Pep Guardiola insists he will not follow Jurgen Klopp by taking a role within football that isn't managerial as questions continue over his Manchester City future with his contract winding down
The Manchester City boss arrived into the dugout back in 2008 when he first took charge of Barcelona. Since then he's only had one year away from management and is currently into his ninth season at the Etihad with talk of him potentially extending his contract.
Should he decide against doing so, Guardiola maintains he will either be a manager or in no role at all. Klopp recently called time on his stint at Liverpool, where he spent almost nine years, but has already taken on a new role, albeit not as a manager.
The German has just been appointed as head of global soccer at Red Bull, meaning he will influence matters at the clubs they own in Leipzig, New York and Salzburg. Guardiola though has no interest in following his former rival.
"I am thinking about Wolves on Sunday and the messages I have to tell them (the players), the images I have to see, the training I have to prepare. I want to beat Wolves desperately."
Guardiola has rewritten the history books at every club he's been at. Whilst in Manchester he's won six of the past seven Premier League titles. City have just won four on the trot - a feat never before achieved - and his side are favourites to claim a fifth in a row.
Several of his records have superseded those set by Sir Alex Ferguson, who remains the most successful Premier League manager following his achievements with Manchester United. Guardiola twice downed Ferguson in Champions League finals but has refused to be drawn into a comparison on their respective legacies.
The Man City boss had no interest in Sir Alex Ferguson comparisons ( Image:
"For the United fans, it's always Sir Alex. Absolutely fine. I'm not saying I'm a bad manager, otherwise I could not be here for a long time and be a success, but to be best or not best, that is, believe me, it's not important.
"Just to say Djokovic is better than Nadal, Nadal than Federer, Federer than Djokovic, so all three are exceptional. Jurgen Klopp made me a better manager, Jose Mourinho made me better manager, Mikel Arteta now is making better manager."
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