Tag: Guardiola

  • EPL: Our plan is to hurt Man City – Conte

    EPL: Our plan is to hurt Man City – Conte

    Tottenham Hotspur manager Antonio Conte says his team will have to hurt Manchester City tonight in their Premier League fixture.

    Conte said he and the players must continue to work as hard as possible if they’re to take anything away from the Etihad.

    “You know very well that we are facing, in my opinion, the best team in this moment and one of the best teams in the world,” said the Head Coach. “We are talking about a team that is full of top players and for this reason we have to perform, to over-perform, to try to get a good result.

    “Last season the result was good but you know very well, when you play against City, you have to concede possession of the ball for a long part of the game and in the part that you have the ball, you have to try to hurt them. We are working very hard to do it.”

    Offering his thoughts on City striker Erling Haaland, who has plundered a remarkable 27 goals in all competitions, Conte continued: “We are talking about a young player but at the same time, I think his status is an important status. He is showing to be a really strong player, he has scored over 20 goals – it’s incredible in your first season in the Premier League to score in this way. Yes, we have to pay attention (to him), but we have to pay attention to all of Manchester City’s players because we are talking, I repeat, about a really good team.”

    Spurs face City again in the League on February 5.

    “We have to play game by game,” Conte added. “For sure, they will be two difficult games because they are second in the table, usually they win the league, and also this season I think, with Arsenal, they are the two title contenders to win the Premier League. It won’t be easy, it’s normal, but at the same time it can also be a big push for my players to try to give everything to deliver a good result for our fans.”

  • EPL: “It’s my fault” – Pep Guardiola takes blame for Haaland

    EPL: “It’s my fault” – Pep Guardiola takes blame for Haaland

    Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola says it is his fault for Erling Haaland’s poor run of form.

    Haaland has hit an incredible 27 goals in all competitions since joining from Borussia Dortmund in the summer.

    But he has failed to score in his last three outings and Guardiola says the supply to the striker needs to improve.

    “We have our game, we have our principles but the way we played in last two games didn’t help Erling to score,” Guardiola said.

    “In the build-up you can be wider, but in the final third you have to have players in the middle. If Erling is not there we are not going to score goals.

    “In the past we have always had incredible movements in the final third, in the small spaces. Now, in the last two games, we haven’t had it. I would say it was my fault. I didn’t make them understand the way we have to attack.

    “We need runners, not just Erling. If we had just Erling he would be controlled by two or three central defenders. We need more players in those positions, definitely. We have done it. We have to do it more often.”

    City host Tottenham on Thursday night.

    Guardiola continued: “I prefer to be eight points in front but I like to handle this situation, I love it.

    “I have to find something to make the team better. I’m the man responsible. When the players don’t play good, if they don’t have the desire to do it, it is because something is wrong in my decisions. We have to find it.

    “People don’t think about the memories, how good we were. When I die people will talk about how good Pep was. That’s for sure.

    “But since we are here, people expect us to perform well, win the games and try to find the way. Otherwise – Pep out.

    “This is how our jobs work – and I want Pep in! I want to stay here, this is what I want, and for that we have to win games and be there in all the competitions.”

  • 5 Lessons from EPL weekend fixtures

    5 Lessons from EPL weekend fixtures

    Mikel Arteta has Arsenal playing like champions, Pep Guardiola’s system at Manchester City is fraying and Julen Lopetegui offered Wolves hope in defeat to Manchester United. Here’s five lessons we learned from the past Premier League weekend:

    1) Arsenal & Man City contrast puts Arteta’s side in charge

    As a seven-point gap opens at the top of the Premier League table analysis of the performances of Arsenal and Manchester City reveals that Mikel Arteta’s side really are the favourites to lift the trophy. It might feel too early to call it and plenty can still go wrong, but it is time for Arsenal supporters to believe – not just because of their team’s quality but the structural weaknesses engulfing City.

    Arsenal have a fluidity, variety, and swirling creativity that seems to open up every team in their path. Brighton are accommodating opponents thanks to Roberto de Zerbi’s all-out attacking system, which inevitably means there is room for any team willing to dribble vertically through the lines, and yet this was still a potential banana-skin game that Arsenal easily overcame.

    As for Man City, Erling Haaland is becoming a problem. His lack of movement makes it easier for opponents to begin counter-attacks from deep, but more importantly having a static striker means Man City’s creative players are forced to roam closer to him, in turn rupturing the path from back to front. Pep Guardiola’s side have slowed down, become stuttered against a deep-lying defence like Everton’s.

    Over the next few weeks Arsenal and Man City play a combined seven matches against the ‘Big Six’ plus Newcastle, before their head-to-head on February 15. It is a definitive period of the season. On current form, Arsenal will pull further clear by then.

    2) Emery wing-back plan allows Kamara and Luiz to shine

    The headline from Aston Villa’s 2-0 victory was just how awful Tottenham Hotspur performed, and indeed this was yet another example of Antonio Conte’s conservatism looking ill-suited to a ‘Big Six’ side. Spurs always look lifeless without Dejan Kulusevski and Rodrigo Bentancur breaking the lines and it is arguably time we ask serious questions about whether Conte can work at Tottenham.

    But Villa deserve praise for their performance. Unai Emery is a brilliant tactician when it comes to devising detailed plans to negate the opposition and his key trick here was to deploy John McGinn and Emiliano Buendia in unusual positions as wide midfielders, as both players dropped into a back six when Spurs entered the final third. It completely nullified the Spurs wing-backs, and with so little creativity in the centre of the pitch that was enough to blunt Conte’s side.

    McGinn’s positioning was particularly strange, the Scotland international playing high on the right wing when Villa had the ball, presumably in order to pin Ivan Perisic. It gave Boubacar Kamara and Douglas Luiz extra time on the ball, and the latter was pivotal in both Villa goals. Already Emery has found a midfield partnership with the composure and technical ability to elevate Villa to a whole new level.

    3) Clumsy Everton shape spared by Guardiola reacting too late

    Everton didn’t really deserve a point from this game. Frank Lampard’s 5-3-2 made sense in theory, with Alex Iwobi expected to break out of that midfield three to give Everton a three-pronged counter-attack, but the visitors didn’t appear to have an organised plan for how to ensure this stopped them from being overwhelmed centrally. Man City should have been able to capitalise on the weirdness of a 5-2-3 more often than they did.

    For a long time it looked as though Erling Haaland’s 24th minute strike would be the winner, and it had come by exploiting Everton’s shape. Idrissa Gueye and Amadou Onana were left to cover the entire width of the pitch as Lampard’s back five refused to step out to help, and as both were drawn to Kevin de Bruyne ridiculous amounts of space opened up:

    A brilliant Demarai Gray strike gave Everton a fortunate point, because had Man City pushed on after the opener they could easily have put the game to bed. Instead, they allowed it to drift.

    4) Lopetegui ideas take hold before poor tactical switch

    Marcus Rashford’s winner at Molineaux was entirely of Wolves’ own making. Julen Lopetegui had switched to a back three just three minutes earlier, and as soon as he made the call it looked like a mistake; Wolves had done a very good job at pushing Man Utd back and confronting them as equals, only for such a defensive switch to alarm the players and see them sit right back. Falling over themselves in their own penalty area, Wolves quickly collapsed.

    But overall Wolves supporters should be pleased with the progress being made. For long stretches of this game they looked like a Lopetegui side, with possession being recycled at every opportunity as the Wolves players followed the mantra of keeping the ball at all costs, even if that meant going backwards and starting the move from scratch.

    They also counter-pressed aggressively in the United third, while the full-backs Hugo Bueno and Nelson Semedo bombed forward at every opportunity, with Bueno helping to create several half-chances by winning his battle with Aaron Wan-Bissaka.

    5) Jones’s formation change a worrying sign

    Nathan Jones has just had six weeks to train his players in a particular style, and yet it only took one defeat – Boxing Day’s 3-1 loss to Brighton – for him to abandon the 4-2-3-1 for a 3-4-2-1 formation, only to reinstate it at half-time of Saturday’s defeat to Fulham. Throwing out his plans that quickly, and deploying a rapid-fire trial-and-error approach, is an alarming thing to see in a new manager.

    The change to a back three was presumably a response to Southampton’s dreadful defensive record, yet taking a player out of central midfield only made Saints more blunt and directionless. They lack quality at both ends of the pitch and, on a five-game losing run, increasingly look destined for relegation.

    Tribalfootball

  • Guardiola did a lot of harm to football – Messi

    Guardiola did a lot of harm to football – Messi

    Paris Saint-Germain star Lionel Messi feels Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola has harmed the game.

    The Argentine forward played some of his best football under the guidance of Guardiola at Barcelona in what is widely regarded as the best club side in history.

    Speaking during an interview with Universo Valdano, he recalled his time at Barcelona with Guardiola.

    “Guardiola did football a lot of harm because everything we did seemed very simple and everyone wanted to copy him,” Messi remarked.

    “After that period I’ve met a lot of Guardiola-style teams and then you realise what we did.

    “Pep has something special to prepare the games, to see them, to analyse them and to communicate.”

  • Best way to enjoy World Cup matches is with red wine – Guardiola

    Best way to enjoy World Cup matches is with red wine – Guardiola

    Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola has explained the best way to watch World Cup matches.

    Pep reportedly rejected an invitation to go to the World Cup.

    The winter tournament is taking place in Qatar in November and December, with fans adjusting to the moving of the event from its traditional summer spot for the first time.

    However, Guardiola will not be in Qatar, as he wants to enjoy the matches at home and work with his remaining first-team players during the club season break.

    Guardiola said, “The best way to enjoy the World Cup matches is at home with red wine.

    “We will have one or two weeks off and then we will work here, maybe go to Abu Dhabi, maybe organise a friendly game.

    “It’s not definite, but we will train, come back on December 28th and be ready as much as possible for the return.

    “We will spend three weeks here in the winter time in Manchester.

    “Then take a break with good training sessions and good weather where our owners are there.

    “It’s not 100 per cent confirmed, but we’re going to try.”

  • EPL: I talk about Haaland a lot – Pep Guardiola

    EPL: I talk about Haaland a lot – Pep Guardiola

    Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola has revealed that he talks about Erling Haaland a lot.

    He said the Norwegian is among the best strikers he’s worked with.

    The striker has already scored 15 goals and produced three assists in nine games in the Premier League for City.

    Haaland has also scored five goals in three games in the Champions League.

    “He is one of the best (strikers I have had). I have many very, very good strikers and Erling is one of them.

    “He understands quickly and he is a nice guy. He can do it for the team, but we have to work together and we have. I talk about him a lot, but sometimes I shouldn’t have to because the numbers do”, said Guardiola.

  • What prepared me for Barca move – Lewandowski

    What prepared me for Barca move – Lewandowski

    Barcelona striker Robert Lewandowski admits he’s loved his first weeks at the Nou Camp and playing under Pep Guardiola prepared him for the move.

    Lewandowski enjoyed his signing presentation last week.

    He said: “I feel like a small child who enters a huge store of new toys . What I feel in Barcelona so far is pure happiness and motivation to start this new chapter,” says the Pole, who adds that “in Munich I was missing new challenges. I won many titles and I recognize that I felt less and less intensity. I needed another challenge. A boost. A change of environment.”

    Lewandowski played for former Barca coach Pep Guardiola at Bayern Munich.

    He also said: “Guardiola’s philosophy and his style of caring for and managing the team I think basically was Barça at Bayern Munich. Xavi is very similar to Guardiola. They were both ‘6’, they worked together. They think football in the same way. With that memory in mind, Barça was the only option for me and it was a great preparation when I was there.

    “I didn’t talk to Guardiola before signing. But when I was with him at Bayern it was like a great preparation to get to Barça one day. All the staff were Spanish, there were eight Spanish players. During that period I had a very good relationship with Thiago and Javi Martínez. Both of them congratulated me when I signed for Barça.”

  • What I need to do to succeed at Man City – Haaland

    What I need to do to succeed at Man City – Haaland

    Manchester City striker, Erling Haaland is expecting his game to improve dramatically under Pep Guardiola.

    As Guardiola’s side prepare for their season-opener against West Ham on Sunday, Haaland believes he can develop his game further with the reigning champions.

    He told Sky Sports: “‘I can get better at everything. As a young player, playing for Pep Guardiola, playing for the best club in England in Man City, I have to keep developing and get better at a lot.

    “That’s what I like a lot about football, you can always develop, always get better at the game.

    “Part of the game is to get out of your comfort zone, something I’ve been doing and something I like – then you develop more as a human.

    “We’ll see about settling in. People can take time, or come directly in. I’m not concerned. That’s life as a footballer – you have to live with it.

    “You are a kind of entertainer, judged every week for what you do on the pitch. You have to deliver, do your best.”

  • Community Shield: Why my team lost to Liverpool – Pep Guardiola

    Community Shield: Why my team lost to Liverpool – Pep Guardiola

    Manchester City manager, Pep Guardiola has explained why his team lost 3-1 to Liverpool in the Community Shield clash on Saturday.

    As quoted by City’s official website, Guardiola said: “Congratulations to Liverpool. The first 15/20 minutes they were better.

    “After we got our game and it was quite similar the last 25 minutes, we arrive when they left space and tried to attack.

    “In the second half we started really well. Our game was there. We were really good against this team, even in the first half we created enough chances to do it.”

    Guardiola’s men will now begin their Premier League title defence against West Ham next Sunday.

  • Ten Hag training more extreme than Guardiola – Strieder

    Ten Hag training more extreme than Guardiola – Strieder

    Former Bayern Munich midfielder Rico Strieder has recalled playing for Manchester United manager Erik ten Hag.

    Strieder was coached by Ten Hag as a player with Bayern II and FC Utrecht.

    He told Goal: “After the first training session with him I thought: I hardly moved. Ten Hag made you tired in your head, not in your legs. When we played eleven against eleven, he stopped the training continuously to grab someone and have him move two metres left or right. After the next pass, he would stop again to push the next player two metres further. We felt like pieces on a chess board.

    “For us it was completely new and completely insane. But we soon realised pretty quickly that it made us better, both as a team and individuals.

    “When he had the time, Ten Hag watched Pep Guardiola’s training sessions.

    “He tried to contact him every day. I don’t know what Guardiola thought about that at the time. Their relationship intensified when Ten Hag started to achieve success at Ajax.”

    In any case, Ten Hag took in detail what he saw at Bayern.

    “Guardiola and Ten Hag had a similar vision and comparable exercises. But Ten Hag’s tactical training was much more extreme. With Guardiola, an exercise lasted maybe ten minutes, with Ten Hag an hour.

    “Ten Hag banned mobile phones from one hour from the start of the warm-up. Nobody was allowed to joke, everyone had to focus.”