Pep Guardiola has raised the tantalising prospect of unleashing Phil Foden and Kevin De Bruyne together in the centre of Manchester City’s attack.
Foden has hit a rich vein of form in recent weeks playing in the central attacking midfield role that De Bruyne had previously made his own.
That has raised the question of how the pair will be deployed once the inspirational De Bruyne returns from the hamstring injury that has sidelined him since August.
City manager Guardiola said: “They are different players but it’s true that in the final third, in the decisive moments, both are incredible. The impact in goals, in passes is a lot.
“Phil is playing unbelievably lately in that position, in the threats, and he feels comfortable.
“In certain games, of course we can play both together in that position, in the pocket, in the middle, close to the box.
“In certain other games for the stability, maybe not. So we have to see day by day.”
The issue may not need to be resolved just yet with Guardiola not intending to rush De Bruyne back into action.
The Belgian was an unused substitute for last week’s Premier League victory over Sheffield United and any return to action is likely to be incremental.
“Right now I don’t ask to Kevin to play his best level,” said Guardiola, whose side host Sky Bet Championship club Huddersfield in the FA Cup third round on Sunday,
“We cannot force a player with a long injury in this kind of situation. From my experience as a football player, it happened quite similar. I was one year with hamstring problems. When you come back you need time.
“It’s not, ‘OK play, it’s the best Kevin’. You have to be relaxed, enjoy the minutes he’s going to play, try to win the games.
“Kevin maybe in 20 minutes can help us more right now than 90 minutes. After that his body will dictate how many minutes more he can get.”
City are the holders of the FA Cup and Guardiola has no intention of giving up the trophy lightly, even as they pursue further glory in the Premier League and Champions League.
Guardiola, twice a winner of the cup, has a strong affinity with the competition and does not want to see it marginalised as other events grow in importance.
He said: “Since day one here I’ve been asked about but it is not going to happen, reduced competition. Accept it.
“It is really, really important. It’s not friendly games here. We train every day for Huddersfield. We prepare incredibly well.
“The FA Cup is the FA Cup. You will not find one person in this club, in the locker room, who doesn’t love it.”
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