Arsenal victory puts no extra pressure on Manchester City, says Guardiola
Last updated: May 13, 2026 | 09:35
Manchester City's head coach Pep Guardiola greets fans at the end of the English Premier League soccer match between Manchester City and Brentford in Manchester, recently. AP
Arsenal’s late win over West Ham United on Sunday to go five points clear at the top of the Premier League table did not put any extra pressure on second-placed Manchester City, Pep Guardiola said.
Guardiola’s side, who have played a game less, must hope for Arsenal to drop points, as a win over Crystal Palace on Wednesday will still leave them two points behind, with two matches left.
Failure to win at the Etihad would mean Mikel Arteta’s side could clinch their first Premier League title in 22 years against Burnley on Monday.
“Same one as two days, three days, four days ago,” Guardiola told reporters on Tuesday, when asked about the pressure on his side.
“What I’ve learned from my career as a manager is, what you cannot control, forget about it. To do better what you have not done better this season. To arrive in better position to fight for the Premier League, that we are still fighting.”
Guardiola said he expected Palace to be a difficult team to beat, despite the 15th-placed side being winless in their last four top-flight games.
“They have a European final,” he said, referring to Palace’s upcoming Conference League final against Rayo Vallecano on May 27.
Manchester City players take part in a training session. Courtesy: Manchester City website
“Maybe struggling a bit in the Premier League with a lot of changes. Manager (Oliver Glasner) is leaving... and maybe they were not consistent, but the quality is there.”
Guardiola said City’s injured midfielder Rodri and defender Abdukodir Khusanov were feeling much better, but did not say whether they would return to action against Palace.
Palace are also set to play Arsenal in the final game of their Premier League campaign, three days before the Conference League final.
Asked if he was worried Palace would field a weakened side against Arsenal to rest key players ahead of their maiden European final, Guardiola said he was not concerned about that.
“They are so professional, the teams. Crystal Palace will play top against (Arsenal),” Guardiola said.
With the FA Cup final against Chelsea coming up on Saturday, followed by a trip to Bournemouth three days later, Guardiola admitted that City may also need to rotate their squad.
“After three days we travel to London, then come back and play Bournemouth. So of course... I have to think about it, yeah,” he added.
Guardiola also expects City striker Omar Marmoush to have a key role in the closing stages of the English season.
Such is City’s squad strength, Egypt forward Marmoush has made just seven Premier League starts this season, but he proved his worth with a goal off the bench in Saturday’s 3-0 defeat of Brentford.
City manager Guardiola now hopes Marmoush and other fringe players can step up when called upon as his side, who have a game in hand, look to overhaul a five-point gap to Premier League leaders Arsenal with three matches to play.
“We’ve talked many times,” said Guardiola. “I know it’s not easy for them, but I’m pretty sure in the next games they’re going to play.
“I want to rotate the team because otherwise we cannot arrive in the final or Bournemouth a little bit (fresh).
“Especially Omar. It’s not easy because normally you just want one striker. He’s a proper striker but Erling (Haaland) is there.
“Erling is so important for us but the contribution of Omar -- the amount of goals for the minutes played -- is so high.”
The prolific form of Haaland has been largely responsible for Marmoush’s prolonged spell on the sidelines, with the Norway international Haaland scoring his 50th goal of the season for club and country at the weekend.
“It’s incredible, and there was a period when he was so tired in November when he came back from Norway qualification,” said Guardiola.