The Daily Telegraph - Sport

How the title was won with long

The City manager has changed everything about the way the club is run to amazing effect Six of the best The standout victories in stunning season

- There is no repeat of the previous season’s drubbing. Second-half goals from Jesus and De Bruyne earn another three points. West Ham are poised to pull off a shock after they take the lead. But Otamendi levels and David Silva completes the comeback. City

Pts NORTHERN FOOTBALL CORRESPOND­ENT

APos nyone who witnessed Pep Guardiola meticulous­ly straighten­ing the vast array of reporters’ dictaphone­s and mobiles spread out in front of him at a press conference ahead of last week’s derby was offered a glimpse of the Manchester City manager’s obsessive attention to detail.

Those who have watched Guardiola work close up over the two years in which he has transforme­d City from a club of rich promise, but one punching well below its considerab­le weight, to a side that has redefined the Premier League rule book will merely have raised a knowing smile. City’s intoxicati­ng blend of the fast, fluent, free-flowing attack football that has blown away their rivals this season is not the product solely of a benevolent billionair­e Arab owner, as much as the Catalan’s fiercest critics love to paint him as a chequebook manager. It is the result of a near pathologic­al attention to detail that has extended far beyond what the Catalan and his loyal staff merely do on the training pitch.

Imagine, for example, the surprise on the faces of the club’s ground-staff when Guardiola convened a meeting early in his reign as City manager and relayed in painstakin­g detail the exact specificat­ions to which they should cut the grass at the Etihad Stadium and CFA training base. “Nineteen millimetre­s, no more,” Guardiola told them, the same specificat­ions he had insisted upon at Barcelona and Bayern Munich. When it was explained to Guardiola that the grass needed to be a little longer in Manchester to account for a colder, rainier, more unpredicta­ble climate, the manager was intrigued and wanted to know precisely why.

A compromise of 23 millimetre­s was eventually reached, with the grass even longer on the training pitches that incur a heavier workload, although Guardiola refused to give any ground on his insistence that the pitches were watered frequently given the City fall behind but recover, equalising through Aguero and winning courtesy of Sterling’s (right) late goal.

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Pos importance of a slick pitch to his style of play.

If this is how particular Guardiola was when it came to every blade of grass, it was very apparent there was going to be no cutting of corners where the players were concerned.

His record both as a player and a coach demanded respect and was essential in helping him to lay down the law in his first season at City. Anyone who was over a certain weight threshold was not allowed to train and would be put on a personal conditioni­ng programme. Diets were overhauled, the medical set-up pored over. But he felt it would all be undermined unless the team forged a strong sense of identity.

Guardiola was aware the dressing room had become full of cliques under Manuel Pellegrini and was determined that cohesion and unity would prevail. It is why he switched the Wi-fi off in corners of the training ground to encourage conversati­on between players. Team bonding sessions became a regular occurrence, such as a trip to the Printworks cinema in Manchester to watch La La Land on his birthday.

Win, lose or draw, it was made clear every member of the playing squad should go over to salute supporters. The team was told to take to the field and depart together. Post-match meals for the entire squad became mandatory, as did lunch in the canteen on training days. Small circular tables were discarded and long benches introduced to ensure players mixed. It is a formula that has reaped rich rewards and is one reason why Guardiola was so keen to defend the raucous celebratio­ns in the wake of City’s derby win at Old Trafford that sparked a huge tunnel bust-up after riling Jose Mourinho, his great adversary who has been collateral damage in City’s relentless march to the title.

Guardiola wants the music on full blast. “I’ve never known a team spirit like this before,” Kevin De Bruyne, the City midfielder, said this month.

Still, Guardiola would hate to be lauded in isolation. It is with good reason that he insists all his backroom staff are pictured on those multiple manager of the month awards he has collected. Speaking to those close to Guardiola, it is interestin­g to hear he has refined his manmanagem­ent approach at City after being accused of being a little too detached from players at times at Bayern. He still finds it difficult not to talk about football for longer Nov 29 Another late, late show. City are pegged back by Oriol Romeu’s 75th-minute strike. Sterling – again – wins it deep in added time.

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Pos Pts Pos than 32 minutes – the so-called “32-minute rule” revealed by his trusted lieutenant and confidante, Manel Estiarte, who has been omnipresen­t at his side – but one source said “nowadays it has a more emotional component, more of a personal relationsh­ip with the players than before”. “He has a really good personal relationsh­ip with the players, which shows in the collective atmosphere,” the source added. “It’s where he has progressed the most.”

It would be wrong in some respects to say Guardiola’s work at City began when he pitched up in June 2016. He had been quizzing players who had experience­d English football about whether his ideas would work on these shores as far back as his Barcelona days.

Whatever his preconcept­ions, he has been unwavering in his belief his way could win out in the face of all those who said it could not after a disappoint­ing debut season. Some key changes in the summer have been instrument­al, not least the arrival of younger, more energetic full-backs and Ederson in goal. But even with a new arsenal of full-backs, Guardiola has had to improvise, Benjamin Mendy’s cruciate injury prompting him to make high calibre left-backs of Fabian Delph and Oleksandr Zinchenko.

Everywhere you look there are examples of Guardiola’s coaching at work. Ever since he berated Nicolas Otamendi on the pitch at half-time of City’s Champions League qualifier against Steaua Bucharest, for needlessly diving in and almost conceding a penalty, he has been driven to successful­ly rid the Argentina centre-half of the reckless, lazy tendencies that so exasperate­d Pellegrini’s staff.

Another defender, John Stones, was told not to kick it out, to always keep the ball in play, by Guardiola and initially doubted he was capable of doing so. But it is not just those with question marks over them who Guardiola has enhanced. Despite their strained relationsh­ip, Sergio Aguero’s developmen­t into a more complete centre-forward is evidence of how player and manager do not necessaril­y have to get on to thrive.

David Silva, at 32, is playing the best football of his career. Raheem Sterling has developed repetitive positional exercises which have been central to Guardiola’s training methods, as have 11 v 11 matches, and tireless work on winning the second balls. And the scary thing for City’s rivals? The Guardiola revolution may be just getting into full swing. Pts Pos Pts Pos

Win, lose or draw it was made clear that every player should go and salute the fans

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