Guardiola is being exposed as a fraud

By Josh Chahal / Roar Rookie

Pep Guardiola’s first season in English football has been nothing short of a nightmare.

After enjoying huge success with Barcelona and Bayern Munich it was expected that the Spaniard would elevate Manchester City into the upper echelon of world football.

To say things haven’t gone to plan would be quite the understatement.

But perhaps now we are finally seeing Guardiola for what he is – a fraud whose success was built largely off the mega-stars at his disposal rather than astute tactical skills.

It’s hard to envision how a manager who has 21 trophies to his name can possibly be called a fraud, or overrated, or anything other than a genius.

Yet here we are doing just that, and rightly so.

Guardiola’s dominance of La Liga and Europe with Barcelona came as a surprise to everyone given, his unknown abilities as a manager. After being chosen to succeed Frank Rijkaard at the Catalan club, Guardiola quickly transformed the way football was played.

His ‘tika-taka’ style took Europe by storm, and has since been imitated by teams around the world looking to implement a similar brand of possession-based football.

However, would he have been as successful implementing that style anywhere other than Barcelona? Absolutely not.

He was lucky enough to have arguably the world’s best midfield and arguably the greatest player to ever grace the football field at his disposal.

To win the treble in your first season is an incredible achievement, but given the attacking talent available, which included the likes of Thierry Henry, Samuel Eto’o, Andres Iniesta, Xavi and of course Lionel Messi, you can’t help but wonder whether the same success would’ve been achieved without him.

After four seasons at the helm with Barcelona, Guardiola was lured by German giants Bayern Munich to replicate his success in the Catalans with the Bavarian club.

And for the second time in his career, he managed to inherit the best squad in the world.

This is by no means an exaggeration either. Bayern was coming off a treble-winning season of their own when Guardiola took over from Jupp Heynckes – a feat he would not replicate during his time in charge.

Though Guardiola won three Bundesliga titles in his three seasons at the helm, he was still a failure, as he was unable to do what it was he was brought in for – win the Champions League.

He was appointed with the vision that he would elevate Bayern to the absolute pinnacle of world football and keep them there.

Instead, he fell short time and time again.

And while it’s foolish to write off a league title as irrelevant, there’s no denying that it is only ever a two-horse race at best – and even then, the financial pull that Munich possess puts them at an immediate advantage every season.

But after failing to deliver in Germany he was lured to the blue half of Manchester and handed his first true test as a manager.

Again, he has fallen into the hands of an owner that has endless pockets to wave at transfer targets, but this time it’s a completely different league.

While Premier League clubs have been accused of being failures on the European stage in recent years, there’s no debating that the EPL remains one of the most competitive leagues in the world.

Anyone can beat anyone, and simply fielding a team of superstars isn’t enough to guarantee you three points.

Six months into his reign as Manchester City’s saviour he has done nothing but provide justification for those who remain unconvinced by his managerial skills.

His side looks a shadow of those he’s managed in the past, and that’s because the squad itself is a shadow of those he’s inherited previously. And now that he no longer has the advantage of fielding the best player in every position each week, Guardiola is struggling to get a foothold in this league.

His decisions are being closely monitored and scrutinised and it seems he is struggling to cope with the pressure that is mounting with each passing week.

Given the money spent to bring him to Manchester, and the wider assumption that he remains one of the best in the business, his position on an unsteady Manchester City ship will remain in tact until the end of the season.

Yet should another summer of splashing the cash fail to deliver vast improvements in his second season, we may well see the demise of one of the most ‘successful’ managers of our generation.

It’s easy to deliver when things are handed to you on a silver platter but it’s an entirely different challenge when you’re made to work for your result.

While it’s too early to label Guardiola a failure at Manchester City, it’s certainly time we start to realise he’s been living the life of a fraud up until now.

The Crowd Says:

2017-12-19T09:57:33+00:00

Neil Raymond Clarke

Guest


Your journalist didn't read peps back story then eh!

2017-11-17T11:46:58+00:00

Peter Lockyer

Guest


Ooops!!!

2017-11-03T11:47:42+00:00

Ben Dyerson

Guest


This article has not aged well at all, has it.

2017-01-25T09:29:37+00:00

gaga

Guest


So one season he's not right at the top (just 5th place...) and you call him a fraud? Then every Football trainer in the world is a fraud. What a load of dribble.

2017-01-19T11:02:01+00:00

Swampy

Guest


I suspect these are the musings of a Man U supporter... I can't see why anyone would see Guardiola as a fraud. His stubbornness with regards to stones and bravo not withstanding, he is otherwise a fine manager. The EPL currently has a number of fine managers - Conte, Wenger, Mourinho, Pochettino, Klopp and maybe even Koeman. Not all of them can win the title. City's team has also had its composition issues - Aguero and Fernadinho committing numerous bonehead red cards, the Yaya saga, Kompany's on-going injury saga, the loss of Ilkay Gundogan for the season (who was adjusting to the EPL very well) and Bravo's inability to keep goals. Not too surprisingly, the two teams not playing in Europe sit 1st & 2nd. Speaking of Europe... City are well placed via the draw to advance to the next round of the UCL which doesn't put them far from the final. If they happened to win that then this article would look like a fraud.

2017-01-19T06:20:30+00:00

steve

Guest


No, he really doesn't.

2017-01-19T05:50:26+00:00

Mark

Guest


As usual, the truth is somewhere in the middle. He is a very decent coach no doubt. But some of the adulation he received following his stints at Barcelona and Bayern was totally over the top bordering on delusional. He is struggling more and more as the relative quality of the teams he is coaching declines and opposition teams better understand his style of play.

AUTHOR

2017-01-19T05:50:17+00:00

Josh Chahal

Roar Rookie


When you compare him to Bravo right now he looks like a superstar

2017-01-19T05:48:35+00:00

steve

Guest


Not really hard to assemble the best Bundesliga squad when BM continually buy the other teams best players. That's how you keep the other teams in place, take their best players from them.

2017-01-19T05:46:35+00:00

steve

Guest


Why? Joe Hart is rubbish. He isn't even the best English keeper in the EPL.

2017-01-19T05:35:13+00:00

Freddie

Guest


Yeah that's it. Highly rated overseas coach comes to England and struggles. The answer? The league and environment is at fault! Yet "being foreign" doesn't seem to have hindered Mourinho/Wenger/Klopp does it? Honestly, you convicts are hilarious!

AUTHOR

2017-01-19T05:34:23+00:00

Josh Chahal

Roar Rookie


Clearly you and I see differently on his time with Munich because I do genuinely believe any qualified coach could have taken over that squad and delivered three Bundesliga titles, such was the difference in quality between their squad and the rest of the league. He will certainly be given the time to adapt but he hasn't shown he has a Plan B or C when he isn't able to play the way he is used to.

AUTHOR

2017-01-19T05:30:55+00:00

Josh Chahal

Roar Rookie


You're right, it's a long way from being over but expectations were much higher of Pep than they were of Conte or even Klopp in his first term. Conte has his side looking like running away with the league, while Klopp's first season took them to two cup finals with a squad that was completely inherited and hadn't had a pre-season under him. The fact remains that Guardiola is struggling to adapt becasue he does not have the world class players he has had everywhere else he's gone. Hates off to him for taking up the challenge but anyone who thinks he will have this club conquering Europe is quite simply delusional.

AUTHOR

2017-01-19T05:28:19+00:00

Josh Chahal

Roar Rookie


I'm pretty confident that the four teams ahead, and even the one behind, are quite content with the managers they already have

2017-01-19T05:07:38+00:00

Liam Sheedy

Roar Guru


He is a fraud a lot of clubs would like as there Manager!

2017-01-19T04:56:34+00:00

Arthur

Roar Rookie


“Guardiola is being exposed as a fraud” SERIOUSLY? I MEAN SERIOUSLY?

2017-01-19T04:13:05+00:00

Caltex & SBS support Australian Football

Guest


"Guardiola is being exposed as a fraud" That's quite laughable---the season is not even over yet, and it's his first season in the EPL.. If Pep, is a fraud, then what of Arsene Wenger?

2017-01-19T03:58:10+00:00

Fadida

Guest


I suspect your last sentence will be spot on Griffo

2017-01-19T03:41:51+00:00

Square Nostrils

Guest


Yes Griffo, perhaps Pep is suffering from " English syndrome" a bit like Brexit ,whats on the continent, doesn't suit the Poms.

2017-01-19T01:53:18+00:00

Chris

Guest


I think getting rid of Joe Hart for heart-in-your mouth Bravo was a mistake. I really don't see any upside here.

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