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Man City's fixture complaints ring hollow when non-league players must juggle same schedule and work

Home: Latest & breaking News | GB News [Unofficial] April 28, 2026
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Manchester City’s latest bout of indignation over fixture congestion is as predictable as it is unconvincing.

The reigning champions, blessed with one of the deepest and most expensive squads in world football, are reportedly unhappy at the prospect of playing three matches in seven days.

For most fans across the country, particularly those outside the Premier League bubble, this complaint rings hollow.

Let’s be clear: three games in a week is not some extraordinary hardship. It is, in fact, a routine reality for countless clubs further down the football pyramid.

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Non-league sides regularly endure similarly demanding schedules, often squeezing in midweek fixtures alongside weekend matches.

The crucial difference? Their players are not global superstars earning astronomical wages. Many of them are part-time footballers balancing the game with full-time jobs, five days a week, before pulling on their boots in the evening or at the weekend.

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While Manchester City’s players recover in world-class facilities, supported by elite sports scientists, nutritionists, and medical teams, non-league players are clocking out of offices, building sites, and warehouses before heading straight to training or matches.

The contrast could not be starker. One group operates in a world of luxury and privilege; the other, in a world of graft and commitment driven by passion rather than paychecks.

It makes City’s complaints feel not only out of touch but fundamentally tone-deaf. This is a club that has assembled a vast squad packed with international talent precisely to cope with the demands of modern football.

Rotation is not a luxury for them, it is standard practice. When you can call upon two or three world-class options in nearly every position, the argument that fixture congestion is unmanageable begins to look rather thin.

Of course, player welfare matters. No one is suggesting footballers should be run into the ground.

But there is a difference between legitimate concern and selective outrage.

When smaller clubs face relentless schedules, there is little sympathy from the top of the game.

Yet when a financial powerhouse like Manchester City voices its frustration, it suddenly becomes a headline issue.

Football’s elite would do well to remember the broader ecosystem that sustains the sport.

The pyramid is built on the dedication of players and clubs who operate under far more challenging conditions without complaint.

Against that backdrop, City’s grievances seem less like a serious issue and more like a failure to grasp the realities of the game beyond their own gilded bubble.

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