Guardiola Admits Fatigue Is Hitting City as Title Race Goes to the Wire
- Pep Guardiola said Manchester City will stay ready to capitalise if Arsenal stumble in the Premier League title race.
- City beat Crystal Palace 3-0 after Guardiola rested Erling Haaland, Jérémy Doku and Rayan Cherki from the starting lineup.
- Guardiola admitted player fatigue is becoming a major concern ahead of the FA Cup final and the closing league fixtures.
Pep Guardiola knows the equation now. Manchester City can win every remaining game and still finish second.
That reality did not stop him sounding quietly determined after Wednesday’s 3-0 win over Crystal Palace, a result that moved City to within two points of Arsenal with two league matches remaining.
“If they win two games, nothing to do,” Guardiola said afterwards.
“All we can be is in there just in case.”
It was a familiar tone from Guardiola. Calm on the surface, but with enough edge underneath to suggest City have no intention of fading quietly from the title race.
The victory over Palace kept the pressure on Arsenal, though it also exposed another issue Guardiola can no longer ignore. Fatigue is beginning to shape his decisions as much as tactics.
City face Chelsea in Saturday’s FA Cup final before difficult league trips against Bournemouth and Aston Villa. Guardiola responded by rotating heavily against Palace, making six changes and leaving Erling Haaland on the bench for the entire match. Jérémy Doku and Rayan Cherki were also held back from the starting side.
It was less about luxury and more about survival.
“We all we can do now is go to sleep as quickly as possible and prepare for the FA Cup,” Guardiola said.
“But it’s not just FA Cup final. It’s Bournemouth three days after. So travel to London, they will be at home with wife and kids, so fatigue, fatigue.”
There was almost a sense of resignation in the way he repeated the word. Not frustration at the schedule itself, but acceptance that the physical demands of chasing multiple trophies are now unavoidable.
Guardiola has often relied on rhythm and repetition during title run-ins, preferring settled lineups when pressure intensifies. This season feels different. The calendar has become too congested and the margins too fine.
“I have full confidence in all the squad,” he said.
“If we lose today, we know it’s over, but then we bring the hope in the last game.”
Hope remains the key word for City.
Arsenal still control the title race and know victories against Burnley and Crystal Palace would seal their first league crown in more than two decades. City, meanwhile, are left chasing perfection while waiting for a mistake that may never arrive.
Guardiola also made clear he expects no easy finish regardless of Arsenal’s results.
“The next contender, Bournemouth, wow, look what they are doing, and then Unai Emery is not easy,” he said, referencing the final-day meeting with Aston Villa.
“I cannot ask for more from the players.”
That perhaps revealed more than anything else he said.
This City side have spent years operating at a relentless pace, but even Guardiola can see the wear beginning to show. The challenge now is preserving enough energy to compete on every front without letting the season slip away in the final fortnight.
For now, at least, City remain exactly where Guardiola wants them: close enough to punish any Arsenal stumble, even if the strain is starting to show.