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Guardiola Says City Are Getting Better and Issues Stark Warning to Arsenal

Guardiola warns Arsenal as City find form: Haaland scoring freely and Foden showing signs of revival

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Pep Guardiola has signalled that Manchester City are trending in the right direction and that their rivals should take notice. He suggested the group are showing characteristics from the clubs’ past title-winning campaigns and that this time of year often sparks one of City’s trademark unbeaten runs.

Arsenal have been reeled in by City in two of the past three seasons, and Guardiola is clearly optimistic about repeating that influence. “I have the feeling that we are getting better,” Guardiola smiled after Saturday’s win. “You believe that the past was always perfect when you look back at all the titles and the 100 points. But for the amount of things we achieved, we had a lot of games like today and the resilience was part of that.”

City began the season with a 4–0 win against Wolverhampton Wanderers, but then lost their next two matches. After the struggles of the 2024–25 season, when Guardiola’s side finished a distant third behind Arsenal and champions Liverpool, many had doubted the club’s prospects. “Still, we are not top, but we are learning and after what happened we will be closer in the future,” Guardiola warned.

On the field, Erling Haaland remains central to City’s surge. He scored twice against Palace, taking his league tally to 17 after 16 matches. Phil Foden has also regained form, equalling his top-flight goal tally from last term with a seventh Premier League strike, a drive from outside the box against Palace.

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Guardiola addressed Foden’s drop last season and placed it in a wider context. “The problem last season was not Phil; it was for everyone, me included,” he explained. On expectations for the attacker, he was unequivocal: “Absolutely, absolutely, absolutely [there is more to come from him],” the Catalan coach promised.

Guardiola added that while Foden’s natural quality is already exceptional, there is still room in areas such as timing and tempo. “He will not improve his incredible quality, because he’s top, at the top. But understanding the game, the way you have certain moments, the way you have to play, and the way you have to accelerate, or sometimes decelerate the game.

“Just the timing, the tempo he will give it, of course, everyone has to improve, everyone.”

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Manchester City

Guardiola Rejects Narrative After Champions League Exit to Real Madrid

Guardiola defended City’s European record after exit to Real Madrid, insisting City were superior…

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Pep Guardiola spoke with visible frustration after Manchester City were eliminated from the Champions League by Real Madrid, insisting his team had been the better side across the two legs.

“My biggest challenge has been [Jürgen] Klopp,” Guardiola said, recalling his enthralling Premier League battles with Liverpool over the years. He added of European opposition: “To play against Real Madrid so many times, with the generation we had, we were good enough. We won both matches. Statistically, we were similar; they eliminated us more often, but based on how we played, I think they know that too.”

When asked if Madrid were deserved winners, Guardiola’s reply was laconic: “1–5 … congratulations.”

After the tie was decided Guardiola went onto the pitch to shake hands with the Real Madrid squad. Most exchanges were routine, but an encounter with centre back Antonio Rüdiger escalated. The pair remained locked in a handshake while words were exchanged and both had to be separated by members of each side. The Real Madrid defender appeared to be doing most of the talking; Nathan Aké intervened as a peacemaker before Los Blancos boss Álvaro Arbeloa managed to drag his player away.

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The defeat renewed the debate over City’s European record. City’s limited success on the continental stage — one title win in 10 seasons — is frequently cited by critics. Guardiola noted that only Carlo Ancelotti has won more European Cups than he has.

He suggested expectations have been shaped by his early achievements. “Everybody wants to fire me!” he said. He continued: “Listen, I started my career really young, in the second team in Barcelona and we were promoted. And my first season, after Barcelona won the treble, great success, and after, if my teams don’t win the treble, they are a failure. I know that.

“My first season here, you remember, ‘When are you going to win the Champions League?’ We won the league with 100 points. ‘When are you going to win the Champions League?’ In the end, we won it. ‘When are you going to win the Champions League?’”

The club record from 2016–17 to 2025–26 in the Champions League includes a 2022–23 winners finish against Inter, a 2020–21 final versus Chelsea and several eliminations by Real Madrid in recent seasons.

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Rodri deflects Real Madrid interest with guarded ‘we’ll see’ after 3-0 defeat

Rodri keeps options open amid Real Madrid links after 3-0 defeat, offering: we’ll see. Transfer talk

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Manchester City midfielder Rodri declined to engage directly with speculation linking him to Real Madrid after his side were beaten 3–0 by Los Blancos in the first leg of the Champions League round of 16. Speaking to Cadena SER, the Spaniard avoided a clear answer and left the possibility open.

“I’m not going to answer that,” Rodri said in regards to a potential move the Bernabéu. “It’s a moment to think about what we have now, with my team, in my season, and then we’ll see.”

The context for the interest is clear in public reporting: Real Madrid have signed some of the biggest names in the sport over the last two years but have still failed to replace Toni Kroos and Luka Modrić. On paper the club already had a long list of midfielders available, yet the creative void remains.

Xabi Alonso attempted to mould Federico Valverde or Arda Güler into the next Kroos, but neither player could match the almost impossible standard set by the German playmaker. Alonso also tried to deploy Bellingham in a deeper role to cover the lack of creativity, but the England international was occupied with tracking back for teammates and cleaning up mistakes rather than producing magic outside his No. 10 role.

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Aurélien Tchouaméni and Eduardo Camavinga have been characterised as too defensive-minded to consistently pull the strings of the attack, leaving Real Madrid with a glaring hole in their squad. That is a vacancy the club would likely seek to fill from another team.

Real Madrid have not hidden their admiration for Rodri, and previous reports suggested they hoped to use the midfielder’s dwindling contract with City to acquire him at a lower cost. If the Sky Blues do not cash in this summer or next winter, they could watch him leave as a free agent in June 2027. Even worse than losing their Ballon d’Or winner would be to lose him for free.

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Guardiola accepts selection error after City draw, cites balance concerns

Guardiola accepted responsibility for benching Rayan Cherki after City drew 1–1 with West Ham extra

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Pep Guardiola admitted he made a selection mistake after Manchester City’s 1–1 draw with West Ham United, conceding he “deserved” the criticism for not starting Rayan Cherki. City produced 24 efforts and forced Mads Hermansen into five saves, yet they struggled to create clear openings against a stubborn rearguard.

Antoine Semenyo, deployed in an unfamiliar central attacking midfield role rather than the centre forward tandem he has often occupied, found chances difficult to come by. It was suggested to Guardiola that Cherki, who was fresh after not starting the midweek Champions League collapse to Real Madrid, would have been better suited to that lock-picking position. “You are right, yeah. Absolutely. For that role, absolutely. There is no-one better than him,” the manager conceded. Cherki only entered the game for the final half-hour.

Guardiola did not deflect responsibility. “Bad selection,” he sighed, “now you can criticize me incredibly, for the selection, now I deserve it.” He placed the decision in the context of balance, explaining the risks of fielding certain attacking combinations: “We learned in the beginning [of the season] that when we played Erling [Haaland] in that moment with Jérémy [Doku] or Cherki that we are incredibly unbalanced, we do not have the stability that teams in the Premier League have to have and that is why I try to handle it for that.

“It’s a team that is growing, I think that from the beginning we’ve grown a lot but still it is not finished business. It is like that sometimes but I will not say that I don’t love playing with Rayan, especially when he came from the bench, always the impact is unbelievable.

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“But sometimes he has not the speed. The team is always stable when Semenyo and Nico O’Reilly play in the winger position and go inside, arrive to the box, they are really, really good. I’m finding still the best way to have stability and consistency in the team.”

Guardiola contrasted Saturday’s match with City’s 3–1 FA Cup victory over Newcastle United a week earlier, and acknowledged that after the 3–0 reverse at the Bernabéu they now face a mountain in both the Champions League and Premier League. That Bernabéu defeat began with a front-footed 4-2-4 that “largely worked for the first 20 minutes,” until Fede Valverde scored and “Everyone has a plan until they get punched in the mouth.”

With City nine points behind Arsenal, Rodri accepted the gap: “Maybe yes, maybe no,” he said. “We’re not going to drop hands, we’re going to keep fighting. We know it’s going to be difficult because we have this experience of what you need to win at the end. I think the distance is too far but we’re going to fight until the end.”

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