Cape Argus

Things won’t be easy for Pep the prophet

Dependency on Sergio Aguero at Man City is now more acute than ever

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WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 3 2016

THE irony of it all was that after suffering the indignity of answering the “Is Pep Coming?” question so often in the past six weeks, no one decided to ask Manuel Pellegrini on the day when he actually wanted it out there that he would be on his way on 30 June.

So after an indication that he had “something to say,” at the end of a sparsely attended press conference convened to discuss last night’s match at Sunderland, Pellegrini took it upon himself to break the worstkept secret in British football.

The last of the questions he fielded as the permanent Manchester City manager was actually more telling than any which might have been designed to provoke a Guardiola conversati­on, though. It went along the lines of: “Are you concerned you’ve not won two Premier League games in a row since midOctober?” and to be fair, he did admit that an improvemen­t was necessary. It certainly is.

Beyond the glitter and anticipati­on attached to City’s thrilling and exceptiona­l coup in landing the most celebrated manager on the planet, though, there is the not insignific­ant question of the rebuilding job required of Guardiola. It is a very different landscape to the one Ferran Soriano, the Manchester City chief executive, surveyed when he last hired the Catalonian, as his Barcelona manager in 2008.

Back then, it was the 37-year-old Guardiola’s willingnes­s to keep things just as they were that most impressed the Nou Camp senior management. “It was Josep’s good judgement to take the team left by [Frank] Rijkaard, make only a few changes to it, and regain the commitment of very talented players so that the club could go on to win several titles in the following season,” Soriano reflected years later.

It won’t be the same this time. This is a creaking squad Guardiola takes over. Its spine was establishe­d as far back as Rober- to Mancini’s tenure and two of the core components – Vincent Kompany and Yaya Toure – increasing­ly seem past their best. The ankle of David Silva, another of that extraordin­arily well-judged sequence of signatures from that era, has become a frequent worry and the dependency on Sergio Aguero is more acute than ever.

Re-shaping will be necessary. And though City’s player recruitmen­t system, based on the Barcelona model Guardiola knew so intimately, is the most enlightene­d in the Premier League – problem positions agreed months ahead with four or five targets for each one – the acquisitio­ns have not always delivered immediate dividends.

You wonder where the route back is for Samir Nasri, now omitted from City’s Champions League squad after three months out with hamstring trouble.

Guardiola will also find the expectatio­ns amplified by this early announceme­nt.

Players have experience­d the same when their names have been trailed months before their signing. The weight of anticipati­on will be monumental by the time he – prophet, renaissanc­e man and football genius – actually drives up the Ashton New Road. It will be Jurgen Klopp and Liverpool to the power of 10 – and few untested Premier League managers have been proclaimed such a saviour as the German was ahead of an English baptism, that revealed the complexity and level of difficulty domestic football represents.

There is certainly much for Guardiola to savour, too. In Kevin De Bruyne and Raheem Sterling, there have been more than enough signs that City invested incredibly well.

City are also through the hard yards of their “accelerate­d spending” now, having reached Europe’s top table. They break even – the irony being that the credibilit­y of financial fair play, their bete noire, was shot to pieces when its creator, Michel Platini, was so disgraced.

They have a player of their own, too, in 19year-old striker Iheanacho: an incredibly serious prospect. Those who know City best have been telling us that much since the 2014-15 pre-season tour. Agents talk about the attraction attached to this club for young prospects. “They do have a pedigree now. The interactio­n with them is excellent,” says one.

The reason why Soriano judged Guardiola to be way ahead of Jose Mourinho when the two men were competing for the Barcelona job was the coach’s preference for working with a small first-team squad with “stable hierarchie­s and not a lot of internal competitio­n”. Guardiola chose “to work with 14 or 15 players that have his total confidence,” Soriano wrote. Well, that’s a happy consequenc­e when the group happens to have Lionel Messi, Andres Iniesta and Sergio Busquets in their number. It is a materially different kind of challenge this time. But whoever said that cracking England was going to be easy? – The Independen­t

 ?? EPA ?? TIME FOR A RENAISSANC­E: Pep Guardiola, right, will have his hands full when he takes over from Manuel Pellegrini, left, and sets about creating a new spine at Manchester City.
EPA TIME FOR A RENAISSANC­E: Pep Guardiola, right, will have his hands full when he takes over from Manuel Pellegrini, left, and sets about creating a new spine at Manchester City.
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