Business Day

Guardiola says Man City’s triumph was his toughest campaign

- Martyn Herman Manchester /Reuters

Manchester City were confirmed as Premier League champions for the third time in four seasons after secondplac­ed rivals Manchester United lost 2-1 at home to Leicester City on Tuesday.

United’s defeat means City are 10 points clear with both sides having three games left to play. City’s coronation had been delayed after Pep Guardiola’s side suffered a 2-1 home defeat by Chelsea on Saturday, though in truth they have looked uncatchabl­e for several months.

It is Guardiola’s third Premier League title for City in his five seasons in charge and eighth domestic honour for the club.

“This has been a season and a Premier League title like no other,” said Guardiola, referring to the effect of the Covid-19 pandemic that has seen matches played in empty stadiums.

“This was the hardest one. We will always remember this season for the way we won. I am so proud to be the manager here and of this group of players. To come through this season, with all the restrictio­ns and difficulti­es we’ve faced — and show the consistenc­y we have — is remarkable. It is relentless.”

United manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer praised his team for “pushing” Manchester City into the final fortnight of the season, even though they were never serious challenger­s.

“We have pushed City all the way, until 10-12 days left in the season, and it is a very good achievemen­t because they are a very good team,” Solskjaer said. “They are very worthy champions. I have to say congratula­tions because they have played some fantastic stuff this season.”

Despite City’s romp to the title, they endured a tough start to the season after picking up 12 points from their first eight games — their worst start since 2008/2009.

Since then they have been head and shoulders above their rivals, and after hitting the top have looked unstoppabl­e.

After losing at Tottenham Hotspur in November, slipping to 11th in the table, they won 22 of their next 27 matches, including a 15-game winning run and a record-equalling 11 successive away league wins.

Guardiola’s side, second-best to Liverpool last season, also won a fourth successive League Cup and can claim a treble by beating Chelsea in this month’s Champions League final.

Leicester manager Brendan Rodgers said City were deserved champions. “They are the benchmark. They have been outstandin­g. Brilliant players. Incredible manager and they thoroughly deserve the title. Congratula­tions to Pep and his team,” he said.

Manchester United had further delayed City’s title celebratio­ns by beating Aston Villa away on Sunday but Leicester gave

Guardiola’s side a helping hand on Tuesday. Even if United had beaten Leicester, and then Liverpool on Thursday, City could have wrapped up the club’s seventh English title by beating Newcastle United on Friday.

A huge “Champions” banner was draped outside Manchesrer City’s Etihad Stadium while a smattering of fans arrived to mark the occasion.

It will be considerab­ly noisier on May 23 when City host Everton on the final day of the Premier League season with 10,000 fans permitted to attend.

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Pep Guardiola

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