Tag: Guardiola

  • Guardiola admits tactical mistake in FA cup loss

    Guardiola admits tactical mistake in FA cup loss

    Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola admitted he made a mistake with his tactics in their 2-1 FA Cup final defeat by Manchester United.

    Guardiola made three changes to the side that beat West Ham last weekend to clinch the Premier League title.

    At half-time at Wembley and trailing 2-0, he reversed two of those by bringing on Jeremy Doku and Manuel Akanji for Mateo Kovacic and Nathan Ake.

    Belgium winger Doku scored for City in the 87th minute, but they could not battle back to defend the trophy they won against United last season.

    “Congratulations to Manchester United on winning the FA Cup,” Guardiola said afterwards.

    “I think my game plan was not good. The second half was much much better. We were more intense, in part because we were 2-0 down and had nothing to lose. It was a tight game.

    Read Also: Manchester City, Guardiola’s chase of history

    “We had clear chances in the second half which wasn’t easy because they had man-marking and defended the pockets but we had the chances and unfortunately we scored a goal a little bit late.”

    It was the first time Guardiola had lost a domestic cup final in England, after four League Cup and two FA Cup successes.

    “It’s normal teams can lose finals but this season has been extraordinary, fighting for all the trophies in a good way,” he added. “We’ll rest and come back next season.”

    Guardiola was asked if his side was sluggish, but said: “No. For my decisions we were not in the right positions to attack them. My mistake, my game plan was not good.”

    When asked what he was trying to do, he added: “The players know the reason why. Tactically, it was not good. I was not good today. You plan a game for different positions but it didn’t work.

    “Always when we play against United, we have the control and we created in the second half but we were not able to do it.” BBC

  • ‘Difficult to find the motivation’ – Guardiola casts doubt on staying at city

    ‘Difficult to find the motivation’ – Guardiola casts doubt on staying at city

    Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola has raised the prospect he will leave the club when his contract expires at the end of next season.

    Guardiola has created English football history by steering his City side to four successive league titles.

    It takes his personal tally to six, equal with Liverpool’s Bob Paisley and George Ramsay of Aston Villa, and only exceeded by Sir Alex Ferguson, who has 13.

    On 25 May, City will attempt to become the first side to complete the domestic Double in successive seasons.

    In total, Guardiola has won 17 trophies since arriving at City in 2016.

    In 2019, City became the first side to win the Premier League, FA Cup and EFL Cup in the same season. Last term, they emulated Manchester United by winning the Treble, beating Inter Milan in Istanbul to win the Champions League for the first time in the club’s history.

    “Last year, after Istanbul, I said ‘it’s over, there’s nothing left’,” he said.

    “But I have a contract and I start to think ‘no-one has done four in a row, why don’t we try?’. And now I feel it’s done, so what next?

    “Now I don’t know what exactly the motivation is because it’s difficult to find it when everything is done.”

    Guardiola’s present contract expires at the end of next season, by which time he will have been at City for nine years.

    Read Also: Guardiola sponsored you, Capello blasts EPL coach

    Asked on Sky Sports about his future, Guardiola said: “The reality is I am closer to leaving than staying. We have talked with the club – my feeling is that I want to stay now. I will stay next season and during the season we will talk. But eight or nine years – we will see.”

    Guardiola said he had to be told by Match of the Day presenter – and former Barcelona star – Gary Lineker about doing the Double two years in a row.

    “He told me no team has done back-to-back Premier Leagues and FA Cups,” said Guardiola, who has now won 12 league titles for three clubs in 16 years as a manager.

    “I want my players to enjoy two or three days and then prepare for the final. Why should we not work as much as possible to do what we have to do?”

    BBC

  • Manchester City, Guardiola’s chase of history

    Manchester City, Guardiola’s chase of history

    *Man City’s win against Spurs on Tuesday night has set the stage for a record-breaking fourth consecutive Premier League title for high-flying manager

    *Showdown with ninth placed West Ham on Sunday, last day of the season, is D-day for City and their manager

    *A win by City will make Guardiola a legend among leading managers as the first to record such a feat

    *Like him, only the legendary Sir Alex Ferguson has won the league in three consecutive seasons. Ferguson won it thrice consecutively on two occasions with Man Utd in 1998/99 – 2000/01 and 2006/07 – 2008/09

    *Guardiola will be the first to make it four if City win their last match on Sunday

    *Other managers like Wenger, Mourinho and Jürgen Klopp never won the title in three consecutive years

    *Wenger however won the league in the 2003/2004 season without Arsenal losing a match

    *Guardiola does not hold such record. City lost some matches in the seasons they won the league. They have lost thrice this season

    *At 86 points, Arsenal are close on the heels of City with 88 points. If City lose or draw on Sunday, and Arsenal win their own match against Everton, the Gunners will win the league

    *Arsenal with +61 goals’ difference have a goal advantage over City with +60 goals’ difference

    *If City win, they will garner a total of 91 points, which Arsenal cannot achieve even if they beat Everton
    Great! Will do! Got it mate.

  • Guardiola names Ortega as reason for title boost

    Guardiola names Ortega as reason for title boost

    Manchester City Manager Pep Guardiola said Arsenal aren’t the Premier League champions because of Stefan Ortega. 

    Pep Guardiola had never won a Premier League game at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium before last night and the visitors didn’t start the game well.

    Spurs were arguably the better side for large parts of the game on Tuesday night. They could’ve, and probably should’ve, scored a couple of goals as well.

    Dejan Kulusevski had a good opportunity to find the back of the net, but the biggest chance of the game fell to Tottenham captain Heung-min Son.

    The South Korean found himself through on goal after a mistake at the back from Manchester City. Everyone in the stadium stood up, expecting the net to bulge.

    Sadly for Arsenal fans, Son’s shot was denied brilliantly by Stefan Ortega, who replaced Ederson in goal in the second half.

    That was the moment for Arsenal – even Guardiola felt that way.

    The Manchester City boss claimed after the game that if Ortega hadn’t saved Son’s shot, Arsenal would’ve been the champions.

    He said in his post-match press conference: “I would say, how is the team a team? It’s because Ortega saved the actions, otherwise Arsenal are the champions.

    “That is the reality in modern football. The margins are so, so, so tight.”

    Guardiola said Ortega is one of the best keepers he has ever seen

    Manchester City signed Stefan Ortega on a free transfer from Arminia Bielefeld in the summer of 2022.

    The 31-year-old was brought in only to be a backup to Ederson in goal, and he accepted that role. He was never going to be the first choice at the club.

    However, Ederson’s injury issues have given Ortega plenty of opportunities at City, and he has almost always proved his class.

    Read Also: Guardiola wants Man City to make Premier League history

    The £55,000-a-week (Spotrac) German was the star of the show against Tottenham. He made a few brilliant stops, and his save to deny Heung-min Son is the reason why the title is not in Arsenal’s hands right now.

    Speaking about Ortega’s ability in one-on-one situations, Guardiola claimed he is one of the best goalkeepers he has ever seen.

    He said: “Stefan made an incredible save. He has this talent. In one-against-one, he is one of the best keepers I’ve ever seen in my life.

    “It’s a German culture, stand up, don’t go down, he’s so really, really, really good. But not today, since he arrived – playing in the FA Cup, Carabao Cup or even this season when Ederson had four times setbacks due to injuries, always he’s so reliable.

    “He’s an incredible, incredible keeper. So the club and our keeper trainer made an incredible decision to bring him here, Incredible!”

  • Guardiola dismisses Man Utd favour in title chase

    Guardiola dismisses Man Utd favour in title chase

    Pep Guardiola won’t ask for a favour from Manchester United this weekend as the Manchester City manager tries to overhaul “incredible” Arsenal in the Premier League title race.

    City boss Guardiola takes his side to Fulham today  knowing a victory would move them two points clear of leaders Arsenal.

    But the Gunners will reclaim top spot if they win at Manchester United tomorrow, putting City fans in the unusual position of having to support their local rivals.

    Asked if he would be cheering on United when Arsenal visit Old Trafford, Guardiola insisted the only thing he is worried about is taking three points from the trip to Craven Cottage.

    Read Also: Orisunmibare community begs Makinde on dilapidated schools, deplorable roads

     “I’m a City fan, try to beat Fulham, this is all I’m concerned about,” Guardiola told reporters.

    City are chasing an unprecedented fourth successive Premier League title and will lift the trophy if they win their last three games against Fulham, Tottenham and West Ham.

    But they have been pushed to the brink by Arsenal this season in a battle that reminds Guardiola of his team’s title fights with Liverpool.

    Jurgen Klopp’s men twice finished runners-up to City and became the only team to stop them winning the title in the last six seasons in 2020.

    Guardiola ranks Arsenal alongside Liverpool in terms of the quality of opposition posed to City during his reign at the Etihad.

     “The same level as Liverpool in the last years. Both teams are incredible and have been incredible,” he said.

    If City are to finish the season as champions yet again, they are likely to need three more influential performances from Rodri, the Spain midfielder who was snubbed in the Premier League Player of the Year award nominations this week.

  • Guardiola’s assistant indeed

    Guardiola’s assistant indeed

    Time was when we were told that a certain foreign coach for the Super Eagles was highly recommended for the Nigeria job by former Arsenal FC of London’s manager Arsene Wenger. The coach was employed. He assumed work with his first signature on the team’s style of play being the introduction of the offside trap whilst our players were defending. Attempts to find answers from those who flew the Wenger kite why his nominee was playing the offside web, a system alien to what Wenger showcased when the Gunners excited the world with their scintillating ball skills, fell on deaf ears. The message from their stoic silence reminded me of the scenario where the proverbial horse being led to the stream and what transpired when it was forced to drink water.

    Did I hear murmuring to know why Wenger didn’t bother to deny the claim when it was being bandied? Wenger was clearly too busy with meeting the tasks associated with his technical roles with FIFA than to deny what he never influenced. The closest attempt to authenticate Wenger’s influence was pictures of a younger-looking Wenger and the coach in the print media. I laughed then because I have several pictures I took with Wenger at different World Cups’ media centres and mixed zones after matches which didn’t translate to Ade Ojeikere knowing Wenger. Not forgetting that this coach was the product of a search by some wise men who went to interview coaches for the Super Eagles job. Why the rigourous sessions if we truly knew that a purported Wenger recommendation for the job could suffice?

    Whilst this so-called Wenger nominee handled the Super Eagles, the team’s play showed nothing to such or reflect how Arsenal FC of England played their matches. The coach’s styles were different. The coach introduced the 3-5-2 system which led to his sack when some members of the Dream Team 1 who had lost their shirts fought back, using a certain sports minister then to oust the foreigner despite the Wenger confirmation tag on him. This foreigner returned to the country with Japan’s U-20 side and played up to the final game, losing 2-0 to Spain, in a competition in which Nigeria wobbled and fumbled until the country’s U-20 side crashed out of the competition here in Lagos. It is one thing to recruit a coach for the Super Eagles. It is yet another kettle of fish for the cabal in the team to work with such coaches, especially the Lilliputians among them. Sadly, it is from the Lilliputians that the NFF recruits, shielding them under the cloak of experienced tacticians.

    Soon, some of the players seeking relevance would start endorsing the coaches using their media contractors. Of course, not much is expected from students who choose their teachers. It is the reason Nigeria has been rebuilding the Super Eagles since 1976 under Father Tiko.  The Otto Gloria years weren’t any different in terms of how the game was being administered here. We can’t forget the 1980 Green Eagles which had its roots here in the domestic game across the country. We can’t stop trying to stem the rot. Yet, we keep looking the same or at best look worse than where we began, depending on who the incumbent NFF President is. It is obvious that we never learn from our past mistakes since we are specialists in passing the buck.

    Read Also: Torrent tipped to tinker Super Eagles to glory

    The recruitment of Clemens Westerhof had its crises but the Dutchman was wise by beating the Sports Ministry loyalists and NFF’s renegades in the politics of the game. Again, Westerhof came to our football like a whirlwind; blowing away some of the mistakes of the past in his five-year stay in Nigeria. The jobbers of the industry messed Westerhof up in the United States (US), with the Dutch rendered otiose in the build-up to the Second Round World Cup game in the US.

    Hmmmm! Bora Mulutinovic. Remember him? What hasn’t happened in Nigeria’s football doesn’t exist. France ’98 World Cup was Nigeria’s worst attendance in spite of the fact that we beat Spain 3-2 in the opening. It was a pyrrhic victory.

    We have adopted several bizarre methods of recruiting coaches including doing interviews here in Nigeria where a coach accused the panel of interviewers of asking him for a bribe which he couldn’t substantiate. The Abuja panel picked a Swede with an enviable track record. But there was a gulf in the relationship between the Sports Ministry and the NFF which then wanted the late Shiaubu Amodu to lead the team’s technical crew to that year’s Mundial in the African continent. It never happened and the Eagles were made to serve two masters – the Presidential Task Force and/or the NFF chiefs, who in any case brought the team to the World Cup.

    In 2002, the Sports Ministry chaps stopped the late Amodu from attending the Japan/Korea World Cup as part of the fallouts of the Africa Cup Nations in 2002. Renowned tactician and FIFA and CAF guru Adegboye Onigbinde was invited to lead the team, but his hands were tied. Certain talented players in the team were banned from going near the team. Onigbinde, therefore, went to the World Cup held in Asia.

    I recall taking a bet with Segun Odegbami in London by practically naming Onigbinde’s World Cup squad before it was announced. It was easy because Onigbinde’s methods were transparent and fair given the players he had in the camp to pick from. Nigeria’s World Cup paths have been dogged by bickering between the Sports Ministry officials eager to lord it over NFF chieftains. Not forgetting the controversy surrounding the Nigeria Football Association (NFA) and the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF). You ask, what is in a name? Plenty, especially in Nigeria football.

    Influence peddlers around our football aim to settle scores after failing to regain their seats in the NFF with every World Cup year, not minding the collateral damages it would cost the country. The people are the same. They fly the kite of trying to rid the federation of sharp practices.

    Pundits weren’t surprised that the Eagles failed at the Brazil 2014 World Cup, one year after Nigeria won the Africa Cup of Nations in 2013 in South Africa. We couldn’t build on that success story and it resulted in the protest by the players days before Nigeria lost 2-0 to France in the second round. The late Stephen Keshi watched in awe as things fell apart with his team. Keshi eventually lost his job.

    After the 2010 World Cup fiasco, and the show of shame at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil, followers of the game thought the emergence of Amaju Melvin Pinnick as NFF president would change the narrative. It didn’t. Instead, it heightened with a deluge of court cases. It was the most turbulent two-term tenure ever which left the country’s soccer teams in dire straits.

    Two foreigners Gernot Rohr and Jose Peseiro have handled the Super  Eagles under different identities. Yet, it is the relationship that Peseiro had with the Special One Jose Mourinho that earned him the Nigeria job. Selling established European coaches as referrals for employing Super Eagles will fail since both assignments are far and wide apart as the dentition of a 100-year-old person.

    Those flying  Pep Guardiola’s credentials as the reason to recruit another of his assistants at Manchester City, Domenec Torrent,  as Nigeria’s next manager, amounts to climbing a high-rise structure with a greasy pole. Guardiola is a magician at the dugout. He plays as many as five patterns in each game using his substitutes to change the way the team plays. I doubt if Domenec Torrent contributes anything that Guardiola takes to his heart and implements.

    NFF, please get us the best manager for Nigeria. Going to the 2026 World Cup to play in the final game is a task that must be achieved. National teams’ assignments aren’t weekly games. They aren’t as demanding as club matches.

  • Familiar Foes: How Klopp, Guardiola compare ahead of Premier League showdown

    Familiar Foes: How Klopp, Guardiola compare ahead of Premier League showdown

    As Jurgen Klopp and Pep Guardiola prepare for what could be their final game against each other, we look at how the rivalry has shaped both of their coaching careers.

    “We have bows and arrows. And when we aim precisely, we can hit the target. It is only that Bayern have a bazooka. The probability that they will hit the target is clearly higher. But then, Robin Hood was apparently quite successful.”

    Those were the words of Jurgen Klopp back in the summer of 2013. His Borussia Dortmund team had just lost the Champions League final to Bayern Munich at Wembley having relinquished their Bundesliga title too. Star player Mario Gotze had been snaffled.

    The rivalry between Klopp and Guardiola, perhaps the two greatest coaches of their era, was born in Germany but it became legendary in England.

    It was Klopp who won their first meeting shortly after that Robin Hood allusion – a 4-2 Super Cup win in Dortmund. But he continues to style himself as the underdog in this illustrious scrap and with good reason given Manchester City’s financial might.

    And yet, this is a balanced rivalry in its own way. Guardiola may have won more trophies but Klopp has still won the lot with Liverpool.

    Moreover, he has a winning record in 29 matches against Guardiola – 12 wins to 11 going into what could prove to be a title decider at Anfield on Sunday. Of the 24 coaches to have faced Guardiola eight times or more, he is the only one who can claim that.

    As the pair prepare to face off for what could be the final time, in a match that the Man City boss hopes will square the record, it is tempting to see the two as opposites. Both brilliant but with their own unique vision of how this great game should be played.

    There is some basis to that, particularly in the early part of their careers.

    Guardiola, though proudly Catalonian, came to symbolise the Spanish school with his emphasis on possession and the positional game – juego de posicion.

    Klopp was a passionate purveyor of German gegen-pressing. Initially, characterised as heavy-metal football, to this day he claims to speak to his players about the virtues of counter-pressing on an almost daily basis.

    It has long been styled as Klopp’s chaos against Guardiola’s control.In truth, they have influenced each other, in ways subtle and striking.Neither would be the coach they are today without the influence of the other.

    Guardiola, who might once have regarded Jose Mourinho as his ideological rival, acknowledges that he has been shaped by his showdowns with Klopp.

    “He helped me, his teams helped me to be a better manager. He gave me another level to think about it, prove myself, what I have to do to be a better manager with our teams to try and beat them. It is the reason why I am still in this business.

    Read Also: NLC to Fed Govt: let salaries, wages be commensurate with cost of living

    “There are some managers who challenge you to move a step forward.”

    If Mourinho occasionally confounded Guardiola, most memorably in that 2010 Champions League semi-final when his Inter side kept out Barcelona without making acquaintance with the football, Klopp showed that it was possible to blow his teams away with it too.

    Eight years on, in a Champions League quarter-final at Anfield, Liverpool tore City apart with a three-goal burst that left Guardiola’s hopes of winning the tournament in tatters just 31 minutes into a two-hour tie. For a period, Klopp seemed to have his number.

    City lost the second leg too and though they won the Premier League title, their only defeat in the competition at that stage had been a 4-3 loss to Liverpool in January. The pressing, the pace and the aggression of Klopp’s side presented a new problem.

    His ideas around possession non-negotiable, it feels like Guardiola has spent half a decade now finding ways to prevent his team being so exposed on the transition – with Liverpool in mind. Typically, given his tactical brilliance, he has largely succeeded.

    But he has been changed by the process. The man who once dreamed of fielding a team full of midfielders now plays with the ultimate No 9 and packs the centre of the park with defenders. “You need proper defenders,” was his verdict on last season’s title win.

    This epiphany was born from a desire to block the transition, first with full-backs moving inside and now with erstwhile centre-backs such as Manuel Akanji. As for England defender John Stones, he is now operating as something more akin to a de facto No 10.

    Perhaps all this would have happened without Klopp but Liverpool certainly created that sense of urgency, forcing Guardiola and his team to find the solutions, demanding that they become not only better tactically but mentally too.

  • Guardiola  admits Champions League ‘getting tougher’

    Guardiola  admits Champions League ‘getting tougher’

    Pep Guardiola  has said it is “getting tougher” to win the Champions League as he targets a second consecutive treble with his all-conquering Manchester City team.

    Defending champions City, unbeaten in 19 games in all competitions, take on Copenhagen in the second leg of their last-16 tie at the Etihad today, with the cushion of a 3-1 lead.

    They beat Manchester United on Sunday to move just one point behind Premier League leaders Liverpool and are through to the FA Cup quarter-finals, where they will face Newcastle.

    But Guardiola played down talk of a repeat of last season’s heroics at his pre-match press conference.

     “It’s better to be here having already won the Champions League but as I said it (the treble season) is finished,” he said.

     “The only target is to try to qualify tomorrow for the quarter-finals,” he added. “We are far, far away, talking about these things.

     “We didn’t say last season until we won the final against United in the FA Cup, so we are at the beginning of March.”

    Guardiola, who also won the Champions League twice as Barcelona manager, in 2009 and 2011, said the bar had been raised in Europe’s top club competition.

    Read Also: Guardiola  wary of tricky  FA Cup test

     “It’s getting better and tougher,” he said. I had the feeling when I arrived at Barcelona in the first years ‘OK we will arrive in the semi-finals”.

    “Now, to reach semi-finals is so difficult. The teams are better and managers are better. Everything is even more difficult than when I was a football player. But at the end the better teams always go through.”

    But he played down the notion that winning with City last season – the club’s first-ever Champions League crown – was a bigger achievement than lifting the trophy with Barcelona.

    “No, I would not say that, otherwise I undermine what we achieved in Barcelona,” he said. “I would not like that, which was really good.

     “I am not saying that ‘That prize is better than the previous ones’. It’s not. Every moment is every moment.

     “What I think when I was at Barcelona or Bayern Munich, here, every title you win is different. It’s not for granted.

     “It’s not because it’s easy. Every step you do is so complicated… you have to be good in the right moments, mentally, physically and the skills and the game plan and many, many things, luck in the right moments.

  • Guardiola  wary of tricky  FA Cup test

    Guardiola  wary of tricky  FA Cup test

    Pep Guardiola said he relishes the pressure at the sharp end of the season as he prepares for the next stage of Manchester City’s FA Cup defence at Luton tonight.

    City are well placed to repeat last season’s trophy treble as the 2023⁄24 campaign enters its final months.

    They are just a point behind Premier League leaders Liverpool, on the brink of qualifying for the last eight of the Champions League and into the fifth round of the FA Cup.

    City manager Guardiola, whose team have reached at least the semi-finals of the competition in each of the past five seasons, said the end of the season was his favourite time.

     “Playing every game that you have the feeling if you lose ‘bye, bye’, it’s so nice,” he said at his pre-match press conference. “The problem in September and October is that you see the expectations far, far away, so in that moment you don’t have to think about any titles, not even now I would say.”

    Guardiola expects a tough battle against relegation-threatened Luton, who lost 2-1 to City in a Premier League clash at Kenilworth Road in December despite taking the lead.

     “Football is going in the direction that Luton play, so aggressive it doesn’t matter if you are the top of the league, at the bottom or in the middle,” he said.

    Read Also: Guardiola tips Manchester City to retain Champions League

     “Courage to play, face the challenge without any fear and it’s not just that… they play really, really well with the ball.”

    Guardiola added the  fixture would be a good test for his team’s rhythm and consistency.

     “After this game February is over, so just two-and-a-half months, three months until the end of the season and we arrive here still being there so tomorrow is a final, like in the Premier League every game (is) and of course in the Champions League,” he said. “So the decisive part of the season is here in front of us and we are going for it.”

    The Spaniard said City’s success was down to work put in over many years.

     “I adore to defend my players, for what they have done because I know how difficult it is. It is not what we have done last season, it’s the last five seasons,” explained Guardiola.

     “That’s why we have accumulated many compliments and many things and still we show humility and are humble but at the same time competitive to do it again.”

  • Guardiola tips Manchester City to retain Champions League

    Guardiola tips Manchester City to retain Champions League

    Pep Guardiola believes Manchester City have shown that they have the credentials to retain the Champions League this season.

    The Citizens completed a historic treble last season by winning their first-ever Champions League trophy, beating Inter Milan 1-0 in the final.

    Man City have won each of their last eight Champions League matches – a record run for an English club in the competition – including all six in this season’s group-stage, and they are now gearing up for a last-16 first-leg tie with Copenhagen in Denmark today.

    Ahead of the contest, Guardiola has heaped praise on his side’s mentality and their ability to adapt in difficult situations, which could play a huge part in the club’s quest to win back-to-back Champions League titles.

    Asked at a press conference if Man City can retain their European trophy, Guardiola said: “We challenge ourselves and challenge the opponents to want to beat you. We feel it more than ever in the Premier League and in the Champions League we want to do it again.

    Read Also; ICPC plays nude videos of female student in evidence against suspended UNICAL professor

    “We have good characters and personalities in the team with how they react in the bad moments. When I arrived eight years ago I had the feeling maybe this competition was too much for us, but our defeats and bad moments helped us to grow up and be in the position we are – two finals and one semi-final in the last three years – and the whole club has awareness that we can try to be ourselves.

    “Before, I felt: ‘are you sure Pep, are we ready to do it?’ Now the whole organisation believes we can do it. This is the best legacy that we give to the club and to the team that Man City can compete. That is so good.”

    Man City were forced to play out a goalless draw against Copenhagen in their last visit to Denmark in October 2022, and Guardiola is expecting another tricky test on Tuesday, even though Jacob Neestrup’s have not played a competitive game since December 12 due to the Danish winter break.

    “I have been here with the national team against Denmark and it is so tough,” said Guardiola. “The crowd are so close and imagine two months without games, the crowd will want to be at the football.

    “I have huge respect. I said to the players this morning you have to prepare mentally and be ready to suffer. It will be a tight, tight game 100% – I feel it – and normally my guts don’t lie to me!”

    Discussing the challenges of last-16 ties in the Champions League, the former Catalan boss added: “My experience tells me this. The exception was Sporting [Lisbon] two years ago when we won 5-0 – but we scored five goals from six chances. But always I have huge respect for their first leg in the last 16 – always.”

    Man City have not lost a Champions League game away from the Etihad Stadium since May 2022, but they enter Wednesday’s contest having never won a European match in Denmark before – drawing twice with Copenhagen in the Champions League (2022) and UEFA Cup (2009), and losing to Aalborg in the UEFA Cup (2009).

    TODAY’S FIXTURES

    Copenhagen vs. Man City

    RB Leipzig vs. Real Madrid

    TOMORROW’S FIXTURES

    8pmLazio vs. Bayern

    8pmPSG vs. Real Sociedad