Manchester City's current malaise continued on Wednesday as they were beaten by Juventus to deal a big blow to their hopes of reaching the Champions League knockout stage.
Dusan Vlahovic's header and Weston McKennie's volley in the second half secured all three points for the home side, boosting their own hopes of progressing automatically to the next stage as one of the top eight sides in the league phase of the competition.
But the defeat meant Manchester City have won just one of their last 10 games in all competitions, with this their seventh loss during that run.
It leaves them 22nd in the Champions League table with just two games remaining - away to Paris St-Germain on 22 January and at home to Club Brugge a week later.
The sides finishing ninth to 24th qualify for a two-legged play-off but this defeat leaves Manchester City just one point clear of PSG in 25th.
This was another game where Manchester City looked considerably below the level they have been capable of playing in recent seasons.
They didn't register a shot on target until just before half-time, when Erling Haaland was played in behind the defence by Kevin de Bruyne, but his shot was saved by Michele di Gregorio.
It all went wrong for Manchester City in the second half when Vlahovic's header squirmed over the line after a scramble, before substitute McKennie fired in from Timothy Weah's cross as the visitors left gaps while pushing for an equaliser.
Ilkay Gundogan had forced a good save out of Di Gregorio but Pep Guardiola's side ultimately did not offer enough as their poor run of form continued.
In addition to it being a blow to City's hopes in Europe it was also not ideal preparation for Sunday's Manchester derby at Etihad Stadium.
City pay price for lack of urgency as poor run extends
After a run of six defeats in seven games, Manchester City had shown something like their old selves when they beat Nottingham Forest 3-0 on 4 December.
But they followed that up by twice having to come from behind to rescue a draw against Crystal Palace, and they were disappointing once again in this game.
Keeping control appeared to have been the gameplan as Guardiola's side dominated possession in the first half, but offered very little in attack.
It meant that while Juventus offered little themselves, City were always in danger of one moment at the back proving costly, and so it proved when Juventus took the lead eight minutes into the second half.
Ederson parried away Federico Gatti's acrobatic volley but Josko Gvardiol gave the ball away, allowing Kenan Yildiz to cross for Vlahovic to get a header just over the line.
City upped the tempo after that but lost all control of the game and when Juventus got their second it never looked likely that the visitors would find a way back.
In past seasons, a 2-0 lead for an opposition team was no guarantee but that is no longer the case for a City side that seems to be struggling to find the solution to stop the rot.
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