If Newcastle are to play Manchester City for a sixth time this campaign, it can only be in the Champions League final. They would take that, of course. But a large part of them must be hoping they do not see Sky Blue until next season. Next year, even.
Pep Guardiola and City have the Indian sign over Eddie Howe’s men, and Omar Marmoush is the one casting the spell. With a match-winning double here, he has now scored four of his six goals this term against the Magpies, adding to a hat-trick last season.
This was a fourth victory for City over Newcastle in less than two months, spanning two legs of a Carabao Cup semi final, the Premier League and now this, an FA Cup fifth-round that keeps alive hope a quadruple. It came at a cost, at least for Guardiola, who picked up his sixth yellow card of the season and will now serve a two-game touchline ban, against West Ham in the Premier League and in this competition’s quarter-final. He threw a tantrum – and his coat on the floor — when Sam Barrott failed to award Jeremy Doku a free-kick when his shirt was tugged. Afterwards, the Spaniard hinted at conspiracy.
‘When Jeremy Doku dribbles Trippier and goes alone to the box and is being pulled from behind, I’m not asking for a yellow card but it’s a foul,’ said Guardiola.
‘I will tell you something – we have all the records in this country, all of them, despite everything. We have the record of the manager with the most yellow cards. I want all records and now I have it. Two game ban now and I will go on holidays the next two games.
‘Oh my god. Oh my god. There are things after 10 years I cannot understand. Review the action. Of course I’m going to defend Doku and all my teams. They (officials) continue to do it.’
The fire still burns in Guardiola, and it did in his team of understudies. This mattered, to him and to them. It was an absorbing and enjoyable contest, even if more so for City.
Not that the team sheets screamed priority, not with Spain’s big two just days away in the Champions League. City made 10 changes and left Erling Haaland at home. Newcastle’s four were more palatable for this grand old competition, but the presence of Dan Burn, Anthony Gordon and Joelinton on the bench — three of their best in the midweek win over Manchester United — told of the distraction that is Barcelona on Tuesday. ’The biggest game in club’s history,’ Howe later said.
Still, Newcastle began by working from the same blueprint that brought Wednesday’s victory, only to lose the drawings after half an hour. By then, they were ahead thanks to Harvey Barnes. Come half-time, though, they were lucky not to be behind. Savinho equalised in the 39th minute and the best thing that happened to Newcastle for the remainder of the half was the sight of just one minute added. City battered them during that spell, and that never looked likely at the outset.
Howe was revisiting the Woltemade midfield experiment, despite abandoning the tactic after half an hour of the German’s last appearance. Again, it did not work. Tonali, one part of a three in the engine room, became the only man working the piston.
City were playing around, through and over Newcastle and, when Doku got the better of two minders to cross to the far post, Savinho was stood alone to prod home. In truth, Newcastle had no answer to City from the moment they went in front, and that is a theme that extends way beyond this latest meeting. — Dailymail Uk



