Manchester City defender Marc Guehi spoke about an interesting year for him as he looks to make more FA Cup history
It’s fair to say that Marc Guehi’s glass is at least half full. Manchester City staff have been impressed by how their newest signing recovers from setbacks, believing it marks him out as a top player for a top club in the same way that it does for Gianluigi Donnarumma and Erling Haaland.
Guehi arrived from Crystal Palace and plunged himself straight into a City emergency, stabilising a team that had lost two central defenders to significant injuries in the same game and rescuing their hopes in multiple competitions. Commanding performances at Anfield and Stamford Bridge have been highlights to a promising start.
Victory at his former club Chelsea, which included a terrific goal, could have been seen as revenge for not being given a chance as a first team player after coming through the academy. There is none of that though, instead a warmness and gratitude for everyone in West London who he believes played a part in making him the footballer he is today.
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But there have also been setbacks. Guehi had to keep his cool early in his City career when Dominic Solanke kicked through his leg to score for Spurs in a damaging draw for the Blues, and then came the fatal error at Everton when he lost his focus to gift Thierno Barry a goal.
Before then, there was also the bizarre situation of the Carabao Cup. Despite the competition having made moves to stop players being cup-tied – allowing Antoine Semenyo, for instance, to feature for both Bournemouth and City – Guehi became the only ineligible player in the competition by virtue of having only completed his move after the first leg of City’s first leg against Newcastle.
Guardiola pleaded for common sense to prevail but the rules stood and City had to make do without Guehi as well as the injured Ruben Dias and Josko Gvardiol. Having joined City to win trophies, the 25-year-old could only sit and watch – something he hates – as his new teammates came together and won a trophy he had played any part in.
If some would naturally be disappointed, it should not surprise that Guehi has found the positive. Having found it tough to acclimatise to a different environment at City while being asked to play straight away, his enforced absence for the league cup final gave him a front row seat for exactly what is required for a City team to win trophies.
“It was great. It was great, to be honest,” he said. “It was great just to see what the guys were able to achieve against such a formidable opponent in Arsenal. And it was great to see the mentality and just learn. Learn what it takes to go on and on those trophies and in those moments.
“When you’re not in those moments often, it’s hard to understand. So taking, I guess, a backseat was probably the best thing for me and just seeing how well that did was amazing.
“I wouldn’t say it makes me hungrier. I think the hunger is always there. I don’t think it ever goes away. It just makes me appreciate the art of winning a bit more, understanding what it really takes to maintain that level and keep winning and finding new ways to win as well. So yeah, I just appreciate the craft a bit more.”
City have taken the fight for the Premier League title into the final week of the season after beating Palace and have also made it to the FA Cup final to present Guehi with a unique opportunity.
The centre-backs has had to endure a few jokes about beating City in last year’s final in controversial fashion, but could become just the fourth player in history to win the FA Cup in successive years with two different teams. Olivier Giroud managed it with Arsenal and Chelsea in 2017 and 2018, Brian Talbot with Ipswich and Chelsea in 1978 and 1979, and Arthur Kinnaird all the way back in 1878 and 1879 with Wanderers and Old Etonians.
Having also been dumped out of the competition by Macclesfield with Palace in the third round, Guehi could also benefit from the same rules that denied him in the Carabao Cup and become the first player to win the tournament after representing two teams. Needless to say, it has been a memorable year for the player..
“I feel like my football life is just crazy. There’s no, how can I say, consistency to it. It’s just very unpredictable. And it’s quite fun to be honest. But yeah, it’s very interesting. I’m glad to be given the opportunity to play in such a prestigious final again.
“And for this football club, I know how much it means to them to win trophies, especially FA Cup and the history that it has behind and also the record breaking, getting to this part of the competition again. So it’s a really big thing for the football club and I’m glad to be involved in it.”
Part of Guehi’s ‘crazy’ life has been ending up at City at the first place. He was hours away from signing for Liverpool in the final days of last summer’s transfer window, having already done a medical, when that deal collapsed and there was then no guarantee that he would move to Anfield or anywhere else in January.
City were interested in him as a free agent for this coming summer but were not expected to be first in line, yet they pounced in January when other clubs stalled and landed their man. Guehi agreed to come, despite knowing that the majority of his career at the Etihad will almost certainly not be with the best manager in the world in Guardiola.
“I just felt like it was the right timing. Right timing, right place,” he added.
“And I think since I’ve been here only a few months, I just get the feeling that I made the right decision. The people at the football club are incredible. It’s got absolutely everything I need to try and develop as a player and just help the football club go even further.
“And so I just think everything just aligned in terms of timing, in terms of what I wanted in my career and where I needed to be in my own personal life as well. So yeah, it’s just been great.
“There’s so much that we can all improve on. We’re all, I think, trying to learn from the older guys, from the guys that have been there and done it again and again and again. But yeah, definitely see the potential. Whether we go on and do it, it’s up to us. We’ve got to make that decision every day we come into training and be intentional about our work.”
Having arrived, it should come as no surprise that the centre-back is feeling upbeat about City’s chances of silverware for this season and the future. A lot has changed for Guehi since he captained Palace to victory over the Blues at Wembley a year ago, but he has not and that is why City are so pleased he is now theirs.






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