Guardiola names two title rivals Chelsea were better than after 4-4 draw

Manchester City manager, Pep Guardiola has hailed Chelsea’s performance in their 4-4 draw on Sunday.

According to Guardiola, the Blues have made it a habit of giving tough games to their Premier League title rivals this season.

He pointed to Chelsea’s 1-1 draw on the opening day of the campaign and a 2-2 draw with Arsenal at Stamford Bridge.

“Liverpool couldn’t win here and they were much much better than Arsenal,” Guardiola said.

The result leaves City on top of the table with 28 points, one more than both Liverpool and Arsenal.

Chelsea have climbed into the top half of the table, sitting in 10th place with 16 points.

Sergio Aguero: Pep Guardiola to be patient with Manchester City striker’s return from injury

Man City have struggled for goals in Sergio Aguero’s absence – managing no more than one in a league game since September’s 5-2 defeat to Leicester – and Pep Guardiola knows it: “I’m not going to say that we don’t need Sergio, we need him. I want Sergio fit”

Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola says his side need Sergio Aguero to return to full fitness, but is ready to be patient over the striker’s comeback from injury in order to avoid further setbacks.

Aguero, who was out for five months after undergoing knee surgery on an injury sustained in the early stages of last season’s restart, made only three appearances this campaign before picking up a hamstring injury.

Saturday’s 2-0 defeat at Tottenham made it one win in three matches for City, who have failed to score more than once in a single Premier League match since September’s 5-2 defeat by Leicester.

Guardiola knows a fit and firing Aguero will be crucial to reviving City’s domestic campaign, but warns he will have to be cautious over how he uses the 32-year-old once he recovers.

“I’m not going to say that we don’t need Sergio, we need him,” said Guardiola after the reverse at Spurs.

“But Sergio, who is 32, was out for five months with a dangerous and difficult injury. He came back and played 50 or 55 minutes and he is injured again.

“We want him and I want Sergio fit because I’m not just discovering now how important he is for us.

“But we have to be careful [to make sure he does] not come back and get injured again. You have to see the right moment to put him in again and hopefully it can be soon and he can maintain the regularity to play games.”

Tottenham made a big title statement as a vintage Jose Mourinho operation saw them beat Manchester City 2-0.

Spurs had just 33 per cent possession and four shots to City’s 22, but once again came away with victory against Pep Guardiola’s City in a clinical smash-and-grab show at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

During a lively opening, Spurs took the lead as Heung-Min Son tucked under Ederson from the edge of the box after Tanguy Ndombele’s chipped pass caught out a high City line (5). It was Spurs’ only shot on goal in the first 59 minutes as Mourinho’s side soaked up City pressure.

Despite some City half-chances either side of the break, Mourinho’s approach continued to work as they snatched a second, man-of-the-match Harry Kane turning brilliantly on halfway and feeding Giovani Lo Celso to finish under Ederson again just 35 seconds after coming on (65).

City were ragged thereon as Spurs closed out victory, and the result means Mourinho, celebrating one year at Spurs, sees his side sit atop the Premier League for 24 hours at least. City’s poor start continues, sitting 10th with just 12 points from eight games.

Pressure on, Pep: Guardiola extension must result in Champions League success for Man City

The Catalan is closing in on a decade since he last lifted Europe’s biggest trophy after a run of disappointing exits during his time at the Etihad.

If Pep Guardiola is actually going to be the manager to finally end Manchester City’s wait to win the Champions League, then he has certainly given himself a little extra breathing space.

By signing a two-year contract extension that keeps him at the Etihad Stadium until 2023, the Catalan now has a total of three more shots at European success.

As the most successful coach in City’s history having collected six trophies in four seasons, Guardiola is assured of his legendary status at the club.

A European triumph, though, would only further strengthen his legacy as well as his reputation as the greatest coach of his generation.

But, with the extra opportunities comes extra pressure.

This year’s final at the Ataturk Stadium in Istanbul will come 10 years and one day after Guardiola last won the trophy back when he was with Barcelona.

The 49-year-old has half-joked in the past that he will be remembered as a failure if he does not win the Champions League at City. He does, to be fair, have previous in that regard.

Domestic dominance with Bayern Munich, where he won three Bundesliga titles and two DFB-Pokals in his three years at the Allianz Arena, was not enough to prevent some in Germany from writing off his time there as being underwhelming.

Seven attempts at trying to win the Champions League with City will now bring an added risk of a similar judgment to his time in England.

Guardiola has contested in the past that it is harder for a club without a pedigree of European success or experience to win the competition, and that it will take time for City to be on the same level as the elite clubs having only previously won the European Cup Winners’ Cup back in 1970.

They have, however, become regulars in Europe’s most prestigious tournament over the past decade, and following heavy investment in the first-team squad, one semi-final in nine successive seasons in the Champions League is a disappointing return.

Paris Saint-Germain have had a similar financial backing, which resulted in them reaching last season’s final. Premier League rivals Tottenham, meanwhile, managed to find their own route to the showpiece in 2018-19 despite not having had anywhere near the same amount of money spent on them when compared to City.

To their credit, City have competently got to grips with qualifying from the group stage of the competition without too many issues, and have reached the knockout stages in their last seven attempts.

This season is no exception, with three victories from their opening three matches ahead of Wednesday’s trip to Olympiacos putting Guardiola’s side on schedule for another early qualification and the opportunity to put all their focus on addressing their disappointing Premier League start.

It is when they get beyond the group stage that the problems have started.

Guardiola has never gone beyond the quarter-final stage with City and faced regular accusations that he overthinks the big matches, with the club having won just three of their seven knockout ties under the Catalan’s tutelage.

Of the successes, two came when they were overwhelming favourites against Swiss champions Basel and German club Schalke, with the other – against Real Madrid last season – the only time they have beaten an established European giant.

Twice, eliminations have come against English rivals – Liverpool and Spurs – when City would later be crowned Premier League champions.

The others were a last-16 defeat to an exciting, Kylian Mbappe-inspired Monaco side in Guardiola’s first campaign and last summer’s shock exit to fellow French side Lyon in a one-off encounter.

“Different year, same stuff,” was Kevin De Bruyne’s honest but withering assessment following the shock quarter-final defeat in Lisbon back in August.

And while much of the focus will be on trying to wrestle back the Premier League title this term, the Champions League remains the most sought-after prize among City’s hierarchy.

In signing Guardiola up for a further two years, they believe they have the best coach available to deliver that dream.

Guardiola: Dias will be an incredible player for Man City for six or seven years

The Spanish boss heaped praise on his new signing after taking down Burnley in the Carabao Cup

Pep Guardiola says that he believes Ruben Dias can be a key figure for Manchester City for “six or seven years” after sealing a deal for the Portuguese defender.

Manchester City completed a £62 million ($79m) move for the defender on Tuesday, with Dias signing a six-year deal with Guardiola’s side.

Part of that cost was offset by a move for Nicolas Otamendi, who completed a move in the opposite direction to Benfica in a deal worth £14m ($17m).

Dias heads to Manchester having already won 19 caps for Portugal and emerging as a star as part of the Benfica set-up.

And Guardiola says that he believes that Dias can be a mainstay for City for years to come as the defender should jump right into matches with his new club.

“I have to thank Nicolas Otamendi, part of the incredible success we have had in recent years,” Guardiola told Sky Sports. “The season we won the league with 100 points he was incredible.

“He played with a broken ankle, with 20 stitches, he had a great mentality so I wish him and his family all the best. He will be one of the things I will always remember about this club.

“We know Ruben Dias’s personality and I am sure he will be an incredible player for the next six or seven years.

“We’re very happy to have him. Our back four are now a young team. We start training tomorrow and get going as quick as possible.”

Manchester City cruised past Burnley on Wednesday in the Carabao Cup, winning 3-0 behind a brace from Raheem Sterling and a goal from summer signing Ferran Torres.

Guardiola was full of praise for the Spanish star, and his side in general, as City now look ahead to a must-watch clash with free-flowing Leeds this weekend.

“[It was] important we didn’t concede and the team was good in general. We are still far away from our best because we’re not training much. We have a lot of players out, six because of Covid and four injuries,” Guardiola said.

“But step by step when we have all the squad we will get better. I hope we won’t be far away from the people up front but we are in the quarter-finals of this competition again so it’s good.

“When you lose a game the most important thing is the next one. Firstly, because if you lose in this competition, you’re out. Secondly because we have just two games before the international break and some players need to play, we didn’t have a pre-season so that’s important we have to give them minutes.

“Ferran Torres needs to improve some things, because we haven’t trained much or spoke much. He has the skills, he’s young, he’s aggressive he can play on both sides, he’s so clever it’s not cross to cross he is always watching what’s happening.”

Man City star facing axe as Guardiola hunts reunion with Bayern legend

Manchester City are reportedly looking to bring in either David Alaba or Nicolas Tagliafico to strengthen their left-back options, but only if Oleksandr Zinchenko leaves the club first.

The Telegraph reports that Pep Guardiola is keen for Zinchenko, 23, to move on so that he can launch a bid for his new defensive targets. Indeed the move would come after City’s £65.2 million capture of Portuguese centre-half Ruben Dias.

Manchester City have now spent around £126million on players this transfer window having previously attained the services of Ferran Torres and Nathan Ake. Now Guardiola is facing a race against time to bring in his fourth signing ahead of Monday’s transfer deadline.

Zinchenko has been predominantly used as a back-up to Benjamin Mendy at left-back having turned down offers from numerous clubs, including Spanish outfit Real Betis, to try and fight for his place in the side. Now, however, The Telegraph says that in order for his club to bring in defensive reinforcements, he will have to make an Eithad Stadium exit three years and 68 games on since his arrival from PSV Eindhoven.

The 28-year-old Austrian worked under the City boss when he managed the German giants between 2013 and 2016. He won three of his nine Bundesliga titles during his tenure and also the 2013 Super Cup and FIFA Club World Cup. The news of Manchester City’s interest in the serial winner comes a month after Bayern Munich chief executive Oliver Khan stated he was “optimistic” that Alaba would sign a new deal with the European champions.

Previous reports claimed that rivals Manchester United and Chelsea are also in the market for the Austrian international after rejecting a new deal with Bayern.