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Manchester City

Guardiola reaffirmes commitment as City prepare for final push

Guardiola says he still boasts “incredible energy” and will honour his contract as City chase titles

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Deep into his 10th season as Manchester City manager, Pep Guardiola has publicly resisted talk of an imminent departure while preparing his side for the closing stages of the campaign. City have already secured the Carabao Cup at the expense of Arsenal and still face an FA Cup final, milestones that have framed much of the recent speculation.

Guardiola sought to deflect questions about his future by pointing to the environment around him. “I wouldn’t be 10 years [here]—even with good titles—if I didn’t have this incredible environment,” Guardiola gushed at the start of May. “I still have incredible energy, still I’m so good, coming here to work on my days off.

“Of course we’re here because we won a lot—and that’s why they don’t fire you, because they continue to trust you—but apart from that, the club is really, really extraordinary. The people take care of all of us in all details. The little details mean my job as a manager and the players, is to just think about what you have to do.

“It’s like a bubble that makes people feel good. It’s a big club, but here it is a family.”

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On the contractual question, Guardiola reiterated a straightforward position. “I have a contract,” the Catalan coach sighed when quizzed on the subject once again in January. “I said a thousand million times. It’s 10 years here. I will leave one day, but I have a contract.”

The club structure that helped persuade Guardiola to arrive in 2016 is part of the backstory. Ferran Soriano was installed as a City executive in 2012, and one month later he hired Guardiola’s former Barcelona teammate Txiki Begiristain as sporting director, laying groundwork for the appointment.

Guardiola has also pointed to testimony from former players, citing Aymeric Laporte: “City is the best club in the world and you never realize how good they are, how incredibly organized, until you leave.” He recalled Ilkay Gündogan returning from Barcelona and calling Manchester City “top-top.”

Despite the coach’s public tone and an on-paper commitment, outlets including ESPN have reported that a change of mind after the season would not surprise many. Should Guardiola deliver a domestic treble, few would begrudge the 55-year-old departing at the peak of a transformational decade.

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Manchester City

Guardiola Explains Choosing Stockport Over Champions League Classic

Guardiola watched Stockport v Port Vale instead of PSG v Bayern calling the clash ‘a disaster game.’

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Pep Guardiola’s presence at Edgeley Park on Tuesday — watching Stockport County take on Port Vale in League One — raised more than a few eyebrows. His decision to sit in the stands coincided with the Champions League semifinal first leg at Parc des Princes between Paris Saint Germain and Bayern Munich, a 5–4 contest that left PSG with a slight advantage.

Guardiola addressed his choice on Friday with a line that undercut the spectacle for many viewers. “The day before, I saw the calendar and the game PSG versus Bayern Munich, and I said ‘Bleh! What a disaster game,’” Guardiola told reporters with a sarcastic smirk. “Managers are not good, [PSG’s] Luis [Enrique] and [Bayern’s] Vincent [Kompany]. Really, really s— players.”

The comments carried extra weight because of Guardiola’s personal connections to both figures he mentioned. Guardiola and Enrique share a deep, long-standing friendship, having played together for Barcelona from 1996–2001. Kompany is also part of Guardiola’s professional history; he served as a player and captain under Guardiola at City between 2016 and 2019, a period that produced six trophies. Kompany has been outspoken about his respect and admiration for Guardiola’s coaching style, even naming him as “the best coach I ever had.”

City’s schedule helps explain Guardiola’s availability. Manchester City had the week off after being eliminated from the Champions League last month and are not back in Premier League action until Monday, when they face Everton at Hill Dickinson Stadium. That gap allowed Guardiola to attend a lower-league fixture in person, even as the continent watched a high-scoring European tie unfold.

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Whether viewed as an amusing lark or a pointed dismissal of a headline fixture, Guardiola’s explanation and the context around his outing ensured the episode dominated conversation through the week.

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Football Development

How a Proposed FIFA Homegrown Rule Would Reshape Premier League Squads

FIFA will propose a homegrown rule that could force Premier League clubs to start more U21s. In 2026

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FIFA plans to submit a proposal within the next year that would tighten the role of homegrown players and shift the priorities of many clubs. The precise definition of “homegrown” has not yet been determined, but the aim is clear: to accelerate the development of younger players and change how squads are assembled.

Under the current Premier League requirement a 25-player squad may include “no more than 17” players who are not homegrown, leaving eight slots reserved for locally trained talent. That rule does not mandate how often those players must appear on the pitch. A similar provision exists in the UEFA Champions League. Both competitions currently define a homegrown player as one who has played at least three full seasons between the ages of 15 and 21 within a club or another club in the same country.

The proposed change would alter more than registration lists. It could influence substitution patterns, transfer-window activity and long-term roster construction. Clubs might be deterred from importing large numbers of veteran stars and instead invest greater resources in their youth systems. For teams that rarely field young homegrown starters, the adjustment would be significant.

There are four Premier League teams that have not included a homegrown player under 21-years-old in their starting lineup this season: Brentford, Leeds United, Aston Villa and recently-relegated Burnley. Those clubs would be among the most affected, facing the task of accelerating development or finding new young talent quickly.

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By contrast, Manchester City would be best placed. Thirty of their 33 league matches so far included a U21 homegrown player in the starting XI, per The Times. Nico O’Reilly, 21, worked his way up City’s youth ranks since the age of eight and has started 26 league matches this season.

Manchester United are also relatively well positioned. Twenty of their 34 league games featured a U21 homegrown starter, with Kobbie Mainoo influential. The 21-year-old has made 12 starts in the last 13 league matches, shining under interim manager Michael Carrick’s tutelage.

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Manchester City

Haaland: Committed to City as Spanish Links Lose Momentum

After a 10-year extension in early 2025, Haaland says he is looking forward to continuing with City.

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Erling Haaland reinforced his commitment to Manchester City at the start of 2025 by signing a 10-year contract extension, underlining that he is not planning to leave the Etihad despite persistent links to Barcelona and Real Madrid. He originally arrived on a five-year deal, and speculation about a move to one of Spain’s so-called big two has continued even after the new long-term agreement.

City have taken their time to settle into the 2025/26 campaign after last season’s disappointment. Haaland began the season scoring freely but has been less prolific since the turn of the year. Last week at Burnley he reached his 24th Premier League goal of the season and remains the leading candidate to reclaim the Golden Boot.

No matter how the final month unfolds, with City chasing a domestic treble, Haaland played down transfer talk and pointed to the club’s project. “I’m super happy, and I’m looking forward to what’s next because I think it’s exciting times for City as a club and also me as a player,” he told ESPN. “I’m looking forward to continuing with City.” He has also said that “exciting times” beckon at the Etihad.

Barcelona-linked talk resurfaced during their recent presidential contest when Victor Font said he was negotiating a “preferential option” to sign the striker should he decide to leave. Haaland’s agent, Rafaela Pimenta, insisted at the time that his client is “very happy” in Manchester. Real Madrid were known to have shown interest before Haaland’s rise, but there is less evidence of a concrete move being planned for the Norway international.

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Within City, Haaland’s statements provide reassurance: the club never expected to need a replacement for him in 2026. There has been substantial squad turnover since last summer, and a pair of key January signings have helped shape a side now capable of challenging on multiple fronts. City are planning midfield activity this summer, with Rodri potentially joining Bernardo Silva in the departure lounge, and Nottingham Forest’s Elliot Anderson and Chelsea’s Enzo Fernández both mentioned as targets. “It’s been a lot of change now the last couple of years, I would say in the last year,” the 25-year-old said.

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