Egypt's elimination opens the door for a controlled return
Omar Marmoush is heading back to Manchester earlier than planned after Egypt's dramatic 3-2 defeat to Argentina in the World Cup last 16. For Enzo Maresca, that timing is useful.
City's official round-up confirmed Egypt surrendered a two-goal lead in Atlanta. Marmoush came on in the 79th minute, just before Lionel Messi equalised. Enzo Fernandez completed the stoppage-time turnaround.
For Egypt, that was brutal. For City, it creates a practical pre-season opening.
Marmoush now moves out of the deepest World Cup workload bracket. Several City teammates remain locked into quarter-final pressure, so Maresca gets one senior forward back earlier than expected.
That does not make the Egypt international fresh. He has still carried tournament minutes, travel and the emotional weight of a late elimination.
The difference is control. City can now manage his next two weeks rather than wait on another knockout tie.
Maresca's first summer is already staggered. City's official Asia Tour schedule has Inter in Hong Kong on 1 August, a K League All-Stars XI in Seoul on 5 August and Atletico Madrid on 9 August. The club return to England after that, with the Community Shield against Arsenal waiting before the Premier League campaign begins.
Those fixtures are not soft conditioning exercises. They are compressed auditions against varied opponents.
Marmoush being available earlier gives Maresca a useful bridge player. He is not part of the fully rested non-tournament core, but he should avoid the late-returning quarter-final group.
That gives City a flexible forward for tactical work, tour minutes and early attacking chemistry.
City are no longer dealing with one return date. They are dealing with layers.
Erling Haaland remains central to Norway — City confirmed he scored twice to knock out Brazil, taking Norway into the quarter-finals. Marc Guehi and Nico O'Reilly are still with England before the Norway quarter-final. Rodri and Jeremy Doku remain tied to Spain and Belgium's own tournament demands.
That is good for City's profile. It is awkward for Maresca's training pitch.
The head coach will need one version of his attack for early tour work. He will need another when the quarter-finalists return. A third version may be needed once the whole group is physically safe to push. Pre-season will not be linear.
The obvious temptation is to treat Marmoush as an immediate solution. That would be clumsy.
The smarter use is more deliberate. Marmoush can give Maresca a first look at the left-sided and central rotations City need while Haaland's recovery window remains open. He can also offer a different pressing profile at the start of tour camp.
Marmoush has the tools to help early work look more realistic. He can run beyond defenders, attack inside channels and press with intensity.
Those details matter in a new coach's first summer. Maresca needs patterns, but he also needs senior attackers who can carry them at match speed.
City will still have to handle him carefully. A World Cup exit like this can take as much out of a player mentally as physically.
The useful part is the timing. Marmoush has gone out early enough for City to build a plan around him.
In a summer shaped by uneven return dates, that is not a small thing. Egypt's pain may yet give Maresca one of his first workable attacking reference points.