Sunday People

Silva sub story as Pep shows he is no fan of dissent

- By Simon Mullock

BERNARDO SILVA is finding out that you cross Pep Guardiola at your peril.

In the five years since the livewire Portuguese midfielder arrived at Manchester City he has arguably been their most consistent performer.

After spending last summer agitating for a move to Spain, he answered his manager’s plea to help him win a fourth Premier League title.

But it’s been more of the same this year. Barcelona want Silva and he fancies La Liga, but City are demanding £80million and the Catalans can’t afford it.

Silva has spurned chances to put the speculatio­n to rest, perhaps forgetting that Guardiola still has eyes inside the Nou Camp and will know all about the machinatio­ns of agent Jorge Mendes.

City’s manager admitted that he doesn’t know where Silva will be when the transfer window closes.

But actions speak louder than words.

And when the champions stepped out at The Etihad for the first time this season, the midfielder was in the same place that he was at the London Stadium last week – on the bench.

When Phil Foden went off at half-time it was Jack Grealish who replaced him.

Silva was given the final half-hour and felt the love from City fans. They sang his name incessantl­y.

But Guardiola doesn’t do dissent.

Raheem Sterling spoke about being unable to understand why he wasn’t one of the first names on the City team-sheet.

But Sterling once questioned Guardiola when he was left out of the team and the relationsh­ip was never the same.

Guardiola is a control freak – and not just when it comes to expecting his players to follow tactical instructio­ns to the letter.

It’s what makes him a serial winner.

Ronaldinho and Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c found it out at Barcelona. Bastian Schweinste­iger was dumped at Bayern Munich, where even club doctor Hanswilhel­m Muller-wohlfahrt discovered that 38 years’ service counted for nothing after crossing the coach.

That’s why Guardiola would have been delighted by City’s first goal.

The common perception is that Erling Haaland has been signed for his finishing.

Haaland bagged a double on his debut at West Ham and would have been disappoint­ed when he swept Grealish’s pass wide before he was substitute­d 15 minutes from time.

But after 18 minutes the Norwegian illustrate­d his ability to be a maker as well as a taker of goals, swapping passes with Ilkay Gundogan to enable the German to sweep home a sweet finish.

City scored 99 goals without a striker to retain the title last season and this was a day to show that Haaland won’t carry the burden alone.

When Kevin De Bruyne showed why he’s on the three-man shortlist to win the Ballon d’or by curling home a second it was all over after half-an-hour.

Foden and a Jefferson Lerma own goal wrapped up the scoring.

But Bournemout­h know it could have been a lot worse.

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 ?? ?? PEP TALK: Silva gets instructio­ns from Guardiola
PEP TALK: Silva gets instructio­ns from Guardiola

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