Scottish Daily Mail

PEP’S GOT ALL THE POWER

Players wear what he tells them, eat what he tells them...and even go through the doors he chooses!

- IAN LADYMAN

PEP Guardiola has said it himself. Nothing in Manchester City’s present or future will ever match the drama of Sergio Aguero’s title-winning goal of May 2012. Even when replayed almost six years on, there is something about that injurytime strike against QPR that remains utterly spellbindi­ng.

So the title clinched by Guardiola and his players by virtue of a rainy Manchester United defeat at home to West Brom on Sunday feels different already. It has seemed inevitable if not from the very start of the season then certainly from the onset of autumn.

But what Premier League title win number three for City lacked in suspense and unpredicta­bility, it more than makes up for in terms of potential. As funny as it sounds, that success of 2012 signalled not the start of something for manager Roberto Mancini but the end. A year later, City’s title had gone and so had their manager.

This time, it really should be very different. The modern Manchester City — with Guardiola and his allies embedded deep in its heart — is now set up for enduring success.

Hegemony does not always arrive when you think it will in sport but City — with a bright coach, a young squad and yet more money to burn — would appear to have the tools to ensure that, for the rest, second place in the Premier League becomes the height of their ambitions.

It will not be this straightfo­rward. It never is, happily.

Some of City’s rivals will improve ahead of next season. It is hard to say what we will get from United, Chelsea and Arsenal but if Liverpool and Tottenham do not come on stronger it will be a surprise.

However, the bottom line is that City have a couple of furlongs start on everybody else and it currently feels very hard to imagine them giving that up.

The key to most things in football is good players but it isn’t everything. City proved that in 2012. Mancini stood at the head of an unpredicta­ble, temperamen­tal dressing room. Not all of his players were even keen to join the open-top bus parade that followed that title win and things pretty quickly nosedived from that point on.

Over the course of that summer, Mancini and his board argued over new players and just about anything else that they could find to disagree on. Transfer targets were missed while other players were signed on the hoof. Celtic’s Scott Sinclair — a spectacula­r failure — was signed from Swansea after Mancini realised on the way home from a pre-season tour in August that his team needed some pace.

These days, City’s transfer targets have been in the system for weeks and months. It will be a surprise if deals for another central defender and a holding midfield player are not all but agreed with the players and their agents already.

The modern City have learned from their recent mistakes and that is understand­able, given that there have been many. Fundamenta­l to it all is that Guardiola — the manager — is now at the very centre of the whole process.

That was not the case with Mancini and he hated it. His title win earned him a new contract but no more power.

His successor Manuel Pellegrini also won a league title and took the club to the last four of the Champions League. But the Chilean’s sense of self-worth, security and ambition was never helped by the fact Guardiola was always being lined up to succeed him. He knew it as well as his players suspected it.

City’s current incumbent has none of these problems. If the modern City has not quite been built in his image then he certainly has his thumbprint­s all over its recent redesign.

City used to be wary of giving their manager too much power, always worrying about what would happen if and when he left. They watched United’s house fall down once Sir Alex Ferguson walked away with its foundation­s in his back pocket and vowed it would not happen to them.

So there is risk attached to what amounts to a subsequent volte face on that policy. Guardiola has influence that executives at the Etihad once briefed a coach would never have but City feel it has been worth it. Who is to say they are wrong?

City players and staff wear the clothes the manager chooses, eat the food he chooses and even enter the training ground and dressing rooms by the doors he chooses. Like many managers, he is a control freak at heart but the difference is that he is allowed to be.

City would have liked some words from their coach yesterday to feed their supporters’ ravenous appetite for content in the wake of their title win. But Guardiola chose to say nothing and, frankly, nobody dare argue.

What matters now, then, is what happens next. Football director Txiki Begiristai­n’s mixed record in the market has improved in recent summers and he must deliver again this time. As Liverpool showed recently, there are holes in the Guardiola prototype.

But City have something special on which to build. We should not doubt that. Whether they win the Premier League again next season will probably be down to them and nobody else. That is a sobering thought for those whose task it is rein them in.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom