Keith Mellor, From Maine Men To Banana Citizens (Temple Press, 1989), p8.
  11. ^ Steve Cawley & Gary James, The Pride of Manchester – A History of the Manchester Derby (ACL & Polar Publishing, 1991), p320.
  12. ^ Gary James, Manchester: The Greatest City (Polar Publishing, 2002), 283.
  13. ^ "Derby day memories: Lou Macari". Manchester Evening News. MEN Media. 8 February 2005. Retrieved 17 January 2011.
  14. ^ "About Man Utd | Manchester United vs Manchester City - 27 Sep 1980". Archived from the original on 5 November 2012. Retrieved 6 November 2012.
  15. ^ "About Man Utd | 1982-1983, Manchester United season". Archived from the original on 16 November 2012. Retrieved 6 November 2012.
  16. ^ "Manchester United Results 1985-86, Division One, FA Cup, League Cup". Archived from the original on 5 September 2011. Retrieved 12 May 2011.
  17. ^ "Manchester United Results 1986-87, Division One, FA Cup, League Cup". Archived from the original on 29 August 2012. Retrieved 6 November 2012.
  18. ^ "From the Vault: Manchester City beat United 5–1". The Guardian. London. 23 September 2009.
  19. ^ "Man City a small club – Ferguson". bbc.co.uk. 26 July 2009. Retrieved 17 April 2011.
  20. ^ Ducker, James (21 September 2009). "Sir Alex Ferguson stokes up hostilities with Manchester City after derby victory". The Times. London.[dead link]
  21. ^ "Boss Ferguson hails 'best derby'". BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation. 20 September 2009. Retrieved 15 July 2011.
  22. ^ "Ferguson hails 'best ever derby'". BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation. 20 September 2009. Retrieved 20 September 2009.
  23. ^ "Manchester derby wins 20 Seasons Best Match". Premier League. 12 May 2012. Archived from the original on 15 May 2012. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
  24. ^ McCarra, Kevin (30 April 2012). "Manchester City 1–0 Manchester United". The Guardian. London.
  25. ^ "Man City boss Roberto Mancini reacts to Sir Alex Ferguson jibe". BBC Sport. 1 May 2012. Retrieved 1 June 2012.
  26. ^ Slater, Matt (17 March 2011). "Sir Alex Ferguson handed five-match ban for outburst". BBC News. Retrieved 23 August 2012.
  27. ^ McNulty, Phil. "Manchester City 1–0 Manchester United". BBC Sport. Retrieved 10 September 2016.
  28. ^ "Man City 2 Man Utd 3: RVP ends City's unbeaten home run". 9 December 2012. Retrieved 10 September 2016.
  29. ^ "Fixture | Man City vs Man Utd". Archived from the original on 10 October 2014.
  30. ^ Rich, Tim (13 April 2015). "Manuel Pellegrini has six games to save his Manchester City job... he must qualify for the Champions League". The Independent. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  31. ^ "Manchester City 0 - 1 Manchester United Match report - 20/03/2016 Premier League - Goal.com". Retrieved 10 September 2016.
  32. ^ McNulty, Phil (10 September 2016). "Manchester United 1-2 Manchester City". BBC Sport. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
  33. ^ Reddy, Luke (26 October 2016). "Manchester United 1-0 Manchester City". BBC Sport. Retrieved 7 December 2019.
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