The Sun (Malaysia)

How Pep ’s coaching turned Sterling around

- BY JACK PITT-BROOKE

IT IS only a small detail but it says everything about the specificit­y of Pep Guardiola’s coaching and the little observatio­ns and improvemen­ts he wants to make in his players’ games.

Guardiola had noticed that when Raheem Sterling received the ball, he would kill it with the outside of his foot, or trap it under his boot, stopping the ball. But that would make life too easy for opposition left-backs, so Guardiola had an idea.

“I would be controllin­g it with the outside of my foot, slowing the ball down,” Sterling revealed at the England press conference on Monday afternoon.

“He’s telling you to get to the left-back quicker. He brings you back to what you used to do with the under 8s, open your body up, gets the rhythm going again.

“He’s telling you to get to the left-back quicker, open your body out and take it with you instead of just controllin­g it and stopping.”

For Sterling it is the simplicity of the instructio­n that gave it its power. “It’s simple stuff, stuff I already know,” he said.

“When you’re playing a game, you probably don’t pick up on it.”

But Guardiola does pick up on these details, which is why he is the best coach in the world. This Manchester City team is proof of that, but so is Sterling, who has transforme­d in less than two years from exciting talent to reliably deadly forward.

Sterling has 20 goals for the season now, the best return of his career, and is showing a confidence and consistenc­y in the final third that has always eluded him in the past.

He is shooting from better positions, more centrally rather than from harder, wider angles, and Gareth Southgate has noticed better execution with his finishes too.

“You can see the confidence in him,” Southgate said of Sterling.

“You can see the positions he’s taking up, his belief in front of goal, he’s scored more goals this week in training than I’ve ever seen. That’s not necessaril­y because he’s technicall­y better, he’s just thinking about the types of finishes a little bit more. “Not snatching at things. Passing things into the net. More confident. More composed.” When Sterling moved from Liverpool to City he was an explosive player but not someone who always made the right decision, or who produced the end product his skills deserved. But that is changing now, thanks to the intense education of Guardiola. “I feel before I was more raw,” said a reflective Sterling. “When I got the ball I wanted to take someone on, beat someone. Now I am trying to pick my moments. If it’s on, it’s on, but if it’s not, then I try to get in the box as much as I can. That’s mainly where I am now.” Last season, City’s lack of a quick rightback meant that Sterling had to play wide on the right much of the time, hugging the touchline to stretch the play. But now that City have Kyle Walker to play out there, Sterling can move inside and attack the opposition centreback­s, as he loves to do. That has made him more dangerous, and also struck up an understand­ing between Sterling and Walker that will be valuable for Southgate again this summer. – The Independen­t

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