CLUB VS COUNTRY: MAN CITY RISKS EGYPT FURY OVER OMAR MARMOUSH RELEASE
Manchester City is refusing Egypt's request to release Omar Marmoush early for AFCON warm-ups, intent on keeping him until December 14 for four crucial club matches.
Manchester City might upset the Egyptian national team. They don't plan to let Omar Marmoush play in any of Egypt's warm-up games before the African Cup of Nations. City wants to keep the forward for their next four games before he goes to Morocco for the tournament.
Egypt's coach, Hossam Hassan, is holding a training camp this Monday. The team will play three warm-up games against Kuwait, the UAE, and Jordan in the FIFA Arab Cup over the next week. Then, they'll face Nigeria on December 14 in a final friendly before their AFCON campaign starts on December 22 against Zimbabwe.
Hassan wants Marmoush and Liverpool's Mohamed Salah to join them for the Nigeria friendly. Egypt hopes to meet expectations as a favourite to win the tournament. The Egyptian FA and City have discussed the possibility of releasing Marmoush earlier.
But it seems City only wants to let Marmoush go for the tournament itself. Since Egypt's first game isn't until December 22, City plans to release Marmoush after their Premier League game against Crystal Palace on December 14. He'll play against Fulham, Sunderland, Real Madrid, and Palace before joining Egypt.
If Egypt makes it to the final on January 18, Marmoush could miss up to ten games. During his absence, City has matches in the Premier League, Champions League, FA Cup, and Carabao Cup. Their next Champions League game is away against Bodo Glimt on January 20.
Guardiola mentioned last week that Marmoush had a rough start to the season. An injury sidelined him for six weeks early on. He's also found it hard to replace Erling Haaland, Jeremy Doku, and Phil Foden in the starting lineup.
“He started well, then got injured. After he came back, we had a more stable team, the manager said. “There was a time when we played the same team for three games in a row. But the season is long, and I think Omar did what the team needed in the last game [against Leverkusen]! But we didn’t find him.
WHY DECEMBER 2025 WAS PEP GUARDIOLA’S MOST "STATISTICALLY PERFECT" MONTH EVER
Pep Guardiola’s "most impressive month" is over. Read why Man City are now favourites to snatch the 2026 Premier League title.
It's tough to say how the 2025/26 team will stack up against Pep Guardiola's other squads from his decade at the Etihad. They've shown a lot of potential six months into the season, but trophies aren't a sure thing yet.
Still, December 2025 definitely stands out as a crazy good month in Guardiola's 95-month tenure. It's not just that the Blues are doing well in the Premier League and Champions League, but where they got those wins.
Winning at Fulham, Real Madrid, Crystal Palace, and Nottingham Forest in a single month is quite the feat. Craven Cottage might not be the scariest place, but it's a long trip for a midweek game. Plus, the other three teams have been a pain for City in recent years.
Guardiola might not be thrilled with how they won—he wants them to be consistent for the entire match and for his young players to really show who they are all the time. But getting wins at those stadiums will help his players learn as they go. Once you’ve won at the Bernabeu, not many places can intimidate you, and the Forest win was huge because City lost there badly nine months prior.
City has totally answered questions about their away game performance this season. They lost three of their four league games—against Brighton, Villa, and Newcastle—on the road. They also messed up at Monaco in the Champions League after a bad second half when they should have won. Erling Haaland was mad and stormed off after the final whistle.
Those worries are gone after a month that was one of City's best ever away from home, statistically speaking. The last time City won all their away games in a month was in early 2024/25. Before that, you’d have to go back almost two years to February 2024 to find a month where they won four.
That February 2024 team was on its way to winning a fourth straight Premier League title and reaching the FA Cup Final. Before that, it was December 2021. City never won four away games in a month during their treble season, for instance.
Part of that is just how the schedule works—there aren't always four away games in a month. And once April and May roll around, if City is still in the FA Cup, they play at a neutral site. Still, it's amazing how good their December was, picking up so many good results from tough places.
That changes things as they head into another tough month with four more away games. They're at Sunderland on New Year's Day (who haven't lost at home in the Premier League this season), then at Newcastle for the first leg of their league cup semi-final, knowing they lost there recently and haven't won there in two years.
A few days later, it's the Manchester derby, followed by a trip to Bodo as they try to finish in the top eight in the first stage of the Champions League. City has done pretty well at Old Trafford lately, but derbies are always tense. And a plastic field in the Arctic Circle doesn't sound easy.
But City can go into these games feeling more confident after the December they just had. No matter how much the home teams try to rattle them, Guardiola’s improving squad has proven they can get results anywhere. They’ll see the first game of the year in the Northeast as a chance to really show what they want to accomplish in 2026.
OFFICIAL REPORT: RODRI RETURNS AS MANCHESTER CITY EXTEND DOMINANT EIGHT-MATCH WINNING STREAK
Rodri returns as Manchester City extends its winning run to eight games. Discover how the Club World Cup saved City's season.
It felt right having Rodri back. Pep Guardiola talked more openly than before about how good the Club World Cup was for Manchester City. He'd said it could be a disaster for the team. Now, they see it as what got them back on track.
At the end of June, he said, The main thing is to get back to our old selves. That's my goal for this competition. I want them to feel like we're back to being competitive, like we have for most of the last decade. Then we'll see.
We'll see after the final. We'll rest as much as the Premier League allows. Maybe it'll be awful in the winter. Maybe we'll be tired, and the World Cup will have messed us up. I don't know; we've never done this before. We'll find out when we get back.
The good from the Club World Cup wasn't clear right away. City played alright against Juventus, but then had a tough loss against Al Hilal in the last 16. Plus, Rodri hurt his hamstring on a bad field during that loss, which messed up his recovery from his ACL injury.
In September, Rodri started three games in a week against United, Napoli, and Arsenal. That wore him out, and he soon got another hamstring issue at Brentford, keeping him out for about ten weeks.
It might not be fair, but it doesn't seem like the Club World Cup helped Rodri get better. His being back in the team at the City Ground hints at a better second half of the season.
When he's back on the field, he'll join a team that's figured out how to win and fight for the league title without him. City has won their last eight games in a row in all competitions. Their longest streak since winning the Club World Cup. Guardiola mentions that the team has rediscovered the identity he wanted.
Despite worrying about the tournament and the problems that came up, FIFA's power move has given City a chance to reset, which they really needed to get back to full strength.