Pep has made a difference Pep Guardiola
Pep Guardiola

Pep Guardiola

LONDON. — There were a few cynical asides when Pep Guardiola was appointed Manchester City manager. There were even those who hoped he would fall flat on his face; those who claimed he was “not all that”.

Would a coach who has dominated in Spain and Germany, and with the two strongest clubs in those countries, cut it in the physically intense, competitive chaos of the English Premier League?

It is early days but we already have our answer. City may not win the league this season; they may not emulate the Champions League semi-final of the last campaign. He may ultimately fail. But Guardiola has made his mark. He has made a difference. There is no revolution, just a raising of standards.

The Spaniard has, within a few short weeks, changed the English Premier League and done so for the better. He has made us — and his rivals — think and react. Everyone is on their toes and knows they have to lift their game. Be harder, faster, fitter — and smarter.

Twice in the last few days the new England manager Sam Allardyce has remarked on Guardiola’s tactics, for example. “If I can get the chance to go and see Pep I’d like to listen to him,” Allardyce said on Monday at a briefing at St George’s Park which echoed comments he made privately last week. “I like the two full-backs coming in, the next generation are going to copy that.”

Maybe there was a “Sam Allardici-style” tongue-in-cheek nature to Allardyce’s remark, a little dig, a la Sean Dyche, at our willingness to fawn at foreign coaches and their tactical tweaks – whether that is Claudio Ranieri winning the league by reverting Leicester City to 4-4-2 or Guardiola deploying his City full-backs “inside” to join the midfield which was a tactic he had occasionally used at Bayern Munich, and one learnt from his inspiration, Marcelo Bielsa, but was new to the Premier League.

The point is, though, Guardiola has done something different, made everyone at least think about it, and felt he needed to do so with a squad that had to change. Not just in personnel – and only one of his expensive new signings, Nolito, has actually featured so far – but, more importantly, in approach. Changing tactics, even a tweak, has made his players think.

As has dropping Joe Hart. It has jolted the dressing room. Here is a big player who is being pushed out the door with Guardiola having a calm but unequivocal rationale behind it: the 29-year-old goalkeeper simply does not fit into the way he plays. Hart may have won the league twice, he may have almost three years left on a £120 000-plus a week contract; the club may even want to keep him. But he is not for Guardiola. And that is the end of the matter.

So there are two examples of food for thought. And here is the third and most important: the food itself. Guardiola is interested to the point of obsession in conditioning and, above all, the effects diet has – which provides a psychological as well as a physical result.

Immediately players such as Samir Nasri and Yaya Toure are banished from training or the match-day squad because they are deemed overweight. In fact City players are weighed almost on a daily basis which has to, by its very nature, keep them on their toes. If their weight is higher than it is deemed it should be then they do not train. Simple – and dispassionate — as that.

The players eat together — breakfast, lunch and, after matches, dinner. They have to sign in and out of the club’s canteen for those meals to prove they have done so with Guardiola regarding nutritionists as vital members of his staff. Out have gone post-match pizzas and chicken goujons and in has come salmon and prawn salads and handfuls of mixed nuts — which are packed with protein. Medical studies have shown that the speed of post-match recovery depends entirely on the players’ diet. Guardiola is a disciple.

Eating together has also helped bonding with the trade-off being that the players are not forced to stay overnight in club accommodation before home games which they were forced to do under Guardiola’s predecessor Manuel Pellegrini. So they are less bored. — The Telegraph.

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