Guardiola Takes Big Gamble as Haaland and Doku Dropped for Palace Clash
- Pep Guardiola left Erling Haaland, Jérémy Doku and Rayan Cherki on the bench for Manchester City’s crucial meeting with Crystal Palace.
- City must beat Palace to keep realistic pressure on Premier League leaders Arsenal heading into the final week.
- Guardiola defended the decision by pointing to a relentless fixture schedule ahead of the FA Cup final and trip to Bournemouth.
Pep Guardiola has never been afraid of a difficult decision, but this one carried the sort of risk that tends to define title races.
With Manchester City chasing Arsenal at the top of the Premier League and knowing anything other than victory against Crystal Palace could effectively end their hopes, Guardiola chose to leave Erling Haaland, Jérémy Doku and Rayan Cherki out of his starting lineup.
All three were named on the bench at the Etihad Stadium as Omar Marmoush, Phil Foden and Savinho came into the side instead.
It was the sort of selection capable of looking either inspired or reckless by full-time. Guardiola, unsurprisingly, sounded entirely comfortable with that reality before kickoff.
“When the schedule is so tight everybody is fit, everybody needs to help,” he told Sky Sports.
“The manager is here to take a risk. We have to take the decisions before and after it depends on the result. We will be judged nicely or completely the opposite. You have to take it.”
There is logic behind the gamble, even if it feels uncomfortable in a match of this magnitude.
City are staring at a punishing final stretch of the season. Chelsea await in the FA Cup final at Wembley on Saturday before another awkward assignment away to Bournemouth, one of the division’s form sides. Guardiola knows he cannot ask the same players to carry every game at full intensity.
Still, leaving out Haaland always changes the atmosphere around a match. The Norwegian remains the focal point of City’s attack, while Doku has rediscovered his sharpness at exactly the right moment, scoring three goals across his previous two appearances to keep the title race alive.
Between them, Haaland, Doku and Cherki have contributed 35 league goals this season. Benching all three at once felt less like rotation and more like Guardiola trusting the depth of his squad at the most delicate stage of the campaign.
“I trust them otherwise we wouldn’t be here,” Guardiola said.
“We have today and in three days travel to London. Our opponents are waiting just for that game and don’t have to travel, then we have to travel to Bournemouth. Everyone has to play these three games.”
The wider context only sharpened the tension.
Arsenal began the weekend five points clear at the summit and know a City slip would hand them the chance to clinch the title against Burnley on Monday night at the Emirates. Guardiola’s side therefore walked into the Palace fixture with virtually no margin for error.
Crystal Palace, meanwhile, arrived with one eye on their own major occasion still to come.
Oliver Glasner’s side are preparing for a UEFA Conference League final against Rayo Vallecano later this month, the club’s first appearance in a European final. Palace stunned City in last season’s FA Cup final and have shown throughout the campaign they remain awkward opponents for the league’s elite.
Glasner has already hinted he may rotate heavily in Palace’s final league game against Arsenal before the trip to Leipzig, but there were no signs of compromise here.
For Guardiola, though, this was about balance as much as bravery. He has spent years building a squad capable of surviving weeks exactly like this one. The challenge now is proving those decisions still hold up when every point feels season-defining.