Iran Daily

Manchester City targets Premier League dynasty

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Manchester City is setting its sights on establishi­ng a dynasty in English football and finally conquering Europe after its relentless march to a third Premier League title in seven seasons.

Pep Guardiola’s men have already matched one of the greatest sides of the Premier League era by winning the league with five games to spare to equal Manchester United’s record in 2000/2001, AFP reported.

The Premier League points and goals records are also likely to be smashed but the true test of whether City deserves its status in the list of all-time greats will be what comes next.

“I want to see the reaction from us next season as I’ve never been able to retain a title,” said club captain Vincent Kompany, a three-time Premier League winner.

Since City’s Abu Dhabi owners started pouring in hundreds of millions to the club’s coffers a decade ago, Manuel Pellegrini and Roberto Mancini have also delivered titles but never sustained success.

This year’s title triumph is just the fifth in the club’s history, putting them well behind fierce rival United, with a record 20 titles, but Guardiola’s side is now the preeminent team in the city and in the country.

“Retaining a title is the next step and City were not in the right state of mind,” said United’s former boss Sir Alex Ferguson after retiring in 2013, having won the title back from City.

“When I won the league for the first time in 1993, I didn’t want my team to slacken off. The thought appalled me.”

Fortunatel­y for City, it now has a coach as relentless­ly dedicated to winning as Ferguson was.

Guardiola has now won seven league titles in nine seasons as a senior coach in three countries after conquering La Liga and the Bundesliga with Barcelona and Bayern Munich on multiple occasions.

The workaholic Catalan’s eye for detail in changing the culture at City has gone as far as dictating to the millimeter how long the grass should be at the club’s many training pitches and turning off the Wifi at City’s Etihad campus to foster interactio­n between teammates.

Guardiola’s intensity can provoke burnout in himself and his players. He required a sabbatical after four draining years at Barcelona during which he won 14 trophies and he only ever planned to stay at Bayern for three seasons.

His City contract expires at the end of next season but the club is confident he will extend for at least one extra year.

“City hope to tie Guardiola to a new contract,” wrote Oliver Kay in The Times.

“They are delighted with his impact, but winning the title was just one part of the mission... they want to be champions again and again, establishi­ng them as the dominant force in the Premier League.”

Backed by a level of spending never seen before in English football, Guardiola has amassed a squad capable of dominating for years to come.

Of the more than €500 million ($616 million) spent in transfer fees alone during Guardiola’s reign, the vast majority has been on players under the age of 25 in Gabriel Jesus (21), Leroy Sane (22), John Stones (23), Benjamin Mendy (23), Bernardo Silva (23), Aymeric Laporte (23) and Ederson (24).

“There will always be those who see the money spent as detracting from the beauty but Guardiola has also improved players and he has blended them to accentuate their assets,” said Jonathan Wilson in the Guardian.

“Yes, money has been spent but City have got full value for it.”

Seven trophies have been won since Sheikh Mansour’s takeover, but one glaring one is missing.

Even Guardiola’s record-breakers have fallen short again in the Champions League, losing 5-1 on aggregate in the quarterfin­als to Jurgen Klopp’s Liverpool. “Sooner or later it’s going to happen,” insisted Guardiola, who has consistent­ly stated City’s need to grow gradually on the European stage, having made the Champions League semifinals just once in its history.

Guardiola has taken City back to the pinnacle of the English game. Keeping the Citizens there and finally breaking through their Champions League glass ceiling is now the challenge.

The Pacers, who dominated most of the game, shot 45.6 percent while holding the Cavaliers to 38.5 percent.

The teams will play Game 2 on Wednesday night in Cleveland.

Lebron James contribute­d a triple-double for the Cavaliers with 24 points on 7-of17 shooting, 12 assists and 10 rebounds. J.R. Smith scored 15 points off the bench, and Kevin Love had nine points and team-high 17 rebounds deficit to 70-63. The Pacers, who led by as many as 23 in the quarter, had to settle for a 73-65 advantage after three quarters.

After the Cavaliers closed the margin to 76-69 with a driving layup by James, the Pacers answered with a 12-2 run, including three-pointers by Oladipo and Bogdanovic, to take 88-71 lead with 7:28 to go in the fourth quarter.

James-led teams had won 21 consecutiv­e first-round before Indiana closed the half strong.

The Pacers shot 47.6 percent in the first half compared with 36.6 percent for the Cavaliers. The Pacers were seven of 14 from the three-point arc while the Cavs were two of 14.

Overall, Indiana made 11 of 28 three-point attempts while Cleveland hit eight of 34 from long range.

The Pacers won the regularsea­son series 3-1.

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 ??  ?? DAVID RICHARD/USA TODAY SPORTS Pacers’ Victor Oladipo (R) goes up for the basket against Cavaliers in Game 1 of an NBA basketball first-round playoff series in Cleveland on April 15, 2018.
DAVID RICHARD/USA TODAY SPORTS Pacers’ Victor Oladipo (R) goes up for the basket against Cavaliers in Game 1 of an NBA basketball first-round playoff series in Cleveland on April 15, 2018.

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