Tom Cleverley: 4/10: Can tell his grandchildren he at least got on the pitch. Reuters
Ederson: 7/10: A pivotal first-half save to deny Roberto Pereyra one-on-one. Even after nine minutes you sensed Watford had blown their chance. EPA
Kyle Walker: 7/10: The energetic right-back didn’t put a foot wrong and always on hand to snuff out what little danger Watford offered. Reuters
Vincent Kompany: 7/10: Imperial as ever. The Belgian again proved the man for the big occasion. Reuters
Aymeric Laporte: 7/10: A quiet day for the Frenchman but did what he needed to do well. Reuters
Oleksandr Zinchenko: 6/10: A sloppy ball helped launch Watford on a dangerous counter-attack early on but the Ukraine defender settled down thereafter. EPA
Bernardo Silva: 8/10: Sumptuous ball to tempt Heurelho Gomes to chase across his goal for City’s second. His usual workaholic self never more on display than when he burst past the Watford defence to set up Raheem Sterling’s second and City’s fifth nine minutes from time. Reuters
Ilkay Gundogan: 6/10: Neat and efficient. The German midfielder barely broke sweat before being replaced in the second half with City 4-0 up. Reuters
David Silva: 7/10: Scored the opener – his first goal of 2019 – even winning an aerial duel against Kiko Femenia in the build-up. Reuters
Riyad Mahrez: 6/10: Withdrawn at half-time for Kevin de Bruyne. It proved inspired. Reuters
Gabriel Jesus: 8/10: Watford couldn’t contain the bubbly Brazilian who scored two goals. EPA
Raheem Sterling: 9/10: A constant threat throughout. Poached a goal off his teammate Gabriel Jesus before it was awarded to Jesus later, but he sealed the stamp on an emphatic City performance with two late goals. Reuters
Kevin de Bruyne: 8/10: The Belgian has endured an injury-hit campaign but signed off with a cup final goal and a superb season-ending 45 minutes after coming on as a second-half substitute.
Leroy Sane: 5/10: Little time for the German winger to make an impact on a game already won by the time he entered the fray. Reuters
John Stones: 5/10: Played out the final quarter as a holding midfielder after coming on as a sub. Should have made it 7-0 with a chance late on. EPA
Heurelho Gomes: 5/10: At fault for City’s second goal. A sad send-off for his farewell Watford appearance. EPA
Kiko Femenía: 6/10: Too few opportunities to get forward and beaten in an aerial duel by one of the smallest players on the pitch that led to City’s first. EPA
Adrian Mariappa: 6/10: Stood up well to the early City onslaught but faded badly in the second half. Reuters
Craig Cathcart: 5/10: Like his centre-back partner wilted under relentless City pressure. Reuters
José Holebas: 5/10: Like all of Watford’s backline failed to get to grips with City’s attacking play. Reuters
Gerard Deulofeu: 5/10: Squandered a chance to get Watford back in the tie from 2-0 down but was otherwise anonymous before being substituted on 65 minutes. Reuters
Will Hughes: 6/10: Perhaps Watford’s best player. Tried to plug the gaps that kept appearing in his defensive third while others went missing. Reuters
Etienne Capoue: 5/10: Frenchman was a non-factor for Watford in a defensive or attacking sense. Reuters
Abdoulaye Doucouré: 5/10: Had a first-half penalty appeal ruled out by VAR and lost possession that led to City’s second. EPA
Roberto Pereyra: 5/10: If only his shot in the opening exchanges had eluded the right foot of Ederson. Reuters
Troy Deeney: 5/10: Way off the pace and never troubled City’s defence. Reuters
Andre Gray: 4/10: Introduced in the second half when the game was already over. Reuters
Isaac Success: 4/10: Little opportunity to get in the game. Reuters
Tom Cleverley: 4/10: Can tell his grandchildren he at least got on the pitch. Reuters
Ederson: 7/10: A pivotal first-half save to deny Roberto Pereyra one-on-one. Even after nine minutes you sensed Watford had blown their chance. EPA
Kyle Walker: 7/10: The energetic right-back didn’t put a foot wrong and always on hand to snuff out what little danger Watford offered. Reuters
Vincent Kompany: 7/10: Imperial as ever. The Belgian again proved the man for the big occasion. Reuters
Aymeric Laporte: 7/10: A quiet day for the Frenchman but did what he needed to do well. Reuters
Oleksandr Zinchenko: 6/10: A sloppy ball helped launch Watford on a dangerous counter-attack early on but the Ukraine defender settled down thereafter. EPA
Bernardo Silva: 8/10: Sumptuous ball to tempt Heurelho Gomes to chase across his goal for City’s second. His usual workaholic self never more on display than when he burst past the Watford defence to set up Raheem Sterling’s second and City’s fifth nine minutes from time. Reuters
Ilkay Gundogan: 6/10: Neat and efficient. The German midfielder barely broke sweat before being replaced in the second half with City 4-0 up. Reuters
David Silva: 7/10: Scored the opener – his first goal of 2019 – even winning an aerial duel against Kiko Femenia in the build-up. Reuters
Riyad Mahrez: 6/10: Withdrawn at half-time for Kevin de Bruyne. It proved inspired. Reuters
Gabriel Jesus: 8/10: Watford couldn’t contain the bubbly Brazilian who scored two goals. EPA
Raheem Sterling: 9/10: A constant threat throughout. Poached a goal off his teammate Gabriel Jesus before it was awarded to Jesus later, but he sealed the stamp on an emphatic City performance with two late goals. Reuters
Kevin de Bruyne: 8/10: The Belgian has endured an injury-hit campaign but signed off with a cup final goal and a superb season-ending 45 minutes after coming on as a second-half substitute.
Leroy Sane: 5/10: Little time for the German winger to make an impact on a game already won by the time he entered the fray. Reuters
John Stones: 5/10: Played out the final quarter as a holding midfielder after coming on as a sub. Should have made it 7-0 with a chance late on. EPA
Heurelho Gomes: 5/10: At fault for City’s second goal. A sad send-off for his farewell Watford appearance. EPA
Kiko Femenía: 6/10: Too few opportunities to get forward and beaten in an aerial duel by one of the smallest players on the pitch that led to City’s first. EPA
Adrian Mariappa: 6/10: Stood up well to the early City onslaught but faded badly in the second half. Reuters
Craig Cathcart: 5/10: Like his centre-back partner wilted under relentless City pressure. Reuters
José Holebas: 5/10: Like all of Watford’s backline failed to get to grips with City’s attacking play. Reuters
Gerard Deulofeu: 5/10: Squandered a chance to get Watford back in the tie from 2-0 down but was otherwise anonymous before being substituted on 65 minutes. Reuters
Will Hughes: 6/10: Perhaps Watford’s best player. Tried to plug the gaps that kept appearing in his defensive third while others went missing. Reuters
Etienne Capoue: 5/10: Frenchman was a non-factor for Watford in a defensive or attacking sense. Reuters
Abdoulaye Doucouré: 5/10: Had a first-half penalty appeal ruled out by VAR and lost possession that led to City’s second. EPA
Roberto Pereyra: 5/10: If only his shot in the opening exchanges had eluded the right foot of Ederson. Reuters
Troy Deeney: 5/10: Way off the pace and never troubled City’s defence. Reuters
Andre Gray: 4/10: Introduced in the second half when the game was already over. Reuters
Isaac Success: 4/10: Little opportunity to get in the game. Reuters
Tom Cleverley: 4/10: Can tell his grandchildren he at least got on the pitch. Reuters