Yeah tbf it was shitty.
Okay, so I totally agree that a Bayern fan is going to have a better idea of whether Pep was successful or not. I never questioned that. I just stated I was surprised that the Bayern fans 'love him', which is what I initially replied to. My reasoning for that is based on 2 things.
One, he never even got to a CL final. Now I'm not saying anyone has a right to win the CL or even get to a final, but I'm fairly sure the reason Pep was hired was to continue their league dominance (check) and make (or keep) them a major force in Europe. Now I don't think anyone could argue with the squad when he took over. It was a treble winning squad full of world class players. To not even get close again is a failure. In my opinion, at least. Much like we should've built on 99, I feel Bayern have dropped backwards since their treble. I'm pretty sure Pep was hired to take them forwards, not keep them where they are.
Second is the squad he inherited and the squad he left. He took over the best squad in Europe and left them with probably the third best squad. At the time I'd put Real and Barca ahead of them. Now that's not a glaring failure to be behind those two giants, but he took over the best. His replacements for key players didn't/haven't really lived up to expectations. Still heavily reliant on Robben and an injury prone To and Costa is now gone while Coman has shown promise but not nearly enough to take over from the main guys yet. He's young, however.
Selling Kroos for Alonso was bad business and set Bayern back imo. Obviously Alonso was older and is now retired, but it's not as if Kroos was a youngster. He was coming to his prime and since he's left had been part of the best midfield in the world. He wanted to leave, right? Why? Could Pep have done more to convince him to stay? He put a lot of eggs in the Thiago basket, and if we look at his 3 seasons at Bayern and Kroos' 3 seasons at Real, Kroos has had the better spell.
Thiago took time to settle but is a great talent and shining now.
Its hard to see how he made Bayern better, and that's why I was surprised to see most Bayern fans love him.
Sorry i'm a bit late, but i owe you a reply.
You certainly make valid points across the board. I also think that one should have reasonably expected a finals appearance, i just disagree that the fact that he didn't reach the final by default labels his stint there a failure.
Small margins and all that, out of those three semifinals i guess Real Madrid is the only outright bad loss, if for nothing then for the fact that they conceded two goals from corners at home in the first fifteen minutes which is completely unacceptable.
Barcelona in 2015 was simply better, while Bayern was ravaged by injuries and played a pretty makeshift XI as far as i can recall. Gave a good account of themselves, and got undone by Messi's genius late in the game. They're not the first, and probably won't be the last.
Atletico 2016, i thought that was their year. Done enough to advance over the two legs in my opinion, Muller's missed penalty probably sealed their fate.
Kroos wanted money which the board was simply unwilling to give him, i have no idea what Guardiola could have done aside from offering to match the amount from his own pocket.
As for the squad quality part, thing is, how do you replace Robben for example? He is thirty three, but when fit and firing he still seems like a closest thing to Messi in terms of raw mayhem he can cause for the opponents with dribbling and penetration. Schweinsteiger played like a man possesed during the 12/13, then fell off sharply (he rebounded for the WC though). It is a much tougher job than it looks on the surface
In short, you can hardly expect a treble winning team to become better TBH, it never happened.