Needle touched vinyl, bass right up. One last spin of the Manchester City’s favourite record. Crackles in places these days but still transports its public back to life-altering days when time stood still as the music kept playing.
Kevin De Bruyne’s final outing here, the area he now calls home. The last gig for the King as the Boss performed at the arena next door. Not even Bruce Springsteen can lay claim to being the hottest ticket in town when City say goodbye to the greatest of his generation.
This is where De Bruyne’s kids grew up, where you suspect the roots will remain, and it has never really felt as if he – the constant talisman of Pep Guardiola’s various super teams – or the supporters are ready for the farewell. One more year, one more song. An encore, come on.
But City need to move on, need to remove the £400,000 a week from their bloated wage bill as new director of football Hugo Viana guides them into the next era. That becomes a smoother transition with the Champions League, and wealth afforded those who qualify.
Victory here against Bournemouth made sure that is in City’s hands when they travel to Fulham on the last day – now in third, needing one point to make absolutely sure – and De Bruyne has contributed a fair amount to the deposed champions hauling themselves into contention for a top five spot when at one stage it seemed fanciful.
Sorrow at De Bruyne’s days coming to a close were tempered somewhat by the emergence of Rodri from the bench, just after the hour, for a jog down the touchline. They rose as one, feeling there are better times ahead once the metronome returns. That only amplified when he actually came on. It may have been the loudest noise of the night.
City won 3-1 against Bournemouth as Kevin De Bruyne made his final appearance at the Etihad

Omar Marmoush opened the scoring in the first-half with a stunning effort from 30 yards out
Silva doubled the lead, squeezing into Kepa’s near post in the only way he seems to know how
There was probably no finer way of paying homage to De Bruyne than what Omar Marmoush conjured 14 minutes in, taking a square ball off Mateo Kovacic just inside the Bournemouth half. The Egyptian wandered forward, the visitors backed off and once within 30 yards of Kepa Arrizabalaga, he let fly.
The effort soared, arrowed, pierced its way towards the goalkeeper’s right-hand post. With a satisfying clink, the shot thundered into its intended target. Hit with such venom, it bounced back out and De Bruyne booted into the stand as Marmoush went off sliding in the corner. One of the more astonishing goals of the season.
And soon came an astonishing moment, involving those two players. Marmoush darted to the byline and flashed across the six-yard box without looking. De Bruyne waited, although was ahead of the ball ever so slightly. His feet weren’t planted properly and the Belgian rather shinned on to the crossbar. An open goal, every which way you dice it.
Bereft, he puffed in embarrassment, and Bournemouth sensed something then, becoming increasingly more active. Marcus Tavernier buccaneered down the left, sending a bouncing cross Evanilson’s way – the Brazilian peeling off Manuel Akanji – only for the striker to hit the post on the stretch. The ease with which how Tavernier engineered room on City’s right tells all as to why they’re targeting a full back in the summer and also baffling that Rico Lewis can’t even get into the squad.
The Etihad’s party atmosphere gave way to anxiety briefly but that subsided seven minutes before the break. Bernardo Silva doubled the lead, squeezing into Kepa’s near post in the only way he seems to know how to score in this stadium – right in that specific area of that specific goal at that specific end.
Ilkay Gundogan did the hard work, cutting back after picking up loose possession, and as Silva’s crazed eyes raced off to the corner of that stand, Erling Haaland and De Bruyne shared a few seconds of quiet reflection as they walked over to the celebrations.
De Bruyne left fans stunned in silence after missing an open goal from inside the six-yard box
Kevin De Bruyne joined Manchester City in 2015 and has won 19 trophies during his ten years
Mateo Kovacic was sent off after dragged back Evanilson around 50 yards from Ederson’s goal
Daniel Jebbison notched a late consolation goal for Bournemouth in their 3-1 loss at the Etihad
De Bruyne’s eldest son, Mason, was being handed an iPhone inside the De Bruyne private box, which very much looked like somebody studying a replay of the miss. Wife Michele smirked and fortunately for her husband, it didn’t matter beyond representing something of a shame.
That’s true of how the night ended – abruptly. Last man Kovacic dragged back Evanilson around 50 yards from Ederson’s goal, referee Thomas Bramall choosing red over yellow, and De Bruyne was sacrificed. He loitered, took embraces off team-mates. Sunk into a Guardiola hug. Waved to his family. And that was it until his manufactured farewells after this was all done and dusted.
But City had a job to do: to see this out against dangerous opposition who had sparked the severe downturn in November. That became easier when Lewis Cook went storming into substitute Nico Gonzalez, studs up. Gonzalez shrugged that off to beautifully curl in a first City goal on the break late on, with Daniel Jebbison notching a late consolation.