Manchester Evening News

Pep: We’ve spent big to win but who hasn’t?

...but so did United, Real Madrid, Barca and everyone else!

- By SIMON BAJKOWSKI

PEP Guardiola says he was convinced to sign a new contract at City by his bosses, despite having done what he came to English football to do.

Having made his name managing one of the greatest teams in the history of the sport at Barcelona between 2008 and 2012, the coach set new standards with Bayern Munich in the Bundesliga before overcoming a difficult first season in England to enjoy unpreceden­ted success at the Etihad.

His City team set several records as they won the Premier League with 100 points before becoming the first team in a decade to retain the title as they picked up a domestic clean sweep the following year – all playing a style of football that many critics argued could not succeed in this country.

With Guardiola having never previously stayed at a club longer than four years and with the Blues starting their fifth season with him at the helm looking short of form and inspiratio­n, it surprised some in the game to see the manager extend his stay at the Etihad until the summer of 2023.

As part of a lengthy press conference yesterday in which he stressed that the managers are not the architects of a club’s success, the Catalan explained how he was pushed into bettering himself and the team.

“I would tell you if I believed the reason why it was me,” he said. “I would be grateful to say that the reason behind this success is because I’m so handsome and that’s the reason why.

“It’s not like that. It’s the players. “The big clubs have incredible success, in South America and Europe, and it’s due to the quality of the players, the mentality.

“The manager can seduce them to have this mentality a little bit but the organisati­on itself too – our chairman does not want one day of sleep, doesn’t want to rest. He pushes me, like I have to push my CEO and the CEO pushes me, and Txiki (Begiristai­n) – we push each other to be better and better, and still I have the feeling when we finished the game against Gladbach maybe it will not be enough to reach the last stages of the Champions League if we don’t improve in some department­s.

“It’s the only way to getting better. If I did not feel we could get better, I would not have extended my contract here. 100 per cent.

“If I extend my contract, it’s because they convinced me for different issues and still that we can do better. If not, the team would be over.

“I came here to win in England and we have done it already – but I did it. I came to play in a special way and I did it. The job is done, but still I have the feeling we can do better. Still I feel we can win more and make our fans proud. We can do it. This is important.

“For a short time, you can do it without top players – half a season, one season, you can do it – but sustaining for a long time, in an incredible hard tough organisati­on, that support their managers a lot so the journalist­s and the players know he will not be sacked, this is so important.

“And after that, (you need) top quality players. I never in my 12 years as manager scored a goal, never. I never saved a penalty, never.

“The artists are the players. All we can do is help them, knowing that doing the same, you can lose. Sometimes people forget the opponents are good too.”

For a long time, Guardiola indicated he would have a cut-off point when he would no longer be a football manager, observing stalwarts such as Roy Hodgson, Carlo Ancelotti and David Moyes with admiration for going on for more seasons than he imagined he would.

However, the City coach has hinted more recently that he could extend his planned career and spoke glowingly ahead of today’s West Ham game about the calmness that the trio of experience­d Premier League coaches have.

If Guardiola would like to be calmer like they are, he also does not want to lose the fighting side of his personalit­y that wants to put as much work as possible into preventing defeat.

As much as his players may also wish he is calmer, they can be happy

I have the feeling when we finished against Gladbach it will not be enough to reach the last stages of the competitio­n

that a manager who has already won so much both at City and in his wider career is still so motivated to achieve more.

“Sometimes I shout at my players and I should not do it but I cannot control it,” he said.

“When I was a player it was like this too, it’s the way I am. I don’t want to be fake to myself. Sometimes I’m more calm. It depends. I do it because I love my job, I enjoy being a manager and I want to be better. I want to try to reach the team every day to do it better.

“I demand a lot of myself, and I have to defend my team. I don’t want to feel weak. I have to be there – they have to know that I am not resting. Now we have two days with the travel, they have six days. Is it an excuse? No way. It’s a challenge, it’s a challenge. The Champions League teams react in this way. The Premier League gives us a challenge and we have to accept it. We cannot use it as an excuse.

“It’s a privilege to have just two days to win another game and then another one. The people who believe ‘it’s only two days’ cannot be at this club. If we have to play one day later, then we will. It’s not tiredness. This is the demands on myself and I demand it of my players too.

“They have to (follow me) – when they arrive they have to know we have to win. If you do not accept it you cannot be there. I want us to be extremely happy when we win and when we lose extremely sad. The day after, calm again and ready. That’s the only way at the big clubs, and this is what we want to be.”

PEP Guardiola has explained the quip in which he put City’s amazing winning run down to the money they have spent.

The Blues says admits there is far more to his team’s consistenc­y than simple hard cash but says it would be impossible to sustain success without financial backing.

The difference is, he points out, the establishe­d elite NEVER get pulled up on the amount they have spent, even though it is a central factor in their years of dominance.

Guardiola had everyone wondering whether he was being honest, or just being sarcastic, when he said – after City had made it 19 wins on the bounce against Borussia Monchengla­dbach – that the run was down to having enough money to buy the best players.

He was asked to expand on that in yesterday’s press conference ahead of today’s Premier League game with West Ham, and admitted there are other factors, but that he was being honest.

“There are many more things – first of all an incredibly strong organisati­on, good, incredible lovely people, the backroom staff, the staff and players especially but when you achieve what this club has achieved in four years, winning a lot of games, you need to have the top players,” he said.

“You can win one title with average players, but to win a lot of titles you need top, top, top players. And top players cost a lot of money, that was my reflection. It wasn’t sarcastic, it was the truth.

“So when Bayern Munich or Barcelona, or Real Madrid or United or Juventus or Milan, or

Glasgow Celtic or Rangers – who win more titles in Scotland – it is because they have more money than other clubs. It’s the way we are doing it, every manager has his own way.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Pep Guardiola signed a new deal which takes him to 2023
Pep Guardiola signed a new deal which takes him to 2023
 ??  ?? Pep Guardiola says City’s success is down to the players, not him
Pep Guardiola says City’s success is down to the players, not him
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom