Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Pep Guardiola. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Pep Guardiola. Afficher tous les articles

vendredi 2 septembre 2011

Barca is the word at UEFA Elite Club Coaches’ Forum

Barca is the word at UEFA Elite Club Coaches’ Forum


This week UEFA held its Elite Club Coaches’ Forum, a summit that reunited the likes of Pep Guardiola, Sir Alex Ferguson, Arsène Wenger and many others to talk about football and education.
Diario Sport (original here) reported that eulogising Barça was a hot topic among the international coaches gathered in Nyon . In fact, Porto coach, Vitor Pereira, said that “it’s incredible how Barça can transform ideas and tactics of coaches, even the most experienced ones. Their football inspires people, is fun to watch and, at the same time, it is quite risky“. He added, ”Barça is a role model, at least from a theorical point of view, but you need several conditions: work, time and quality players. I wish the rest of teams also embraced a more fun and risky way of playing football.
Read more after jump.
Unai Emery, Valencia’s coach, said that “Barça is making history“. He mentioned that Pep’s work is very important both in Spain and internationally, as “Barça is achieving a level that will be rememberd for a long time and will be difficult to surpass“.
Ralf Rangnich, Schalke 04 coach, also agreed that “Barça is the best team in the world and has been for the last two or three years”. Rangnich added, “Not only they’ve got Messi but they defend so well, which is a quality of theirs that is not recognised so often. There (in defense) is where Barça makes the difference.
In another article, El Mundo Deportivo (the original can be read here) quotes Arsenal coach Arsène Wenger, who said that the secret of Barça’s success is “in ther philosophy. All their players and their coach share the same way of playing football, and they are good enough to play like their coach wants them to play. That’s why copying Barça is pointless“.
Barça game was analysed by the best European coaches, all of whom showed their honest appreciation for coach Pep Guardiola’s work.

Image credit: www.uefa.com

jeudi 1 septembre 2011

Pep Guardiola: “Feel it”

Pep Guardiola: “Feel it”


The following is a translation of an editorial published in El País in March 2007, following Barça’s display against Zaragoza in the Copa del Rey. On that day, the 3-4-3 system, once again and after a long time, was used by a Barça coach, then Frank Rijkaard. Pep Guardiola explains his view on this approach. The original article can be found here.
Feel it
by Pep Guardiola
In yesterday’s editorial in La Vanguardia, actress Norma Aleandro said that many people are lucky and are not aware of it. I believe that those of us who love Barça (a lot) and football (much more) got lucky long ago. And the best part of all is that we are aware of it—from the hand of a Dutchman and a Catalan.
I’m sorry, Norma.
It appears, according to what they say, that the Dream Team returned in Zaragoza, but I believe that the Dream Team has never left.
I am drawn to victory and I realize that the road that gets you the closest to it is leadership. Never think about a game without playing on the opponent’s home turf.” A wonderful saying by Marcelo Bielsa that Barcelona made its own for over a decade. In Barcelona it is understood that you can win a thousand ways. All are valid. All work. There’s little more to say. But in Barcelona it is also understood that you can never win and repeat in a way that does not feel right to you—that does not feel right to the directors, coaches, players, friends of the press and the people who go every week to see them.
I think the current Barça players feel this. They feel it because many of them saw their closest predecessors do it. They feel it because you have seen them doing it and winning (much reinforces the belief to win) and since they know how they did it, they are able to do it again. If they did not genuinely feel it, they would win. But one day, they would not be able to keep it up. You cannot go on playing with a four-man defensive line, then to play with a line of three, and I say three, not five, and do it with consistency. And do it well. And win and reach the Copa del Rey semifinals.
I think, and maybe I’m wrong, but what I see is: they like to organize themselves according to the ball—that they attack and defend with the ball and understand that it is unacceptable that the ball is there and we are here. The players feel that, instead of moving towards the ball, the ball will reach them where they are. They feel that, in order for the attackers to succeed and appear in the newspapers, [they] need a good ball from the midfield and they, to do so, need a good ball from their defenders. I will pass it on to you and you pass it to them. Ronaldinho knows that he is better with Eto’o and Eto’o knows he is better with Ronaldinho. They have their aspects, but are better together than alone. They insist on knowing where the free man is at every moment, and know that it is better if that man is Iniesta rather than a winger. They know that Xavi and Iniesta are compatible. And why wouldn’t they be, dammit? They understand, as all good collectives should, that when you start on the right, it is better to finish on the left end and a back pass does not indicate fear, but the beginning of another, better play. They feel that the time will come and that possession itself is nothing, but rather a means to reach the goal. That it is better that the ball reach the extreme end of the pitch via the center rather than from up the sides. And if they play the three little ones (Xavi-Iniesta-Deco) like in Zaragoza, the homegrown players must deal with the control and preparation of the plays, and Deco with the completion. They feel that if we play with three in midfield, three will need  the support of Oleguer and Puyol. And they also know they have the best player in the world, or nearly so, and the best striker in the world, or nearly so, and if it comes to knowing how to play football, not decide games, not playing to make plays, I repeat, to know playing football, we have the two best midfielders in the world. But all of these better’s or almost’s, in another setting would be nothing more than better’s and almost’s. They know. Or they feel it.
Or that’s what I believe.
And with all this, sometimes, occasionally, they also lose. They lose through lack of will power, by not getting their shirt sweaty enough. Or because they have recently eaten too much and too well, and they have lost their appetite. Yes, they also lose for these reasons, like all teams around the world. But they also lose because sometimes, Xavi or Iniesta or Deco will steal the ball from the midfielders when perhaps they should not. Or because the ball that starts on the right is on track to finish on the right. Or because the third man is seldom used. Or because Ronaldinho has to receive more passes from Marquez and fewer from Sylvinho … Or because the attack-defense transition, to have it or not have it, was seen and unseen, and now maybe the best is slower. Or because Eto’o is not there anymore. Or I do not know why they lose! But they lose. But they lose not only by not sweating enough, not by not running more and more. They lose for other reasons they are aware of. Some know because they were born here and have thus been raised, others because they have no other remedy but to learn.
Tomorrow Barça will lose. Or after tomorrow. We will all be aware of it. But no one can argue that Barça has been a recognizable team for a long time. Unique.
And they do not know how much I like it.
Hours before the big game against Zaragoza, Iniesta sent a message to my brother. My brother forwarded it. He said: “The Dream Team is back. Game on.” Do they or do they not feel how they must play this wonderful profession that is playing football?
Are there still any who doubt how they will play the game against the Beatles?
Will they pass? Will they go home? Do not doubt the words of Bielsa.

dimanche 21 août 2011

A tribute to Pep Guardiola: How he changed the Club’s fortunes

A tribute to Pep Guardiola: How he changed the Club’s fortunes



At the beginning of the summer of 2008, Barcelona were a club in crisis. Frank Rijkaard’s last season at the club was a disaster at best, with Barcelona finishing third in the league and having to perform the infamous pasillo at the Bernabeu. The players lacked motivation and the (immediate) future looked bleak for the club. But one man completely turned the club’s fortunes around: Pep Guardiola. In his first speech as manager, the former Barcelona defensive midfielder didn’t promise trophies, only hard work, but he told the fans to fasten their seatbelts because this was going to be a wild ride. But not even the most optimistic culé could imagine just how wild it was going to be.

In his first season as Barcelona’s manager, Pep Guardiola made the club’s tiki-taka brand of football the most widely admired in the world, and the team won an unprecedented sextuple of trophies, with an historic 6-2 win at the Santiago Bernabeu being the icing on the cake. Not only did Pep win, he did it in style. In just one year, Barcelona had gone from a team in disarray
to one of the best sides ever to grace the game. Pep Guardiola couldn’t possibly have had a better first year.

Still, many doubted that Barcelona could remain on top, but Pep Guardiola proved them all wrong. Despite not retaining the Champions League title (due to a narrow, slightly unlucky, defeat to eventual champions Inter Milan in the semifinals), Barcelona won La Liga again with a record-breaking 99 points, despite the best efforts and the Galatico signings of Real Madrid. Lionel Messi was yet again acknowledged as the world’s best player, with his teammates Xavi Hernandez and Andrés Iniesta completing the Ballon d’Or podium after, along with several other Barcelona players, leading Spain to the World Cup title.

But this was surely the end of Barcelona’s period of dominance. With José Mourinho taking over at Real Madrid, Barcelona couldn’t win anything again… or so many thought. The truth is that José Mourinho and the most expensively-assembled squad in football history were no match for Pep Guardiola and FC Barcelona. In a night that won’t soon be forgotten, Barcelona routed Real Madrid 5-0 at Camp Nou en route to the third consecutive La Liga title, also beating Madrid on their way to yet another Champions League final triumph against Manchester United.




In three years, Pep Guardiola has won 11 trophies (and counting) out of 14 and he has made this Barcelona crop one of the best club sides of all-time. To put it in perspective, 11 trophies is more than Barcelona had won in a decade before Pep arrived (9), you’d struggle to win that much in Football Manager! Pep did warn us that this was going to be a wild ride, but this has been way beyond even our wildest dreams, this is an era we culés will never forget.

Besides, Pep isn’t done winning yet. He has been improving the squad with each passing year: in 2008/2009, he promoted Pedro Rodriguez and Sergio Busquets, turning them from relative nobodies in the football world into starters for the World Champions Spain. In 2010/2011, the acquisition of David Villa took the team to yet another level. This time around, the signings of Alexis Sanchez and Cesc Fabregas, as well as the emergence of Thiago Alcantara, seem to indicate that Barcelona will keep (or even improve) their level and keep competing for every trophy.

Regardless of what happens from now on, Pep Guardiola’s legendary status is undeniable. FC Barcelona have won 21 leagues, Pep has won 9 of them (six as a player, three as a manager). They’ve won four Champions Leagues, Pep has won three of them (one as a player, two as a manager). It’s hard to find another man who has given so much to the club.

Some people love to discredit Pep, citing his mistakes, namely in the transfer market. It’s true that Pep isn’t perfect, but it’s also true that Barcelona couldn’t possibly have a better manager in charge, he’s an absolute legend. Pep’s mistakes are utterly insignificant compared to all the great things he has done for the club. As fans, we should all pay tribute to Pep and appreciate all the great moments he’s given us, because we’ll miss him when he’s gone. It will be a long time before Barcelona has such a great manager again. As Pep Guardiola said back in 2008, fasten your seatbelts one more time and enjoy the ride! With Pep in charge, this coming season promises to be another glorious one in the club’s history, further adding to Pep Guardiola’s legend.