INSIDE RULE 6.4.2: DISCOVER WHY MARC GUEHI IS BANNED FROM THE CUP FINAL
Pep Guardiola is fighting the EFL over a rule barring Marc Guehi from the Carabao Cup final despite City paying his full salary.
Marc Guehi can’t play for Manchester City in the Carabao Cup final. Pep Guardiola wanted him in the squad for Wembley on March 22, right after City knocked out Newcastle with a 5-1 win on aggregate. But the EFL isn’t budging on the rules. Guehi joined City from Crystal Palace on January 19—six days after the first leg of the semi-final. The rulebook says you can play for more than one team in the Carabao Cup, but only if you sign before the winter window closes or before the first semi-final, whichever comes first. Guehi missed that cutoff.
The rule is new this year. It’s why Antoine Semenyo got to play for City in the semi at St James’ Park, right after signing from Bournemouth. Max Alleyne, who was on loan at Watford earlier in the tournament, also managed to feature after City brought him back.
Guardiola’s frustrated. “Why shouldn’t he play? He’s our player. We pay him; we signed him…” he said on Wednesday. “We’ll definitely ask the EFL—I just don’t get why he can’t play in the final when he’s been with us for a while. Of course we’ll try. It just makes sense. But, honestly, I don’t see them changing the rule.”
Switching gears—Tijjani Reijnders knows City can’t slip up anymore. They’re six points behind Arsenal in the league, and after a rough stretch where they dropped points in five out of their last six matches, there’s no more room for error. At least they’re feeling good after brushing past Newcastle to book a spot in the Carabao Cup final.
But next up? Liverpool at Anfield on Sunday. Liverpool’s title defence might be over, but they’re still fighting hard for a Champions League spot. Reijnders knows what’s at stake. “It’s a big match, for sure. We have to show up and be ready. No more mistakes. We want to win every game, and this one’s no different.”
City made light work of Newcastle at the Etihad. The second leg finished 3-1, with Omar Marmoush scoring twice and Reijnders adding another. They had all three goals before halftime. Anthony Elanga got one back for Newcastle after the break, but City had already done the job.
Now it’s Arsenal waiting for them in the final at Wembley. Reijnders is hungry for success. “We’re one step closer to a trophy, and we’re very hungry. Personally, winning my first trophy with Manchester City would be amazing.”
MANCHESTER CITY CONDEMN RACIST ABUSE OF STARS SEMENYO AND GUEHI
Following swift stadium action, Manchester City pledge full support to Semenyo and Guéhi amid shocking discriminatory abuse.
Manchester City didn’t hold back after Antoine Semenyo and Marc Guehi faced racist abuse during and after their wild 3-3 draw with Everton. The game itself was a rollercoaster; City managed to scrape a point thanks to Erling Haaland and Jeremy Doku, who nailed a jaw-dropping equaliser in the 96th minute.
Doku actually got City off to a great start, putting them up before halftime. But Everton flipped the script after the break, scoring three and having everyone on edge with ten minutes left. City defender Guehi made a costly error on Everton’s first goal, his misjudged back pass handing the ball to Thierno Barry, who didn’t think twice about putting it away.
Since then, City put out a statement confirming that Guehi was targeted with disgusting racist messages online, while Semenyo, who played most of the match at the Hill Dickinson Stadium, endured abuse in the stadium itself. City’s statement was straightforward: they’re outraged by the abuse and thanked Everton and the police for acting fast to identify the person responsible. They made it clear they're sticking by Guehi and Semenyo and won’t tolerate discrimination in football.
Right after the game, Guehi posted on social media, owning up to his mistake but keeping his head up. He thanked City fans and leaned on his faith, writing, “I need to do better, but we keep going & focused on the next. Thank you for your support as always! Thank you, Jesus!”
Racism in football keeps getting worse, on and off the pitch, and there’s a growing call for authorities to actually step up and fight discriminatory abuse wherever it shows up.
Both Guehi and Semenyo have made an immediate impact at City. Guehi came from Crystal Palace in January for £20 million, fitting right into Guardiola’s defence and looking sharp until Monday’s mishap. He’s already played 16 times for City. Semenyo arrived from Bournemouth for £64 million, has 22 appearances, and has made himself a regular threat, scoring eight goals with three assists, moving smoothly between central and wide positions.
They’re both expected to be in the lineup when City faces Brentford at home on Saturday as Guardiola’s team hangs onto their faint hopes of defending the title.
PEP GUARDIOLA REFUSES TO GUARANTEE RODRI’S RETURN FOR MONDAY’S PREMIER LEAGUE CLASH
Pep Guardiola provides the latest injury news on Rodri, Ruben Dias, and Josko Gvardiol ahead of a crucial title race clash at Everton.
Pep Guardiola has shared the latest on Manchester City's injury situation ahead of Monday’s Premier League match against Everton at the Hill Dickinson Stadium.
City is in good form right now. They came from behind to beat Southampton 2-1 in the FA Cup semi-final last weekend, making it six wins in a row across all competitions.
But they’ve had to do it without Rodri. He's missed their last two matches, including a tight 1-0 win at Burnley, after hurting his groin against Arsenal a couple of weeks back. Guardiola recently told reporters that Rodri is getting better, but the team’s been cautious and isn’t rushing him back.
At his latest press conference on Friday, Guardiola said Rodri still hasn’t returned to training, so they’re just taking it day by day. There's hope, but Guardiola wouldn’t give any guarantees about Rodri’s chances of playing against Everton. "He’s getting better. Still, he didn't train with us, so we’ll see in the next few days,” he said. When pressed about his confidence, Pep just replied, “I am always confident.”
With Rodri still not training, it sounds like a last-minute decision on whether he’ll play. A start against Everton seems unlikely. That probably means Nico González, who scored the winner against Southampton, will keep his spot in midfield next to Bernardo Silva. Maybe Nico O’Reilly slides into central midfield, too, if he isn’t covering at left-back.
It’s not all good news in defence either. Ruben Dias is still out with the ankle injury that’s kept him sidelined for the last six games, and Josko Gvardiol is recovering from the tibial fracture he picked up in January. Both are working their way back, and Guardiola says they’re improving, but there’s no sign of a return just yet.
Turning to the Everton game, City could head into it trailing Arsenal by six points if the Gunners beat Fulham on Saturday. With the title race this tight, City can’t afford to slip up.
Guardiola knows Monday will be tough. “Everton have always been tough,” he said. “Old Everton was so cool and so British, and I loved to go there, but in the new stadium, they are defending really well, and it has always been tough." He’s not taking recent Everton results lightly, adding, 'They're fighting for a place in Europe. We won with two or three actions here, but we were not good at that moment. We can’t have any result but win, win, win.”
Everton won’t be easy, especially away, but City can at least take confidence from their strong record of 17 league games unbeaten against the Toffees. They won the reverse fixture 2-0, with Haaland scoring both goals. Still, Guardiola isn’t expecting it to be straightforward.