Football

‘A happy flowers team’: What Pep Guardiola’s outburst says about him and Man City

At one point in a remarkable media appearance, Pep Guardiola kind of twirled his hands into the air, as he discussed the ambition of his Manchester City team.

“The players want it, but there is something here, in the clouds.”

He might well have been describing his own post-match press conference, that maybe even surpassed the 4-2 win over Tottenham Hotspur in terms of theatrics. The actual football certainly felt like a fairly distant memory by the time Guardiola was in mid-flow.

It is striking to think that this was a figure who had apparently been so serene at half-time. His City players had gone in to the dressing room having just conceded twice in two minutes and expected to be castigated. There was instead silence for a while before Guardiola forensically talked them through what was required.

He outlined the blueprint to win the game. It was only afterwards that he addressed how to beat out Arsenal to win the title, making him much more agitated.

Everyone got it, from the players to the fans to the club as a whole and even “haters” outside. It was hard to know if this was the purest Pep possible or rather Pep pushed to the limit; Guardiola distilled or Guardiola unleashed.

It was even harder to know what he meant in many of his statements. You can pick your own interpretation from so many choice lines.

Guardiola started in his immediate broadcast interview and continued in the purportedly calmer surroundings of his press conference. Both could better be described as Joycean streams of consciousness rather than media duties. It was even more complicated by so many contradictions within these statements, as Guardiola seemed to be going against things he himself had said in the same sentence, let alone the same press conference or week.

Having declared on the eve of this match that any defeat is always down to tactics, he here put everything down to mentality. His own mindset was one of super intensity, as he just kept going.

“I don’t recognise my team.” “Everything is so comfortable but opponents don’t wait.” “There’s nothing from the stomach, from the guts.” “The same with the fans, they are silent for 45 minutes. I want my fans back.”

He then at least elaborated a bit more in front of the written press, but only insofar as his monologues became more elaborate themselves.

“I’m here and I just listen to Spurs fans.” “People say it’s not success if you don’t win the Champions League. Bulls***. We won a lot… against this Liverpool!” “I want a reaction, from the whole club, everyone.”

Then there was what might be called the high point.

“We’re a happy flowers team. I don’t want to be happy flowers. I want to beat Arsenal. If we play that way, Arsenal will beat us.”

If it’s indeed difficult to know the meaning of much of that, the sentiment is all too easy to read by that last line.

This is of course about drive, as Guardiola both sought to bring it out in his team, and also showed his own.

So much of this post-match episode will of course be lampooned, but it is actually an illustration of why he is so good. He’s on another plane of intensity to most people, which is kind of what you need to be that successful at this level.

It may seem unusual to many, but that’s sort of the point. It was here designed to put everyone at City out of their comfort zone.

It might also have been more pronounced because of the unusual position this is for Guardiola. It is usually Guardiola in first, not second. He’s not used to chasing, and we actually don’t know if he’s that good at it. The numbers at least illustrate the inexperience here. This game of two halves against Spurs might have been a raucous contest but it offered a rather neat comparison point, given it came at exactly the halfway point of the season, as the 19th Premier League game.

Xural.com

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