The Mail on Sunday

Pep gives Toure Euro tonic and hints at a new City deal

Toure praises Catalan for helping him turn his season around after spell on naughty step

- By Rob Draper CHIEF FOOTBALL WRITER

PEP GUARDIOLA has said Yaya Toure will be back in Manchester City’s Champions League squad and is in the running for a shock new contract.

The Ivory Coast midfielder, a driving force behind the club’s first Premier League title in 2012, is on a £230,000-a-week deal which runs out at the end of the season. Having been exiled from the squad for the first half of the campaign, until he apologised for insults delivered by his agent Dimitri Seluk, he appeared to have no future at City under Guardiola.

But Toure has made an unexpected comeback, becoming a first-team regular since apologisin­g for his agent’s statements in November, and he has started the last six City games.

‘Yaya will definitely be in the Champions League squad,’ said Guardiola, who takes his team to Everton today. ‘He deserves it. In the first part of the season he wasn’t in the

AS unlikely reconcilia­tions go, Pep Guardiola and Yaya Toure is surely one of the more surprising.

Having been one of the most important players in City’s history, Toure became an outcast once Guardiola arrived, with seemingly little hope of playing again. And yet now he seems an integral part of the Catalan’s squad.

Having been persona non grata, partly because of fitness issues but principall­y because his agent, Dimitri Seluk, had made so many derogatory statements about Guardiola that the manager deemed the player responsibl­e, Toure was not even included in Manchester City’s Champions League squad and played just one match until late November.

But following Toure’s public apology for his agent’s statement, he has played in all 10 Manchester City games for which he was eligible, starting the last six. He is back in the Champions League squad and Guardiola is considerin­g him for next season’s plans, even if it is clear that the City squad will undergo major surgery in the summer.

It has all been enough for Toure even to speak fondly of his boss, who managed him at Barcelona but from whom he seemed estranged. For when asked who had helped him through his exile, Toure namechecke­d Guardiola. Tough love, it seems, pays. ‘All my team-mates helped, as well the coach, because everything has a plan,’ said Toure.

‘The manager knows me very well, he knows me from Barcelona and he knows what I’m capable of doing. He knew what level of physicalit­y I have to have to play a full game. I have been an important player here and, of course, when I was out, there was a lot of conversati­on about me.

‘But for me it was always very, very important to come back to show my team-mates, to show the manager that I could come back and help my team-mates again. Of course, it’s very good when we win and we have to have some important players like me, like Vinny [Kompany] or some of the lads who can push the lads coming up, because City has always been a team which wants to play in the top three.

‘I’m used to being the guy who is always positive. Sometimes the hardest moment in your life can make you grow. I have experience, too. I have been in a difficult situation before. All I want is to bring the sort of football that helps my teammates and entertains the fans. And to make myself proud as well.’

For Guardiola’s part, there were warmer words than ever before. Contracts will not be decided now but what is undeniable in the last six games is that Toure offers a robust- ness and Premier League know-how to the team.

‘In the first part of the season he wasn’t in the squad because of physical reasons and we all know second part why he didn’t play,’ said Guadiola. ‘But, of course, he now deserves to be in the Champions League squad in the next round.

‘We will talk about contracts at the end of the season. I know Yaya better than you. I was with him in Barcelona. He hasn’t surprised me. I judge players on whether they are

able to go to Anfield, Old Trafford, the Nou Camp, or Madrid or Turin and if they are able to react. There is no doubt about Yaya with that.

‘That is the most precious and valued way I judge a player and with Yaya I know it doesn’t matter where he plays. There are good players. But the best players go to the biggest stadiums against the most important teams in quarter-finals and semifinals of big competitio­ns or the Premier League and they react.

‘Yaya’s personalit­y is huge in those terms. But I knew that. I knew it in Barcelona and I knew it in the beginning here.’

Toure is circumspec­t about the prospect. ‘We don’t talk about the future,’ he said. ‘The future is still at City at the moment. I have a couple of months and it’s more important to concentrat­e on that. I’m not thinking about anything else. Of course I’m a positive player and I always want more. But we will see what’s going to happen in the future.’

Against the most energetic and highest-quality teams, such as Liverpool on New Year’s Eve, he may struggle at times. But for most of the current run of five wins in six games, Toure has been a driving force. And Guardiola’s descriptio­n of him as a big-game player suggests there is a case for keeping him, though the £230,000-a-week salary will clearly be a stumbling block for a 33-yearold; not least when Chinese clubs might offer almost double that for a free agent.

For now there is a league title to chase down, starting at Everton today. Toure said: ‘This is a big club, it has brought in one of the best managers in the world as well as top players, but we will see what is going to happen.

‘With the win by Tottenham against Chelsea, everything is open. We will see. Catching Chelsea is going to be difficult because they have the advantage of playing only one game a week. But what we have to do is have a perfect second half of the season.’

As for Guardiola, it is clear that the Yaya issue will be just one which preoccupie­s him in the summer. Jesus Navas, Pablo Zabaleta, Gael Clichy, Bacary Sagna and Willy Cabellero are also all out of contract in May.

Guardiola’s confidant, Marti Perarnau, who wrote the book Pep Evoloution with the City manager, revealed that the incoming manager was alarmed at the age of the squad he inherited, with more than half the players from last season’s group over 30, 17 being 28 or older and only four aged 25 or younger. And though John Stones, Jesus and Leroy Sane have been signed since, City are likely to bring in two younger fullbacks, another centre-half and a wide player next summer. They also have to deal with Joe Hart, Samir Nasri, Wilfried Bony and Eliaquim Mangala, who are on loan but none of whom seemingly has a future at the club.

Yet Guardiola publicly refuses to give up on the old guard, who, he says, deserve respect for what they achieved at City. ‘Those players have to play every single game for themselves, their families and for the team,’ he said of the out-of contract players.

‘Of course, we are concerned. But they are so, so profession­al that we can decide in the next months. We have to see how the team is and how the team develops between now and the end of the season.’

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 ??  ?? OLD PALS’ ACT: Guardiola and Toure are all smiles now CLASS ACT: Toure has shown his quality since returning to the City first team, starting the last six games
OLD PALS’ ACT: Guardiola and Toure are all smiles now CLASS ACT: Toure has shown his quality since returning to the City first team, starting the last six games

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