Manchester City
Former Colleague Voices Concern Over Guardiola as City Future Remains Unclear
Sammer fears ‘something is wrong’ with Guardiola amid uncertainty over his Manchester City future…
A former colleague of Pep Guardiola has warned that something may be wrong with the Manchester City manager as uncertainty persists over his future at the club. Guardiola has a contract until the end of next season and has previously hinted at retiring. He also took a 12-month sabbatical at the end of the 2011–12 campaign.
Matthias Sammer, who worked with Guardiola in Munich, described their time together and expressed unease. “We worked together wonderfully for three years—it was very, very good. I think I understood him quite well with his facial expressions, his gestures, his eyes, and his way of speaking,” Sammer said on his Sky Sport Germany podcast. “My gut feeling tells me something is wrong when I look at his face. When I see your eyes, when I see your face, and in other ways too, you really don’t need to explain to clueless people what you are and who you are, and that you can’t always win. I would advise him to take a deep breath.”
Facing speculation over how long he will remain at City, Guardiola has repeatedly emphasised his contentment and his contractual position. “I have a contract. I said a thousand, million times,” he said in January when rumours began that former assistant Enzo Maresca was a consideration to replace him. “It’s 10 years here, I will leave one day but I have a contract. I’m happy. I want to fight with my team.
“The hierarchy respect me, that was proved last season with what happened in this club—we didn’t win one game in two, three months. They supported me. I have one more year’s contract. I like to be here, so we will see, you will see.” He has also joked in response to similar questions that he would quit Manchester City at “75 or 76” years of age.
The immediate sporting picture offers context. City can still complete a second domestic treble in Guardiola’s tenure after the first in 2018–19. The Carabao Cup is in the bag following last weekend’s triumph, the FA Cup remains attainable and the Premier League looks a much tougher prospect with Arsenal nine points clear and eight games to play. A domestic cup, or two, a fairly unremarkable achievement for a club with City’s track record of success over the past 15 years, is the most likely outcome.
Football Development
Guardiola to Join City Football Group in Advisory Capacity After Man City Exit
Guardiola will move into a City Football Group role, advising on development across multiple clubs. .
Pep Guardiola will move into an advisory role with the City Football Group after leaving Manchester City at the end of this season. City say he will be “working on specific projects and collaborations.”
The role is described as promoting and advancing the profile of the City Football Group and may also involve applying Guardiola’s knowledge to help processes across the network in Asia, North America and Europe. That work could include identifying, coaching and developing talent at CFG clubs, with the longer-term aim that standout players might eventually be considered for Manchester City. Savinho the biggest success story in that respect to date, having joined City from a fellow CFG club after being on loan with a third.
City Football Group is made up of 11 clubs spread around the world, a mix of wholly owned teams and those held as majority or minority stakes. Notable examples named by the club include New York City and Melbourne City, the first two acquisitions, and Girona, acquired via a 2017 joint-ownership venture with Pere Guardiola. Troyes was bought in 2020 and Palermo in 2022. The group has also held stakes in clubs such as Yokohama F. Marinos and Lommel, and Esporte Clube Bahia is listed among the stable. Mumbai City is noted as a former member, leaving the group in 2025 after six years.
Even with this confirmed CFG position, there is no suggestion Guardiola will stop managing for good. The 55-year-old is expected to take at least a short break from day-to-day duties. The club say he could remain involved with City Football Group if he returns to management, provided there are no conflicts of interest.
The move represents a transition from daily team management to a strategic, multi-club remit, keeping Guardiola connected to the wider organisation he helped build while leaving open the possibility of a future return to coaching.
Manchester City
Guardiola explains why he is leaving Manchester City
He says ‘it’s my time’ to leave Manchester City and thanks the city, the fans and the staff. Eternal.
Pep Guardiola confirmed he will leave Manchester City this summer, saying he simply knows it is “his time” to depart and reflecting on the relationship he has built with the club and the city.
He recalled the early days: “When I arrived, my first interview was with Noel Gallagher. I walked out thinking, ‘O.K., Noel is here? This will be fun,’” and spoke of the bond formed over more than a decade. He asked not for explanations: “Don’t ask me the reasons I’m leaving. There is no reason, but deep inside, I know it’s my time. Nothing is eternal, if it was, I would be here. Eternal will be the feeling, the people, the memories, the love I have for my Manchester City .”
Guardiola framed his decision in terms of work and community, praising the city’s industrial roots and the determination he felt in supporters and staff. “We worked. We suffered. We fought. And we did things our own way. Our way.” He referenced testing moments that shaped the club and the city, including trips away and shared hardship, and singled out the response to the Manchester Arena attack as an example of the city’s values: “Not anger. Not fear. Just love. Community. Togetherness. A city united.”
He also spoke of private loss and public support: “Remember, losing my mum during COVID and feeling this club carry me through it. The fans, the staff, the people of Manchester, you gave me strength when I needed it most. Cris, my kids, my whole family, you were there as always. Khaldoon, you were there too.”
To supporters he offered thanks: “Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for trusting me. Thank you for pushing me. Thank you for loving me.” He closed with a light note and gratitude: “It has been so f—— fun. Love you all.”
Before he arrived at City, Guardiola had already built an exceptional record: a three-time La Liga champion with Barcelona, a three-time Bundesliga winner with Bayern Munich and, at the time of his arrival at City, a two-time European champion.
Manchester City
Haaland: City Must Turn Title Heartache into Motivation for 2026
Haaland urged his teammates to use this disappointment as motivation to reclaim the Premier League..
Erling Haaland left no doubt about the mood in Manchester City’s camp after the final match of the season. Arsenal’s draw clinched the league — their first in 22 years — and City have now failed to win the Premier League for a second successive season, a first in the Guardiola era at the Etihad.
City did secure the Carabao Cup and the FA Cup during 2025–26, but those successes could not erase the sting of missing out on the league. Haaland scored his side’s only goal in stoppage time, converting in the 95th minute, yet that late strike only underscored how narrowly City fell short.
Soon after the final whistle, Haaland spoke to City Studios and set out the standards he expects going forward. “In the end, every game in the Premier League is difficult. We tried. It wasn’t enough,” he said. He added: “The whole club should use this as motivation now. We should be angry, we should feel a fire inside our belly because it’s not good enough. It’s gone two years now. It feels like forever.
“We’re going to do everything we can, everyone that will be here next season, to win the league.”
The runners-up finish is an improvement on last season’s third place, but it remains below the club’s ambitions. Under Guardiola, City previously secured the English crown six times, only falling short once between 2017–18 and 2023–24. That record has made these back-to-back disappointments particularly jarring.
City’s challenge briefly looked salvageable in April when a nine-point deficit to Arsenal disappeared over 11 days, but dropped points at Everton and Bournemouth ultimately sealed their fate. The failure to reclaim the title follows a catastrophic 2024–25 campaign and raises questions about a squad in transition.
Those questions are heightened by reports that Guardiola will leave after a decade in charge, signaling an end of an era at the club. Former Chelsea boss Enzo Maresca is the frontrunner to replace him. The challenge for any incoming coach is substantial, with Bernardo Silva expected to depart this summer and Rodri possibly linked with Real Madrid.
