Pep Guardiola has admitted Manchester City's failure to land Harry Kane this summer has left them lacking the same goal threat as their rivals for the Premier League title.
City came up short in their bid to replace Sergio Aguero as Tottenham stood firm despite their captain's desire to leave, while Saturday's opponents Chelsea signed Romelu Lukaku to strengthen their status as title favourites and Manchester United brought back Cristiano Ronaldo.
City managed to win the league relatively comfortably last term despite Aguero missing the majority of the campaign through injury, but even though they broke the bank themselves to sign £100million man Jack Grealish, Guardiola knows a true number nine would have added a different dimension.
"A striker is a striker – they live a little outside the bubble," he said. "Along with the goalkeepers they are the most specialised players.
"These are the most difficult players to get. We were privileged to have Sergio for so many years but unfortunately the last year he had was bad for injuries.
"We survived without him in a way, but when we played with him we had something extra. We have exceptional players but we don't have this weapon that other teams like United or Chelsea or Tottenham have.
"We have to use what we can as a team. We do not have a player who can score 25 goals for himself so we have to do it as a team, and that is what we will try this season."
Chelsea broke City hearts last season, with their 1-0 win over Guardiola's side in the Champions League final one of three defeats they inflicted in the final two months of the campaign – having also ended their FA Cup defence at the semi-final stage.
Guardiola acknowledged the task of ending that run of results had only become harder since Chelsea splashed out £98million to bring Lukaku back to the club.
"I'm not going to deny what a player Romelu Lukaku is," Guardiola said. "Chelsea are the champions of Europe, already a strong team, and with him they are even stronger of course.
"You see how he handles the long balls, he supports the attacking midfielders and the wing-backs and with the quality of players they have the middle, he puts balls between the lines.
"Of course they are a stronger team than last season but this is the challenge."
And Guardiola believes his squad is good enough to meet that challenge as long as they can avoid more costly injuries.
Phil Foden made his first start of the season in midweek against Wycombe while Kevin De Bruyne completed 90 minutes, having not been fully fit since tangling with Chelsea's Antonio Rudiger in Porto.
"I am not going to say we are disappointed with the squad that we have," Guardiola said. "We are the champions, we were runners-up for the Champions League, we won the Carabao Cup and were in the semi-finals of the FA Cup.
"We just want people to come back fit and to have the squad as high as possible. When they are all fit I know what we can do because we have done it for many years.
"You will not hear me complain that we don't have this player or that player because the players we have and what they have given to the club, wow.
"When an opponent is better and wins, all I've said all my career is congratulations to them and then we try to improve. Always it is a new challenge."