- Joined
- Apr 21, 2023
- Messages
- 324
You are underselling Barca and Rijkaard there mate. When Rijkaard took over, Barca was in a complete mess and nowhere near European glory. Rijkaard transformed them into one of the most dominant sides in Europe on par with Ancelotti's Milan. They won everything there is to win prior to Pep arriving there. They literrally won the CL 3 years prior.Bayern is the only team he managed that was already a dominant force before he got them.
The Barcelona team he inherited wasn't really a dominant force in Spain when he got the job, and they were just coming from an awful season as well. He also didn't just inherit the team and used it as it's. He changed a lot of things regarding the team dynamics and tactical set up, most notably in the midfield where he shifted the likes of Deco and Toure out to give a more central role to Xavi and Ineista. Messi also improved massively thanks to Guardiola, he wasn't the best player in the world before Guardiola, and he's the one who put him as a false nine which made most of his abilities explode. He won 6 trophies in his first season, coming from the back of a trophyless season the previous year. How is that normal ?
If it was the players only, why the only manager after him to manage to win a treble was Enrique ? Barcelona had a lot of managerial failures post Guardiola and bar Enrique no one has ever managed to achieve quarter of what he achieved in his 4 years there, despite having the same set of players.
And Spain domination was thanks to Guardiola's Barca domination. Just a normal follow up.
We can talk about City financials as much as we want, but the reality is this level of domination over domestic trophies in England is unprecedented and City spent a lot of money on the team even before Pep came and they still never looked as dominant as they're now under him.
Pep's style of play is very expensive, and requires a lot of quality and many players able to implement his ideas and training methods, that's very much true, but if you have a very good team and wants it to reach the next level, to start dominating everything, Pep is the perfect manager for this. His style of play is unmatched when implemented right and he unlocks the full potential of his players to reach their peak. He's the ultimate winner.
Sure he's not suited for teams in a rebuilding process or ones who can't afford his requirements, but Guardiola isn't really in need of this. He doesn't have to prove himself by managing a team in free fall. He has already built his name and everyone knows which teams he's perfect for and which job he can do and to what level of success.
Klopp is a great manager but he's a different category from Guardiola and suits different teams than him. I see no issue in this.
The season Pep took over Barca was knocked out of the CL by our 2008 squad. And even then we had to basically play 4-6-0 away from home, and park the bus after we knicked a goal against them at OT and hold on to the result. And that was our greatest team probably on par with the treble side.