LONDON, ENGLAND - JANUARY 28: Sam Allardyce, Manager of Crystal Palace and Josep Guardiola, Manager ... More of Manchester City shake hands prior to the Emirates FA Cup Fourth Round match between Crystal Palace and Manchester City at Selhurst Park on January 28, 2017 in London, England. (Photo by Steve Bardens/Getty Images)
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Everton’s Goodison Park stadium hasn’t always been a happy hunting ground for Manchester City.
In the 100 encounters that have taken place in the famous old Liverpool arena, the home side has won close to half, which is more than double what Pep Guardiola’s team managed in more than a century of visits.
Even when Manchester City became one of the country’s strongest teams in the late 2000s, the struggles at Goodison didn’t automatically cease. The visitor’s eight straight victories, which preceded yesterday’s final clash at the stadium, came off the back of just three wins in the 10 games before the run that notably included a 4-0 humbling during Pep Guardiola’s first season in charge.
David Moyes was the mastermind of many of those victories against a powerful City. And for yesterday’s game, he stood in the Everton dugout again, having been re-hired midway through this season. It’s hard to imagine the Scotsman wasn’t licking his lips at the prospect of facing a team way off its regular standards of excellence.
When the action took place, it was far from a classic encounter. Everton were stubborn but uninspiring, City lethargic and without incision.
So it was a surprise when teenage left-back Nico O’Reilly ghosted in at the far post to put the Mancunians ahead in the 84th minute.
The second added by Mateo Kovacic in injury time gave the scoreline some gloss, but there was no getting away from the fact that the victory was ground out.
As has been the case in previous years, delivering a win at a difficult venue would be viewed as a further sign of strength in the context of a more spectacular season.
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However, the fragility displayed by Manchester City this season makes it far harder to draw conclusions.
However, manager Pep Guardiola probably only felt prouder because of the grittiness of the performance.
This is because the man known for being a tactical maestro, who once famously questioned the wisdom of coaching tackles, has been hailing the most British intangible of all: team spirit.
“I’m optimistic to finish well this season,” Guardiola said a few weeks back. “Some spirit is back. The spirit is there. The spirit will sustain us.”
The Catalan coach cited his team’s comeback win against Bournemouth, one of the season’s most impressive sides, as a catalyst in driving his team’s fire and desire.
Trailing 1-0, Manchester City missed a penalty and then lost talisman Erling Haaland to injury. However, Manchester City dug deep to earn a 1-2 victory.
“Run, solidarity. Again, since the Bournemouth game in the FA Cup, we are back in those terms.” He said after the game.
“there’s a minimum requirement that we have to show respect for your mates, you have to make an effort.’”
The sentiment doesn’t just flow from the manager; experienced dressing room leader Ilkay Gundogan has also cited spirit as the key factor in a recent upturn in form.
“I feel in a lot of games, maybe we gave a bit too much importance to tactics and didn’t really pay attention much on behaviour of ourselves,” he told UK broadcaster TNT Sports.
“Having that determination, desire, aggression. In the last few games, I see a certain change, especially that very uncomfortable game against Bournemouth in the FA Cup (at the end of last month). Maybe people don’t give much credit to that because people, especially in our society and also football society, tend to credit more a beautiful goal, beautiful assist, beautiful actions.
Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola (left) and Cardiff City manager Neil Warnock before the ... More Emirates FA Cup, Fourth Round match at Cardiff City Stadium. (Photo by Nick Potts/PA Images via Getty Images)
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When Pep Guardiola arrived in English soccer nearly a decade ago, his philosophy was often cast as the antithesis to the stereotypical blood and thunder tactics the country was known for.
To some extent, the man himself encouraged this. In his first season, he repeatedly made statements about his unwillingness to compromise a possession style.
“Until my last day in England, I will try to play with the ball as much as possible. I know it’s impossible for 90 minutes, but I’m sorry, I will not negotiate that,” he said after his first Manchester derby.
But the truth is that Guardiola has also deeply respected the gutsy, mud-soaked English game.
Characters like Neil Warnock and Sam Allardyce regularly receive high praise from the Catalan. He pointedly never sneered like Arsene Wenger or Jose Mourinho about rivals using ‘rugby tactics’ or playing ‘19th-century football.’
The rhetoric from Guardiola has been the opposite.
“Sam Allardyce is a genius to take these teams when everyone believes it is over and get results,” Guardiola said in January 2021 after the journeyman coach had joined West Bromwich Albion.
‘Big Sam would always argue that he was far more like Guardiola than people give him credit for.
Clearly, in this moment of dire need for Manchester City, the manager is summoning Allardyce’s' genius' to grind out the vital wins needed for Champions League qualification.
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