Pep Guardiola has warned
his Manchester City players that they have to prove themselves all over
again following his arrival at the club.
The former Barcelona and Bayern Munich
coach was making his first public appearance as City handler on Sunday
in front of thousands of fans at a festival held at their Academy
Stadium.
The Spaniard is already familiar with
the players he is inheriting, having faced his new club in Champions
League contests in two of his three seasons at Bayern Munich.
In addition, the new manager has also
been able to glean information on the squad from director of football
Txiki Begiristain, a close friend going back to their days together as
Barcelona players.
Guardiola has also moved quickly to
bring in new talent, signing German midfielder Ilkay Gundogan from
Borussia Dortmund for £20million and Spain winger Nolito from Celta Vigo
for £13.8million.
But he insists that all of his players are starting with a clean slate – regardless of what they have achieved in the past.
Guardiola said: “I know them. I have
played against Manchester City in the last two or three years many
times. I spoke many times with Txiki too.
“I know them, I know their quality but
they have to show me, show the fans again. The past is the past. The
people don’t come here to remember what we did. We are here to try
again.”
Guardiola has indicated that he will not
seek to inflame a long-running rivalry with Jose Mourinho, who took
charge of City’s neighbours Manchester United in late May.
The two managers were involved in a
number of public verbal confrontations in the two years between
Mourinho’s arrival at Real Madrid in 2010 and Guardiola’s departure from
Barcelona in 2012.
That rivalry reached its low point
during a Spanish Super Cup meeting in 2011, when Mourinho was captured
on camera poking Guardiola’s then-assistant Tito Vilanova in the eye
during a touchline brawl.
The north west of England will host
several of football’s big managerial names next season, with Jurgen
Klopp in place at Liverpool and Ronald Koeman in charge at Everton, but
Guardiola insists that the focus should be on the players.
“The people don’t come to see who the
manager is, they come to see how good our players are. I don’t think
just that’s just the case this year, but in the past as well, with
Klopp, with Conte, with Ranieri, Mourinho Pochettino, Koeman. The reason
I work here is just to help the players.”
Guardiola, meanwhile, laughed off
suggestions that he was about to make an attempt to bring five-time
world footballer of the year Lionel Messi to City.
The Barcelona forward, who retired from
international football last week, won two of his four Champions League
titles when Guardiola was the club’s manager.
But asked about the possibility of a
reunion in Manchester, Guardiola said: “He is not a bad player, this
guy. But I am sorry – Messi has to stay in Barcelona for the rest of his
career.”
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