Pep Guardiola admitted Manchester City must regroup after a shock 2-0 defeat against Wolves left the Premier League champions eight points behind leaders Liverpool on Sunday.
Two late goals from Wolves winger Adama Traore condemned City to their first loss at the Etihad Stadium since last December.
With 16 points from eight matches, it is City’s worst start to a league campaign for six years.
They are trailing well behind Liverpool after Wolves joined Norwich as unexpected winners against City this season.
In contrast, Liverpool enjoy a 100 percent record at the top of the Premier League thanks to eight successive victories.
Guardiola had no excuses for City’s poor performance and he was trying not to think about the advantage Liverpool have already built up.
“It was a bad day, a bad game, but we have to credit our opponent,” he said.
“Today we were not at our level. We had problems to make our game. We have faced many teams defending deep and found a solution, but not this time.
“We were not solid in our build-up. It was not just about our defence. The feeling when we lost the ball was they could run at us and that made us nervous. “The distance to Liverpool is big, but we must not think about the eight-point gap. We are still in October and there are lots of games and lots of competitions to play.”
City could easily have fallen behind early on as Wolves passed up three golden chances to score.
First, Patrick Cutrone skewed his effort badly wide after Traore’s pass had found a way through the heart of City’s defence.
Raul Jimenez had a pair of opportunities in a matter of minutes as he was denied by a fine last-ditch tackle from Fernandinho and then took too long to get his shot away.
City had started slowly and Rui Patricio was not tested until more 30 minutes had been played when he pushed away Raheem Sterling’s shot.
Agence France-Presse