Pep Guardiola

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I am currently reading a book about Pep and his academy days. The more I read the more it makes sense why he has achieved so much in his first year.

I found this article online that illustrates how Pep goes the extra mile for his players.

This piece is based upon Oriol Domenech’s editorial, Detallista Guardiola, published in El Mundo Deportivo.


In his article, Domènech talks about some of the unexpected gestures and attention to details that Pep Guardiola has made since he became head coach of Barcelona’s first team. The author talks about how Guardiola’s “gestures that are not common at the elite levels of football have greatly surprised people” and how “with a naturalness, humility, respect, and simplicity, Pep has won the admiration of his own team and of his rivals, and he has humanized a locker room that is historically capricious.”

Here are the examples that he gives, to illustrate how Pep Guardiola is a “great professional and even better person.” After reading these, I completely agree — the more I learn about Pep Guardiola, the more I admire him. In his article, this is what Oriol Domènech describes:

1. In May of 2008, when Guardiola had not even been officially signed as the coach of the first team, he found time to visit Gabi Milito in the hospital after his knee surgery. Pep was busy not only with the end of the season with the reserve team, but also with his new daughter, who had just been born. Yet, he surprised the defender with a long visit of more than three hours. The coach also stated at the beginning of this season that he “would rather see Gabi playing than win a title.”

2. Guardiola inherited Rijkaard’s office and because he spent so many hours there, he installed a plasma screen to analyze the team’s games and those of the rivals. What is notable here is that he paid for the screen from his own pocket. It is an example of how he has tried to minimize indulgences not only with the players but with the staff, too.

3. One of the first decisions that Guardiola made was to designate that the fines collected throughout the season go to a charity, to the Sant Joan de Déu Foundation, which researches “Rett’s Syndrome.” Previously, the fines had gone towards paying for dinners.

4. At the beginning of each season, Audi gives a car to all of the first team players, as well as to the head coach. Pep Guardiola turned his down, arguing that if there weren’t a car for all of the technical staff, then there should not be one for him, either.

5. When the father of goalkeeper coach Juan Carlos Unzué passed away after a long illness, Guardiola and the entire team attended the funeral, even though they had a game the next day. According to Guardiola: “In a moment like this, it is normal to be at the side of someone with whom you spend so much time with day in and day out.”

6. When Thierry Henry struggled during the first six months, in his most critical moment, Guardiola took him to dinner to encourage him and to express his confidence in him. In the next game, against Valencia, Henry scored a hat trick in their 4-0 victory.

7. Cristóbal was a likable person who, without studies or work, lived with the assistance of the directors, coaches, and staff of the “cantera” (Barca youth system). The Barcelona coach had known him since he [Guardiola] was 25. When, with the arrival of Pep, the players stayed to eat at Camp Nou, Guardiola invited Cristóbal to eat with them everyday at noon. Many knew him because they had come through the cantera. This way, Cristóbal could eat and the players saw a different reality of life. Cristóbal passed away several hours after celebrating in the locker room with Pep and the team after the 6-2 victory over Real Madrid.

8. A week before the Champions League final, Guardiola learned that former player and coach Ángel Mur had not received a club invitation to the game, so he personally delivered one.

9 Guardiola took care of his assistants to the maximum. The night before the final in Rome, everyone gathered, and after watching the famous video with images from Gladiator, he gave everyone a photo of all the staff. He dedicated it thus: “Thanks for everything. Pep. You all are great, just like the players.”

10. After the final in Rome and after their last league game against Depor in Riazor, Pep surprised the players and staff by taking them out to eat at a seafood restaurant in A Coruña, where they enjoyed lobster, seafood and “all the alcohol in the world.” According to some who was there, it was one of the best moments away from the pitch.

11. Guardiola’s first words at the team presentation at the beginning of this season were to recognize the efforts of players that were no longer with them: Eto’o, Sylvinho, Hleb, Cáceres,Gudjohnsen and Víctor Sánchez. He also remembered them after the victory in the Club World Cup.

12. After the Copa del Rey game in Camp Nou against Cultural ended, Guardiola opened the doors of the locker room to the players of Cultural, some of whom had wanted to exchange jerseys with the Blaugrana players. He welcomed them in “as if it were their home.”

When a person is so humble, its impossible not to like the guy.
 
Yes he is the best thing ever, he will be knighted, made a citizen of the world, and he will start the first football league on the moon.

Just because he is Barca.
 
Mo the special one is way better...
 
I want to see all these top managers try out a little team
 
I want to see all these top managers try out a little team

Why would they manage a small team?? Most of them did that early in their careers. Mou managed uniao de leiria for instance.
 
PeP PeP PeP

Guardiola was already a coach when he was playing – he’s never stopped being a coach and he’ll never stop being a player. His way of understanding football is very close to that which Johan Cruyff believed in and he’s putting that into practice now.”

Juan Manuel Lillo (44), former coach of Dorados Sinaloa – the Mexican team Guardiola played for, current coach of Almeria.
 
For me it's Guus Hiddink before Pep. He still has a lot to accomplish, like whether he can bring success to more than one team.
 
PeP is a genius.

He played Alves a Right Back as a foward, in the second half he plays a Left Back Maxwell as a Centre foward. A flippen GENIUS!!! Real Madrid never knew what the hell was happening.

Real Madrid 2 - 0 Barcelona

First coach in history to win 4 back to back El Clasico's
 
PeP is a genius.

He played Alves a Right Back as a foward, in the second half he plays a Left Back Maxwell as a Centre foward. A flippen GENIUS!!! Real Madrid never knew what the hell was happening.

Real Madrid 2 - 0 Barcelona

First coach in history to win 4 back to back El Clasico's

this makes him genius how, exactly?

i've always liked Guardiola even as a player - but dude, you give '*ss-kiss' a whole new rep.
 
What other coach will have the balls to try what did in the biggest match of the season?

Having complete trust in his players and teaching them TOTAL FOOTBALL. Do you know of any coaches that would try something like that in such a MASSIVE game?
 
mmm... arsenal vs sampdoria - cup winners cup semi-final 1995 - no striker - arsenal playing 3-5-2 ...and Stewart Houston (caretaker coach at the time), one of the worst coaches i've ever seen makes an amazing change: moving steve bould (a slow, lumpy, lanky old-fashioned centre half) to play up front... bould scores twice against a team comprising of pagluica, roberto manchini, sanisa mihilovic and atillio lombardo - arsenal win 3-2.

given time i could think of countless less talented coaches and managers who have made similar 'match winning' changes. that's what they're paid to do - that's what's expected of them. cos they play a robust full-back in an attacking position, so what? bruce rioch and george graham played martin keown as a holding midfielder in games...belhadj has been doing it all season at wing back when he is not a defensive player. zirkov at chelsea...chris sutton has played at centre half, giggs at left back, lauren at right back, nial quinn in goal and saved a penalty! they're professionals. that's what they do.

get off your barca-tinted pedestal for once and get real!

pep's great...but calm down boytjie!
 
mmm... arsenal vs sampdoria - cup winners cup semi-final 1995 - no striker - arsenal playing 3-5-2 ...and Stewart Houston (caretaker coach at the time), one of the worst coaches i've ever seen makes an amazing change: moving steve bould (a slow, lumpy, lanky old-fashioned centre half) to play up front... bould scores twice against a team comprising of pagluica, roberto manchini, sanisa mihilovic and atillio lombardo - arsenal win 3-2.

given time i could think of countless less talented coaches and managers who have made similar 'match winning' changes. that's what they're paid to do - that's what's expected of them. cos they play a robust full-back in an attacking position, so what? bruce rioch and george graham played martin keown as a holding midfielder in games...belhadj has been doing it all season at wing back when he is not a defensive player. zirkov at chelsea...chris sutton has played at centre half, giggs at left back, lauren at right back, nial quinn in goal and saved a penalty! they're professionals. that's what they do.

get off your barca-tinted pedestal for once and get real!

pep's great...but calm down boytjie!

LoL - you have to go as far as 1995 to give me an example.

The big difference is, Barca did not have to play it that way. They had enough strikers on the bench, they never had injury problems at the back. Yet Pep displayed TOTAL FOOTBALL to the max!!!

The oke wins 6 trophies last season, the first coach in the history of the game to do that. He is on course to break another record, yet you think he isnt a genius.

It must hurt you, that you are always trying to knock Barca down. Take some time out and appreciate what Pep is doing, as you rightfully pointed out - the last time you can recall it was done in 1995 :D

Even though it was under different circumstances. The team in 1995 was forced to play that way compared to Barca's 11 who were taught to play that way.
 
1stly, i always give barca and pep the credit they deserve. Guardiola was one of my favourite central midfield players growing up - so don't for one second underestimate my respect for the man and what he has done for barca.

edit: nothing in my post suggests that playing players out of position even when you have proper replacements at hand, had never been done since 1995.

my arguments are to merely point out to you that your 'flippen genious' claim is not exclusive in it's own right as it is a norm amongst managers in every league, in every division in the world at every level.

your mere chirping off statements like "Pep displayed TOTAL FOOTBALL to the max!!!" tells me you know nothing of substance more than what you've heard on La Liga commentary.

managers will always play teams to their strengths - nothing new there.

and what does hurt me is when football fanboys just mouth off empty claims of grandeur at their clubs, when quite clearly a pat on the back is all that was due in the first place - yet demand everyone to bow down and worship every living thing their club represents.

not that you're one of those ;)
 
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oh and by the way, gerrard houlier won 5 trophies with Liverpool in 2001, a year in which UEFA gave Owen the Player of the Year - the rest of the team was mediocre compared to what Barca had last season (and that too a team who's spine was Rijkaard's and NOT Guardiola's).

big deal. did liverpool come out and say Houllier was a 'flippen genius'? no, as clearly he was not.
 
Well Pep has confirmed that he will see out another season at Barca , before he heads off for a new challenge.
 
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