Manchester City have officially announced that Pep Guardiola
will join the club on a three-year contract from 1 July 2016, replacing
current manager Manuel Pellegrini at the end of this season.
The confirmation puts an end to months of unnecessary speculation
around the City manager’s future as well as Guardiola’s future, and now
attention will move towards City’s expected summer transfer signings
(earmarked in advance by Guardiola and worked on by Begiristain and
Soriano) and the challenges Pep will face in England.
Manchester City’s official statement:
“Manchester City can confirm that in recent weeks it has
commenced and finalised contractual negotiations with Pep Guardiola to
become MCFC Head Coach for the 2016/17 EPL season onwards.
“The contract is for three years. These negotiations were a
re-commencement of discussions that were curtailed in 2012. Out of
respect for Manuel Pellegrini and the players, the Club wishes to make
its decision public to remove the unnecessary burden of speculation.
“Manuel, who is fully supportive of the decision to make
this communication, is entirely focused on achieving his targets for the
season ahead and retains the respect and commitment of all involved
with the leadership of the club.”
After his presser ahead of the Sunderland game, Pellegrini took the time out to address the situation:
“Before I finish, I want to tell you I have talked with the club and I will finish my contract on the original date.”
“I signed for one year more but with the clause that the club or me
can choose not to use that now. So I finish here 30 June, so there is
not the speculation.”
“The club are not doing anything behind me, I knew this one
month ago, but I don’t think it’s good to have rumour or speculation
about these things, so I prefer to finish today, which I why I have told
the players and I have told the press. I also spoke to the club two
weeks ago and said that I would do it.”
Pellegrini had signed a two-year contract extension back in August
but as speculated at the time, it meant little in case City were to
convince Guardiola to sign with them, which they have done now.
Pellegrini will now be in demand in England and in Europe, having led Mancester City to the Premier League
title in 2013/14. Chelsea are rumoured to be interested, especially if
Diego Simeone cannot be prised away from Atletico Madrid, although
recent reports suggest that Antonio Conte is also a front-runner for the
Stamford Bridge post.
Manchester United will be linked as well despite the taboo of
cross-city moves – however Pellegrini works best with a director of
football and given United’s comical handling of transfers, he’s unlikely to pull up trees in the red half of Manchester either.
The big question for now, though, is whether Guardiola can lead City to Champions League glory. But first, he must try and achieve the same with Bayern.
Culled from: Soccerlens
No comments:
Post a Comment