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Guardiola Calls for Champions League Rule Change After City Draw Madrid Again

Guardiola urges rule change after Manchester City again draw Real Madrid in Champions League last 16

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Pep Guardiola has urged UEFA to revisit Champions League knockout rules after Manchester City were paired with Real Madrid in the round of 16. City have now drawn Madrid again weeks after their most recent meeting, a 2–1 league victory in December.

Guardiola said he wants to prevent early repeat fixtures that can come from teams who already met in the competition’s opening phase. “Yes, it is a little bit weird [to face Madrid again],” he said.

The manager pointed to the timing of the group stage finish as part of the issue, noting that the last game of the group stage—Real Madrid vs. Benfica—became the first draw. He argued that the current sequence made the outcome appear unusual and suggested UEFA should consider changes to stop teams who met in the first stage from meeting early in the knockouts.

City face a daunting path through the knockout stages. Their portion of the bracket includes Bayern Munich, Liverpool, Chelsea, Paris Saint-Germain, Galatasaray and Atalanta alongside Real Madrid, making the route to the final especially demanding on paper.

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Arsenal avoided that side of the draw and were paired with Bayer Leverkusen for the next round. Mikel Arteta’s team would face Bodø/Glimt or Sporting CP in the quarterfinals, with one of Barcelona, Newcastle United, Atlético Madrid or Tottenham Hotspur waiting in the semifinals.

Despite the apparent imbalance, Guardiola dismissed the notion that Arsenal have an easier route. “ [It] would be so disrespectful [to], for example, Newcastle, Barcelona, top teams, Atlético Madrid or Spurs,” he said. “So I’m not a fan of that [saying it’s the easier half of the draw].”

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Saka Returned to Arsenal Squad as Fitness Issues Ease Ahead of Newcastle

Arsenal welcome Bukayo Saka back for Newcastle as fitness improves; Calafiori also included.

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Mikel Arteta confirmed Bukayo Saka will be part of the matchday squad for Saturday’s visit from Newcastle United, a welcome development as Arsenal seek to arrest a late-season dip.

The 24-year-old has struggled for fitness this season, with this his third period on the sidelines this year. While none of his injury woes have been particularly serious, they have prevented Saka from building up any sort of momentum. “We have given him some time because there was a moment that he was struggling to sustain the performances because he wasn’t comfortable at all and we’ve done that so he had the right treatment, the right space,” Arteta explained before the game.

“He had some time as well for himself and now it’s the most important part of the season and he’s back with us.

The timing of Saka’s return matters. Watching a fatigued, physically bruised squad fall into a slump at the end of the season is nothing new to Arteta, and it is no coincidence that Arsenal’s title hopes have once again faded during Saka’s latest spell on the sidelines.

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Arsenal’s wider fitness problems are easing. Saka returns to the squad alongside left back Riccardo Calafiori, while captain Martin Ødegaard made a surprise return to the starting lineup against City last time out. The manager made clear that availability alone is not the final goal: “Being available is not enough,” Arteta reflected. “Being available with your best version is what we need in this stage of the season. But at least they are with us. They certainly make us stronger.

“We miss them. And now all the players as well, they’ve just come back as well. They’re going to have more games, more minutes, and hopefully we will see a performance as well.

Arteta’s comments underline the importance of regaining full fitness across the squad as Arsenal prepare for a key fixture against Newcastle. The inclusion of Saka and Calafiori restores options and experience as the team aims to recover momentum.

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Keane Rekindles Old Grievance After Haaland-Gabriel Confrontation

Keane mocked the Haaland family after Erling’s clash with Gabriel on Stick to Football in the panel.

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Roy Keane reopened a long-standing dispute with the Haaland family after the confrontation between Manchester City striker Erling and Arsenal defender Gabriel. The incident began with a grappling moment from an aerial challenge in which the two players came together, pressed foreheads and Gabriel pushed his opponent forward. It was not a full headbutt, but it came close. Haaland appeared dumbfounded and his refusal to hit the deck may have prevented Gabriel receiving a red card and a three-match suspension.

There was no VAR intervention. The Match Center ruled the action not to be “excessively aggressive or violent”, citing a perceived lack of force.

Keane commented on the episode during the latest episode of Stick to Football, where the panel discussed the match and the Haaland-Gabriel flashpoint. “His dad would have gone down. I am sure of it. Sorry,” Keane chimed. The line referred back to Keane’s infamous knee-high challenge on Alf-Inge Haaland, then of Manchester City, during a heated derby clash in 2001.

The animosity between the pair has earlier roots. In 1997 Haaland, then of Leeds United, stood over Keane accusing him of feigning injury when Keane had in fact torn an ACL.

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Keane later addressed the 2001 tackle in his autobiography, released the following year. He wrote: “I’d waited long enough. I f—-ng hit him hard. The ball was there [I think]. Take that you c—. And don’t ever stand over me again accusing me of fake injuries.”

The consequences of the 2001 incident were significant. Keane received an initial red card that triggered a three-match ban and a £5,000 fine. His admission that the tackle was premeditated prompted a further five-game suspension and a larger £150,000 fine. After Keane’s 2002 revelation Manchester City sought to pursue lost earnings on Haaland’s behalf. It is notable that the Norwegian midfielder finished the match in which the tackle occurred, played 45 minutes in an international fixture and then 68 minutes in City’s next league match. He eventually retired in 2003, with a long-term, preexisting injury to his left knee the ultimate problem.

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City-Arsenal US TV Record Sharpens 2025/26 Title Race

Man City’s 2-1 win over Arsenal set a U.S. viewership record, and intensified the 2025/26 title race.

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Manchester City’s 2–1 victory over Arsenal on Sunday became the most-watched Premier League game in United States history two months before the World Cup comes to U.S. soil this summer. Goals from Rayan Cherki and Erling Haaland delivered the win that pushed City into a decisive stretch of the 2025/26 campaign.

The result left Arsenal and City level on 70 points apiece, with City occupying the summit on goals scored. The win also closed a gap that had been three points after the match and was further narrowed when Pep Guardiola’s men defeated Burnley 1–0 on Wednesday.

In the United States the April 19, 2026 clash drew 2.6 million combined English- and Spanish-language viewers across NBC, Peacock, and Telemundo. That figure tops a list that includes another Man City versus Arsenal broadcast, which also recorded 2.6 million viewers on March 31, 2024.

Other high-ranking fixtures in U.S. viewing figures include Manchester United versus Arsenal on Aug. 17, 2025 (2.5 million), Arsenal versus Manchester United on Jan. 22, 2023 (2.3 million), and Liverpool versus Arsenal on Dec. 23, 2023 (2.3 million). All five of the most-watched Premier League matches in the United States featured the Gunners.

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City’s latest win over Arsenal now heads that list, eclipsing last year’s goalless draw at the Etihad, which could not match the weekend’s intensity. The match’s audience underlines an undeniable trend in the United States: soccer’s profile is at its highest level to date.

With the World Cup scheduled to take place across 11 U.S. cities this summer, the record numbers from club competition suggest a strong domestic appetite for the sport. Millions of fans from around the world are set to attend the tournament, and millions more throughout the host nation are expected to follow the action closely.

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