Scottish Daily Mail

The moment of truth arrives for Guardiola and Mourinho

- IAN LADYMAN

ASKED about one Manchester United manager, Pep Guardiola talked about another. ‘I remember when I was a young boy seeing Sir Alex Ferguson winning the English titles,’ said Guardiola yesterday. ‘That’s beautiful and that is what I want to live with my guys — and then celebrate it.

‘The toughest league (in Europe) is this one. To win the Premier League, to feel that title, if we are able to, will be special. And we will always remember it.’

As body swerves go, it was a good one. Field a question about Jose Mourinho and answer with a story about Ferguson. Nicely done.

But as the Manchester City manager stands on the threshold of one of the more remarkable achievemen­ts of a remarkable career, Guardiola cannot escape the significan­ce of facing Mourinho’s United at the Etihad Stadium today.

Mourinho caused Guardiola much anguish when their spells in charge of Real Madrid and Barcelona overlapped in Spain.

By the end, Guardiola looked a little broken. ‘He has won the war,’ he is known to have said.

In England, the renewing of the rivalry was supposed to characteri­se the narrative of the modern Premier League, but it has not turned out that way.

If City beat United today, they will win the title with six games to spare. It has not been so much a rivalry as a race with only one horse in it.

‘I respect him a lot, Jose,’ said Guardiola with a small sigh. ‘But I have many rivals. I am a big boss. I’ll give you a huge list of my big rivalries.

‘I never beat Mourinho and he never beat me. Our teams beat the other ones, so I don’t play against Jose and he doesn’t play against me. We are still in the business and we’ll play 1,000 times more.

‘Listen, when I arrived here I understood what it was. “Pep arrives and they are both together” — but it’s two years now and nothing happened in a special way. So what I want to feel now is to win the toughest league by far. This one. If we don’t do it, okay, the next game maybe.’

Of Guardiola’s list of rivals, one was subsequent­ly to be named yesterday.

The Spaniard’s deliberate revelation that the agent and longtime foe Mino Raiola offered him United’s midfielder and record signing Paul Pogba in the January transfer window was as big a hand grenade ever to have been thrown before any derby in recent memory. It was an extraordin­ary moment and we will feel the reverberat­ions at kick-off this evening.

At City, they will relish this opportunit­y to win. Whether they admit it or not, a sense of inferiorit­y developed and engrained over so many red-stained years has not yet been banished by the two league titles claimed in the nineand-a-half years of Arab ownership.

Another one today — claimed and celebrated in the presence of the great enemy — would represent one more huge step in the struggle for comprehens­ive and lasting self-worth.

Guardiola may not understand all of that and why should he? He has watched footage of the lastminute Sergio Aguero goal that gave City their first Premier League title six years ago and said yesterday that nothing his team do today could eclipse that for drama. He is right.

But the Spaniard will not really comprehend the many deep layers of rivalry with United.

Peel one way and there will always be another. They will come today not just to celebrate the beauty and effectiven­ess of City’s modern football but also to hopefully bear witness to the pale shadow of their great selves that United have become.

Mourinho’s team are second in the league but at times it doesn’t feel that way. Yesterday, the United manager’s press conference countenanc­e was so downbeat he was all but asked if he was actually okay. ‘It’s because you are not asking me about the match,’ was his reply.

So, about the match. United will attempt to spoil just as they did in running City close before losing 2-1 at Old Trafford last December.

They have had a week of rest while City were humbled at Anfield in the Champions League and it is this extra energy — coupled with the knock-on effects of such a miserable night for Guardiola’s team on Merseyside — that combine to give Mourinho great hope of spoiling the party.

It could happen. It would be surprising if City are at their best and Guardiola may rest players ahead of Tuesday’s return with Liverpool.

If Mourinho hopes to get out of east Manchester with his pride intact then there is opportunit­y to do so. If not, he will be forced to live through something close to his worst nightmare. Both teams have improved this season, it’s just that City have improved more, much more.

Guardiola’s team have 23 points more than this time last year and have scored 28 more league goals.

Guardiola said yesterday this triumph will not signal the start of City hegemony but it is hard to agree.

Mourinho will fear he is about to see a Guardiola title celebratio­n at the Etihad. The stark truth is that he may actually be witnessing the start of something very much bigger. Small wonder that nobody is really sure whether he is preparing to stick around in Manchester for long.

 ??  ?? Best of rivals: Guardiola and Mourinho clashed when both managed in Spain
Best of rivals: Guardiola and Mourinho clashed when both managed in Spain
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