Manchester City have long been accused of pushing football’s boundaries. This week, however, their advantage came from something far more mundane: a rule change.
City’s semi-final success in the Fizzy Cup was shaped by updated eligibility regulations that effectively scrapped the traditional “cup-tied” restriction for certain late-window signings. The tweak meant Antoine Semenyo, signed from Bournemouth for a reported £65m, could feature for City despite previously appearing in the competition earlier in the season. In a previous campaign, that would have been impossible; now it is simply permitted under the revised rules. The original discussion and framing of the change comes from the source piece, ‘Pure logic’ and a final fantasy: Manchester City will have to play by the rules.
City were hardly subtle beneficiaries. Semenyo was able to play in the semi-final and make an immediate impact as Guardiola’s side surged past holders Newcastle United in the first leg, turning a tie that once promised jeopardy into something far closer to a procession. He was not alone: Max Alleyne also impressed for City despite having already represented Watford in the same competition earlier in the campaign, another example of how the revised framework has loosened the old guardrails.
Ordinarily, a manager would greet such administrative fortune with a shrug and a smile. Yet Pep Guardiola’s public posture was notably pricklier. The City boss has frequently argued that the sport’s authorities must be consistent and transparent, and this episode has handed him the perfect paradox: his team have thrived thanks to a “revolutionary tweak”, but the broader implications sit awkwardly with the idea of protecting competitive integrity.
For the neutral, the argument is straightforward. If the rules are written in a way that allows clubs to strengthen mid-competition, the wealthiest squads are best placed to exploit it. That does not mean City have done anything improper; it means the rule-makers have built a landscape in which the strongest financial platforms can become even stronger at precisely the point where margins are supposed to narrow.
City’s position, then, is simultaneously defensible and unsettling. No one forced rivals to vote for change, and no one forced competition organisers to write the amendment. But as Semenyo’s eligibility illustrates, a modernised regulation can quickly become a competitive accelerant.
Infographic: How the semi-final swung
Rule change: Previously cup-tied players can now be eligible under updated Fizzy Cup regulations
Big winner: Manchester City, who fielded new signing Antoine Semenyo
Knock-on effect: Holders Newcastle United were overwhelmed in the first leg
Wider debate: Fairness vs. flexibility in squad building mid-tournament
Key Takeaways
- Manchester City benefited from a revised Fizzy Cup eligibility rule that relaxed cup-tying restrictions.
- Antoine Semenyo was able to feature despite earlier involvement in the competition with Bournemouth.
- Max Alleyne’s appearance after representing Watford highlights the breadth of the change.
- The episode reignites questions about whether rule tweaks disproportionately favour the richest squads.
- Guardiola’s stance underlines the tension between “following the rules” and liking what the rules enable.
Whether this change becomes a footnote or a flashpoint depends on what happens next: not just in City’s pursuit of silverware, but in how quickly football’s lawmakers recognise that even small edits can have outsized consequences when the best-resourced clubs are the ones poised to act.