Manchester City felt like favourites coming into the FA Youth Cup final. The Under-18s have been the best team in the league this season again and had star quality they could bring in for knockout games that have spent the season training and playing up.
In the case of Ryan McAidoo, there was a winger who had scored on his senior debut for City and on the opposite flank Reigan Heskey had also given United Under-21s plenty of problems last week in a semi-final defeat. These were two of the players who everybody in the squad knew would be in the starting XI as soon as Oliver Reiss’s side had booked their place in the final.
However, they were also strong favourites last year when they went to Aston Villa on an obscene run of 27 games won in a row and then proceeded to lose. Shortly after, they lost the league championship match to the same opponents and a phenomenal season had a sour ending.
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As good as City were then ahead of facing local rivals United – 40 years on from the first Manchester derby to grace the FA Youth Cup final – there was that nagging doubt in the mind of Reiss and his players: what if they lost again? What if all the high standards of the last nine months led to no silverware again?
Those doubts were enough to make sure that City made full use of the home advantage that they kept despite not having the Etihad available to play at. The players are far more at home with the Joie Stadium than they would have been at Old Trafford, yet still the squad went the extra mile and trained on the pitch ahead of the game rather than their usual spots at the training ground.
And while Reiss wanted to build the game up for the young Blues, he deliberately did not tell any of his players that Pep Guardiola was among the watching crowd on the night. They found out for the first time after the match, meaning they had not had to process that during the game and risk it impacting their performance.
There were nerves out there regardless, and that manifested physically for several players as the celebrations for Heskey’s late winner turned into a mass stretch before Heskey and McAidoo were replaced with cramp. Another player went down at the full-time whistle as the bodies of the players betrayed their state.
“I think the main part of the cramps maybe at the end were of course the energy and the intensity we had in the second half but also again when you are a little bit nervous, everything is a little tougher for your body and that’s why it’s so important to play in these games where we have a little more pressure, there are more supporters around us and things like this,” said Reiss.
“This is also the reason why we are not talking about, ‘Hey guys, stay calm, it’s a normal game.’ It isn’t a normal game, so I like to increase it a little bit, to make it maybe bigger – not bigger than it is, but just to be realistic, it is a big game, and a lot of people are watching, and this is what happens with you here. But next time it’s not the first time again, so this is then development and learning, and they need games like this to develop, especially these things.”
Reiss has known all season of the special talents at his disposal – particularly for this competition – but he also learned from the final defeats last year that such individual skill is not enough. The team were not enough of a collective, and that has been addressed this season.
The spirit in the group has been excellent all year, and Reiss has put more emphasis on the players simply enjoying being in training together with their mates. High standards have always been demanded, but steps were taken consciously to make sure it has been an environment where the players can enjoy their football and being with each other.
If Heskey’s winner took the headlines, the goal was made by left-back Jake Wain pouncing on a loose ball near the centre-circle and first playing McAidoo through in the box and then receiving the ball back and slipping it to his other winger. Wain’s only previous minutes in the competition this season were two minutes against Fulham and six against Everton, yet a player who has not been one of their most regular contributors saved one of his best moments for the biggest occasion.
For all the controversy around not playing the game at a big stadium, Reiss had made clear that winning is an important part of development as well. Especially after losing those finals, getting over the line in whatever fashion possible feels significant to the players.
“I’m over the moon,” said captain Kaden Braithwaite. “Obviously, last year we fell so short, so to do it this year with this group of players is a real good feeling. Obviously I think this year we’re as close as ever, our group is as close as ever. The relationships we have are worth a whole life, so yeah, we’re so good to do with the team we have.
“I feel like football, especially in the academy, you need to be winners – that’s what drives you to the next point of your career. So obviously to win today is a really good feeling and a step forward in the right direction.
“Everyone has different pathways, the next step for all of us is to play professional football at the end of the day, no matter how long it takes us, we all want to be at the top and we’ll all give 100% to be on that top, so yeah I think that’s the next step.”
Before that, two days of celebrating and then another final awaits as City head down to Stamford Bridge next Friday to face Chelsea. That will be another tough test against one of the best academy sides in the country, but once again City will feel ready for it – and now those nagging doubts about winning will have gone away.

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