The Mail on Sunday

MAN TO RECKON WITH...

Guardiola knew from moment Tuchel arrived he was a threat

- By Rob Draper CHIEF FOOTBALL WRITER

PEP GUARDIOLA knew he had a problem t he moment Thomas Tuchel was appointed at Chelsea. If there is such a thing a Guardiola Mark II, the Bavarian-born coach is the closest you would get to that.

If Manchester City hadn’t already been forewarned that next season’s title won’t be quite so straightfo­rward, here was the confirmati­on.

Specifical­ly regarding the Champions League final, this was perhaps an inaccurate form guide, City having made nine changes. But Tuchel’s team are one of few in world football who would cause City to fret in a one-off game.

Here they temporaril­y delayed City’s title celebratio­ns. More significan­tly they again outsmarted and outcompete­d a Manchester City side. There were some caveats. City had made nine changes from their win over Paris Saint-Germain and what might be considered the first team. But the reserves were worryingly flat. Legend Sergio Aguero, an embarrassi­ng shadow of his former self, the intermitte­ntly effective Gabriel Jesus and Benjamin Mendy, schooled by Reece James, are unlikely to be sweating on their starting places for the Champions League final.

At least there was some consolatio­n for City in that Guardiola ought to have got his annual overthinki­ng-it-tactical-blunder event, usually reserved for the most important game of the season, out of his system. At times it looked as though the coach who aspires to play with a whole team of central midfielder­s was asking Rodri to run the entire show on his own, with five defenders and four attackers. Even with Mendy and Joao Cancelo as wing backs, he looked alone.

Even more so in the second half, when Chelsea started breaking at speed into space, putting runners in behind City. And Chelsea made their own changes after their epic victory over Real Madrid.

Much of the fear factor Chelsea induce is down to Tuchel. You know exactly what you are going to get with Chelsea. All the players perfectly understand their roles. They move together coherently, like the well-drilled outfit they are. They have dangerous runners. Even the back-up players, like Callum Hudson-Odoi, who has barely featured recently, stretched City when he came on. Hakim Ziyech, who scored the FA Cup semi-final goal that beat City, was equally effective here, getting the equaliser. James kept getting past his man, causing mayhem down the City left. Timo Werner and Hudson- Odoi had second-half goals disallowed for offside, the latter marginal.

Tuchel’s team look like they are building to something special. ‘The feeling now in the dressing room, everyone is super tired,’ he said. ‘Everyone who was out there gave his last drop in intensity and work rate and this is what you need to really feel this strong bond and strengthen this bond, these wins, these big games. You need to be a bit lucky...’ — he was referring to Aguero’s penalty miss and Raheem Sterling’s potential penalty claim — ‘… but the group i s doing everything to force the luck on our side. No, we catch the momentum of another big win and increase our selfconfid­ence in a natural and healthy way.’

Tuchel was right. His team really do make their own luck. ‘Could we have lost the game in the four minutes before half-time?’ me?’ asked Tuchel. ‘Yes. Would that at have been deserved? No. I had the feeling we were tired in the first half, slow i n decision making and rushed our attacks. But half- time we said: ‘ Let’s continue as though it’s 0-0. Don’t lose our heads because of these last few minutes. Step up, play with courage, e, have more ball possession in their half.’

‘And this is what the guys s did did. And the momentum changed completely with the goal. I could feel the confidence growing and we played with more and more quality, pressure and we never stopped attacking. It is a huge win and fantastic second-half performanc­e.’

His players also have to work extraordin­arily hard and they are phenomenal­ly well organised, All the hallmarks of a Guardiola side. They are of course a little more direct, a little more likely to play the ball forward quickly. But all the same, you can see the influence. Though they are only three years apart in age, Guardiola was something of a role model to Tuchel in his formative years. Without an illustriou­s playing career to project his coaching credential­s, the German’s path to the top has been a longer and harder one. He was always desperate to meet Guardiola, even back in 2008, when he had just taken

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 ??  ?? COMMON TOUCH: A hug for Hudson-Odoi after a win that cemented the bond in the Chelsea dressing room
COMMON TOUCH: A hug for Hudson-Odoi after a win that cemented the bond in the Chelsea dressing room
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