Manchester City struck back after an early wobble to beat Newcastle 3-1 in the FA Cup fifth round, with Omar Marmoush doing the damage yet again and Pep Guardiola finishing the night by joking he would spend his touchline ban on “holiday.”
Same Opponent, Same Punishment
At this stage, Newcastle must be sick of the sight of Manchester City.
This was the fifth meeting between the sides this season, and City have now won four of them in less than two months. For Newcastle, the only way they can face Pep Guardiola’s side again this term is in the Champions League final. They would snap your hand off for that scenario, but they may also be relieved to avoid another meeting before then.
Omar Marmoush was the main problem all over again. The Egyptian scored twice at St James’ Park and now has four of his six goals this season against Eddie Howe’s team. Newcastle just cannot get him out of the script.
Newcastle Came Out Flying
The home side actually started like a team ready to change the story.
Fresh from their midweek win over Manchester United, Newcastle pressed hard, played with intent and created chances early. Will Osula nearly got in, Nick Woltemade saw an effort cleared off the line, and the crowd had plenty to shout about.
They got their reward in the 18th minute. Sandro Tonali slipped Harvey Barnes through, and the winger produced a lovely finish into the top corner. After a 12-game goal drought, it was exactly the kind of moment Barnes needed, and one that may have caught the eye of England boss Thomas Tuchel in the stands.
For a while, Newcastle looked sharp, aggressive and in control.
Then City woke up.
Savinho Turns the Tide Before the Break
Once City found their rhythm, the game tilted fast.
Howe’s midfield setup never looked convincing for long, and City began to move through Newcastle far too easily. The equaliser arrived in the 39th minute when Jeremy Doku beat his man and sent over a cross that Savinho finished at the far post, completely unmarked.
That goal changed the feel of the tie. Newcastle were hanging on by half-time and looked grateful to hear the whistle with the score only 1-1.
For anyone watching with a betting slip in hand, the momentum swing was obvious. Newcastle had their spell, but City suddenly looked like the side far more likely to land the next punch.
Marmoush Slams the Door Shut
City needed only 100 seconds of the second half to go in front.
Matheus Nunes got forward from right back and fizzed a low cross to the far post, where Marmoush was waiting with too much space and a simple finish. Newcastle had not reset properly, and City punished them straight away.
The third goal was the best of the lot. Tijani Reijnders drove through a midfield that had all but disappeared, squared the ball to Marmoush, and the forward whipped a brilliant shot into the top corner from 20 yards. Aaron Ramsdale had no chance.
At 3-1, that was that. Newcastle had no route back, and City were fully in control.
From a punter’s point of view, this was the sort of tie where City’s squad depth told the whole story. Guardiola made 10 changes and still had too much quality, while Newcastle faded badly once the game stopped being played at their pace.
Guardiola Sees Yellow and Talks Conspiracy
The win came with a side order of fury for Guardiola.
The City manager picked up his sixth yellow card of the season after raging at the officials when Doku was pulled back and no free-kick was given. His reaction earned him a two-match touchline ban, ruling him out of the Premier League game against West Ham and City’s FA Cup quarter-final.
After the match, Guardiola was in a sarcastic mood, saying he would go on “holidays” for the next two games. He also made it clear he thought Doku had been denied a straightforward foul.
It was classic Guardiola: delighted with the football, still furious with the officiating, and never far from a running feud with referees.
Squad Players Deliver at the Right Time
What will please Guardiola most is how strong his second string looked.
With big Champions League business looming, he left Erling Haaland at home and rotated heavily. It did not matter. City still had too much movement, too much control and too much quality once they settled.
Savinho was lively, Doku caused problems, Reijnders ran the middle of the pitch and Marmoush finished like a man who clearly enjoys playing Newcastle.
That is the scary bit for the rest. City did not even need their biggest names to get the job done.
What It Means
City move into the FA Cup quarter-finals with their hopes of a four-trophy season still alive.
Newcastle, meanwhile, are left to focus on Europe and to wonder why this matchup keeps turning into the same grim story. They started well, scored first and had the crowd behind them, but once City clicked into gear there was only one likely outcome.
For the average fan, and the average bettor, this was another reminder that backing against City in domestic cup ties remains a dangerous game, even when Guardiola starts shuffling the pack.

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