Man City furious with Premier League after giving Arsenal major advantage in title race

Man City furious with Premier League after giving Arsenal major advantage in title race

Manchester City are furious at being forced to navigate three crucial fixtures within a seven-day period during the decisive final stretch of the season.

The defending champions must host Crystal Palace on 13 May before travelling to Wembley for the FA Cup final against Chelsea three days later.

Pep Guardiola’s squad then faces a 502-mile round trip to the south coast for their Bournemouth encounter on 19 May, leaving minimal recovery time between matches.

City currently sit three points behind Arsenal with a game in hand, making the congested schedule particularly problematic as they chase both the league title and domestic cup glory.

Manchester City are facing a tough run-in over the next four weeks

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The club submitted five separate proposals to address the fixture congestion, yet the Premier League dismissed every alternative put forward.

Among City’s suggestions was scheduling the Bournemouth match for Thursday 21 May, which was not immediately rejected but ultimately overlooked in favour of the earlier Tuesday date.

Club officials are particularly aggrieved that their title rivals Arsenal had a rescheduled fixture moved to 18 February, an evening when four Champions League matches were taking place.

City also expressed frustration at being blocked from playing on Wednesday 21 May, with UEFA’s desire to protect the Europa League final schedule cited as the reason.

City maintain the Palace fixture could have been rearranged far sooner, given the league knew since 4 February that the match required a new date following their Carabao Cup semi-final victory over Newcastle.

Manchester City had several requests turned down by the Premier League

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Three available midweeks existed from late April onwards, though Palace’s Europa Conference League commitments complicated two of those windows.

The club’s preference was to face Oliver Glasner’s side during the week commencing 20 April, when the Burnley match was instead scheduled.

City’s logic centred on Burnley’s absence from European competition, making them far easier to accommodate at a later date than Palace.

The scheduling disparity extends beyond fixture timing to travel demands, with Arsenal’s remaining four matches all taking place within London.

This geographical advantage affords Mikel Arteta’s squad significantly more recovery time between fixtures compared to their title rivals.

City face two substantial journeys south in the space of four days, departing Wembley after the cup final before making the lengthy trip to the Vitality Stadium.

The club contends this arrangement contradicts what they consider an established Premier League principle that league fixtures should be completed before cup ties, mirroring the approach taken with their Burnley match ahead of the FA Cup semi-final.

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