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Pep Guardiola exclusive: Manchester City boss admits ‘relief’ of UEFA Champions League success - ‘We are so proud’

Ben Southby

Updated 09/04/2024 at 13:45 GMT

Pep Guardiola felt "a sense of relief" when he and his Manchester City side finally sealed the UEFA Champions League trophy last season. The Spanish boss wrapped up a historic Treble-winning campaign in Istanbul last summer, which he feels put to bed a lot of questions surrounding the club's success on the European stage. "To be champions of Europe, we are so, so proud," he told TNT Sports.

ISTANBUL, TURKEY - JUNE 10: Pep Guardiola of Manchester celebrates victory with the trophy after the UEFA Champions League 2022/23 final match between FC Internazionale and Manchester City FC at Atatuerk Olympic Stadium on June 10, 2023 in Istanbul, Turke

Image credit: Eurosport

Pep Guardiola has revealed the “relief” of finally getting his hands on the UEFA Champions League trophy at Manchester City last season.
The Spaniard became a European champion for the third time last June when he guided Man City to their first-ever Champions League title, capping off a remarkable treble-winning campaign seven years after joining the club.
Ahead of City’s highly-anticipated quarter-final first leg clash against Real Madrid on Tuesday, live on TNT Sports and discovery+, Guardiola reflected on the moment City clinched the trophy that made him “so, so proud”.
“There is a sense of relief I would say,” he told TNT Sports.
“Every time we come here [I get asked] if we’re going to win the Champions League, or that we have to win it. So since the season started, they didn’t ask me again and again.
“I always said and people don't believe me, I think the Premier League or the domestic league title are the more difficult ones because it is 38 fixtures and being there every single day, and especially the contenders we have this season.
“But this competition, Europe. To be crowned and be champions of Europe, we are so, so proud.”
Despite ending their wait for a UEFA Champions League medal under Guardiola last year, the Man City boss feels the club are still new to Europe in the grand scheme of things.
“Relax as much as possible, don’t talk much, strategy and be courageous,” Guardiola replied when asked how he prepares for blockbuster games, such as Tuesday night at Bernabeu.
“You have to be brave to play in these types of stadiums. [It is] an experience, a new chance to improve to play these types of games.
“As I said before, it is a little bit more than one decade [that] Manchester City have been flying around Europe, and one decade in perspective of Europe is not much. Every time we play this type of event we get experience.
“The club learns, I learn, the players learn and we can know better.”
Man City thumped Real Madrid 5-1 on aggregate in the semi-final of the competition last season to reach their second-ever final, where they eventually went on to beat Inter Milan in Istanbul.
Guardiola is now only one UEFA Champions League title behind Madrid manager Ancelotti after claiming Europe’s most prestigious prize at Barcelona in 2009 and 2011 in addition to his triumph at City.
“He’s an exceptional person, we have a good relationship,” Guardiola told TNT Sports of the pair's relationship.
“We don’t see each other much. He’s more experienced than me, he’s a little bit older! He’s been in many leagues where he’s had success. How he makes his teams work and all the success [shows] how good he is.”
On whether he aims to emulate the legendary manager, Guardiola added: “I don’t complain. If I have to retire tomorrow and go home, I could not [have] expected the career I had so far.
“I’ve accomplished everything I dreamed of. I think it would be incorrect to ask more of my life and my career.”

Rodri hails City's mentality

Rodri was the hero that night in Istanbul, with his thunderous strike - the only goal of the game - etching Man City’s name into the European history books for eternity.
Ahead of Tuesday’s match, the midfielder told TNT Sports “it means a lot” to be the defending champions heading into the latter stages of the competition.
“I remember last season before we won any trophy, I said my biggest concern about this year is not only winning because we won the trophy, but what we can do after that and the legacy [we have] and how other teams look at you when you win. It’s different,” he explained.
“This is something we have now, this mentality. This is something that reflects to the opponents. I hope this helps us in the weak moments in the game, there are moments when we will feel the pressure.
“This is what Real Madrid have done very well in the last few seasons. This is something we want to copy because now we’re the champions and this is the way we have to go.”

How to watch Real Madrid v Manchester City on TNT Sports and discovery+

TNT Sports is available across all major TV platforms, offering a line-up of up to four TV channels (TNT Sports 1, TNT Sports 2, TNT Sports 3, TNT Sports 4), and up to six digital or red-button channels (TNT Sports 5 to 10), and TNT Sports Ultimate plus TNT Sports Box Office HD.
Real Madrid v Manchester City will be live on TNT Sports 2 with coverage from 19:00 UK time on Tuesday, April 9.
You can subscribe to TNT Sports through discovery+, BT, EE, Sky, and Virgin Media.
To find out where your local establishments showing TNT Sports are, use our Pub Finder tool.
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TNT Sports presents the premium live sports rights previously carried by BT Sport including the Premier League, UEFA Champions League, UEFA Europa League, UEFA Conference League, Gallagher Premiership Rugby, Investec Champions Cup, EPCR Challenge Cup, MotoGP, Cricket, UFC, Boxing and WWE. The streaming home for TNT Sports in the UK is discovery+, where fans can enjoy a subscription that includes TNT Sports, Eurosport and entertainment in one destination. You can also watch TNT Sports through BT, EE, Sky, and Virgin Media.
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