He'll get bored and miss fighting with Mourinho.Maldeika said:I have read so much about people that want Guardiola here as a coach...
I just want to give you a piece of the book Perarnau, who wrote a book about Pep at Bayern, said...
The way Bayern support him is remarkable. Pep is less in charge than he was at Barcelona. Here he’s just the coach, but instead of making him feel uncomfortable, this ‘lesser’ role has been a liberation. His friend, Xavier Sala i Martín, puts it like this: ‘The burnout factor for Pep in Munich is less than at Barcelona because there he had to step into roles which shouldn’t really have been his, due to the lack of leadership there. There were moments when he seemed almost to be the president of Catalunya, the coach of FC Barcelona and the club spokesman. He had to fight accusations of doping, battle Mourinho and deal with UEFA. His work in Munich is much more normal.’
Pep loves his players’ immediate pre-disposition to hard work, the care with which Markus Hörwick prepares the press conferences, the minute detail to which team delegate Kathleen Krüger dedicates herself, the affability with which Hermann Gerland is teaching him about the variety of characteristics the Bundesliga exhibits, the outright passion of Matthias Sammer…
Germany is moulding Pep, who now seems more open, more serene, more disposed to new initiatives with every passing day. He’s not just conceding interviews to the club magazine and television station, but happily lends himself to some of Bayern’s publicity drives. He knows that the business of transfer policy is taken care of in the offices of Rummenigge and Hoeness and he’s just fine with that. ‘Here I’m the coach, full stop, which is very different from Barça. I coach the players, I try to drive the team towards the best results and I’ve got Sammer’s support, which is very important. He’s the key.’
I do not think that Guardiola will leave Bayern that early. He just started. And it is a nearly perfect work environment he has - more than he had it in Barcelona. Money ain't the most important factor - every club who wants to engage him would pay a lot. But I cannot imagine a team that is more ideal for his tactics or a better work environment right now.
Maldeika said:I have read so much about people that want Guardiola here as a coach...
I just want to give you a piece of the book Perarnau, who wrote a book about Pep at Bayern, said...
The way Bayern support him is remarkable. Pep is less in charge than he was at Barcelona. Here he’s just the coach, but instead of making him feel uncomfortable, this ‘lesser’ role has been a liberation. His friend, Xavier Sala i Martín, puts it like this: ‘The burnout factor for Pep in Munich is less than at Barcelona because there he had to step into roles which shouldn’t really have been his, due to the lack of leadership there. There were moments when he seemed almost to be the president of Catalunya, the coach of FC Barcelona and the club spokesman. He had to fight accusations of doping, battle Mourinho and deal with UEFA. His work in Munich is much more normal.’
Pep loves his players’ immediate pre-disposition to hard work, the care with which Markus Hörwick prepares the press conferences, the minute detail to which team delegate Kathleen Krüger dedicates herself, the affability with which Hermann Gerland is teaching him about the variety of characteristics the Bundesliga exhibits, the outright passion of Matthias Sammer…
Germany is moulding Pep, who now seems more open, more serene, more disposed to new initiatives with every passing day. He’s not just conceding interviews to the club magazine and television station, but happily lends himself to some of Bayern’s publicity drives. He knows that the business of transfer policy is taken care of in the offices of Rummenigge and Hoeness and he’s just fine with that. ‘Here I’m the coach, full stop, which is very different from Barça. I coach the players, I try to drive the team towards the best results and I’ve got Sammer’s support, which is very important. He’s the key.’
I do not think that Guardiola will leave Bayern that early. He just started. And it is a nearly perfect work environment he has - more than he had it in Barcelona. Money ain't the most important factor - every club who wants to engage him would pay a lot. But I cannot imagine a team that is more ideal for his tactics or a better work environment right now.
Mister Appointment said:Maldeika said:I have read so much about people that want Guardiola here as a coach...
I just want to give you a piece of the book Perarnau, who wrote a book about Pep at Bayern, said...
The way Bayern support him is remarkable. Pep is less in charge than he was at Barcelona. Here he’s just the coach, but instead of making him feel uncomfortable, this ‘lesser’ role has been a liberation. His friend, Xavier Sala i Martín, puts it like this: ‘The burnout factor for Pep in Munich is less than at Barcelona because there he had to step into roles which shouldn’t really have been his, due to the lack of leadership there. There were moments when he seemed almost to be the president of Catalunya, the coach of FC Barcelona and the club spokesman. He had to fight accusations of doping, battle Mourinho and deal with UEFA. His work in Munich is much more normal.’
Pep loves his players’ immediate pre-disposition to hard work, the care with which Markus Hörwick prepares the press conferences, the minute detail to which team delegate Kathleen Krüger dedicates herself, the affability with which Hermann Gerland is teaching him about the variety of characteristics the Bundesliga exhibits, the outright passion of Matthias Sammer…
Germany is moulding Pep, who now seems more open, more serene, more disposed to new initiatives with every passing day. He’s not just conceding interviews to the club magazine and television station, but happily lends himself to some of Bayern’s publicity drives. He knows that the business of transfer policy is taken care of in the offices of Rummenigge and Hoeness and he’s just fine with that. ‘Here I’m the coach, full stop, which is very different from Barça. I coach the players, I try to drive the team towards the best results and I’ve got Sammer’s support, which is very important. He’s the key.’
I do not think that Guardiola will leave Bayern that early. He just started. And it is a nearly perfect work environment he has - more than he had it in Barcelona. Money ain't the most important factor - every club who wants to engage him would pay a lot. But I cannot imagine a team that is more ideal for his tactics or a better work environment right now.
It's a fair point of view that Maldeika. I also think when I see his team and his work in Bayern that it's hard to imagine him walking away before his contract is up as a bare minimum. I guess the only question mark is over the competitiveness of the league. If he's won it again by mid March or whenever it was over as a competition last season, I wonder if that might make him question how long he'll stay.
Having said that i wonder whether even when he does leave Bayern, he has the desire to cross swords with Mourinho again.
OB1 said:Maybe Pep has or will change his mind about England but my understanding is that he learnt English some years ago because he wanted to work in England, eventually.
I would expect that all the things he is enjoying about working in Munich are being fed to Txiki on a regular basis.
Neville Kneville said:Worried about Mourinho ?
I'm assuming that's a joke.
adammck said:Our owners would take Pep in a heartbeat.
hgblue said:because we can't afford to wait for him if he's committed to Bayern imo.
Mister Appointment said:hgblue said:because we can't afford to wait for him if he's committed to Bayern imo.
What makes you say that?
I think we have a perfectly capable title winning manager in charge already. Albeit he's going through a bit of a bad spell as the side are but the international break has done wonders to restore a bit of perspective.
In terms of replacing Pellegrini, it just seems a long way off at present and the shortlist would be Klopp and Pep - beyond that you may as well just write five names like De Boer, Simeone, Koeman, Tuchel, and Garcia down and pick one of them out of a hat.
hgblue said:Mister Appointment said:hgblue said:because we can't afford to wait for him if he's committed to Bayern imo.
What makes you say that?
I think we have a perfectly capable title winning manager in charge already. Albeit he's going through a bit of a bad spell as the side are but the international break has done wonders to restore a bit of perspective.
In terms of replacing Pellegrini, it just seems a long way off at present and the shortlist would be Klopp and Pep - beyond that you may as well just write five names like De Boer, Simeone, Koeman, Tuchel, and Garcia down and pick one of them out of a hat.
I don't see Pellegrini as the man to take us to the next level, more a safe pair of hands until we appoint the man who will.
I already have, and Simeone came out ;).
Mister Appointment said:hgblue said:Mister Appointment said:What makes you say that?
I think we have a perfectly capable title winning manager in charge already. Albeit he's going through a bit of a bad spell as the side are but the international break has done wonders to restore a bit of perspective.
In terms of replacing Pellegrini, it just seems a long way off at present and the shortlist would be Klopp and Pep - beyond that you may as well just write five names like De Boer, Simeone, Koeman, Tuchel, and Garcia down and pick one of them out of a hat.
I don't see Pellegrini as the man to take us to the next level, more a safe pair of hands until we appoint the man who will.
I already have, and Simeone came out ;).
The 'next level' makes for nice forum rhetoric but it's meaningless in reality. Pellegrini's record in the champions league is ten times better than City's. His record in the premier league is one season, two trophies. Baring that in mind, whatever the 'next level' is, if we're not there it's because as a team and a club we're not ready to be there. Not because of the manager.
Sadly for you there's more chance of Lavinda Past becoming City's manager than Simeone. Not that I don't rate him but it's just highly unlikely. Pellegrini will get another shot next season with a much improved squad to the one we currently have. Succession plans are nice in theory, but in practice I would expect the entire club to be focussed on the upcoming two transfer windows to help give the manager the tools he needs to get the club to the 'next level'.
tolmie's hairdoo said:I'm not sure he will get another shot, mate.
Certainly if this malaise continues and there is a lot which can happen between now and the summer.
Still the calm before the storm for me. He's a gentleman and I don't see him receiving much of a rough ride (outside of this forum, anyhow).
Between now and mid January, having also had the outcome of the 3rd round of the FA Cup, a more appropriate landscape will be in evidence.
Unless we back him with serious intent in January, I think the owners are once again in a 'suck it and see' Mancini holding pattern.
tolmie's hairdoo said:Mister Appointment said:hgblue said:I don't see Pellegrini as the man to take us to the next level, more a safe pair of hands until we appoint the man who will.
I already have, and Simeone came out ;).
The 'next level' makes for nice forum rhetoric but it's meaningless in reality. Pellegrini's record in the champions league is ten times better than City's. His record in the premier league is one season, two trophies. Baring that in mind, whatever the 'next level' is, if we're not there it's because as a team and a club we're not ready to be there. Not because of the manager.
Sadly for you there's more chance of Lavinda Past becoming City's manager than Simeone. Not that I don't rate him but it's just highly unlikely. Pellegrini will get another shot next season with a much improved squad to the one we currently have. Succession plans are nice in theory, but in practice I would expect the entire club to be focussed on the upcoming two transfer windows to help give the manager the tools he needs to get the club to the 'next level'.
I'm not sure he will get another shot, mate.
Certainly if this malaise continues and there is a lot which can happen between now and the summer.
Still the calm before the storm for me. He's a gentleman and I don't see him receiving much of a rough ride (outside of this forum, anyhow).
Between now and mid January, having also had the outcome of the 3rd round of the FA Cup, a more appropriate landscape will be in evidence.
Unless we back him with serious intent in January, I think the owners are once again in a 'suck it and see' Mancini holding pattern.
lancs blue said:If that happens we basically write off another season as we did in 12/13, the players will be familiar with the "dead man walking" scenario and it gets reflected on the pitch. Unless the execs have a nailed on replacement lined up for the summer it may be better to be ruthless if form doesn't improve between now and mid-Jan.
Mister Appointment said:tolmie's hairdoo said:I'm not sure he will get another shot, mate.
Certainly if this malaise continues and there is a lot which can happen between now and the summer.
Still the calm before the storm for me. He's a gentleman and I don't see him receiving much of a rough ride (outside of this forum, anyhow).
Between now and mid January, having also had the outcome of the 3rd round of the FA Cup, a more appropriate landscape will be in evidence.
Unless we back him with serious intent in January, I think the owners are once again in a 'suck it and see' Mancini holding pattern.
My feelings come from the innate belief that everyone hasn't overnight become shit and unsettled working with Pellegrini. I'd expect a serious upturn in league form and I expect us to mount a title challenge which goes to the final couple of months of the season. Seems a distant prospect now but I don't believe Chelsea to be good enough to go the season unbeaten.
You are right about the next 6/8 weeks allowing for the lay of the land to be fully digested. I just think at the end of that period we'll be much more optimistic than we currently are.
In terms of business in January. Only Barkley would be worth the money/hassle. Everyone else we should wait until the summer for. Unless we get out of our CL group, in which case I might revise that slightly!