Josep 'Pep' Guardiola
reportedly expressed a desire to manage Manchester United a few years ago
(Photo/PA)
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Bayern Munich head coach Pep Guardiola would relish
the chance to take charge of Manchester United, according to a newly-released
book chronicling his debut season with the German giants.
Press Association reports Guardiola ended a highly successful tenure at
Barcelona in 2012, after winning 14 trophies in four years, and took the top
job with Bayern last year following a 12-month sabbatical.
According to several national newspapers, in Pep
Confidential: The Inside Story of Pep Guardiola's First Season at Bayern
Munich, his close friend and journalist Marti Perarnau wrote that Guardiola
expressed his desire to manage United in 2011.
"I like this atmosphere. I could see myself
coaching here one day," Guardiola is reported to have told personal
assistant Manel Estiarte as they watched United beat Schalke at Old Trafford in
the Champions League.
In the event, Guardiola was eventually tempted by
Bayern, with the Spaniard uttering a similar desire to manage at the Allianz
Arena.
He had already agreed to take over at Bayern in
January 2013 before Sir Alex Ferguson announced his intentions to stand down
after 26 and a half years at the helm of United a few months later.
It was reported that the Red Devils made overtures
towards the former Barcelona and Spain midfielder following David Moyes'
sacking earlier this year, but they instead appointed veteran Dutch boss Louis
van Gaal.
"From the start Pep was well disposed to the
overtures from the Bavarian club," Perarnau added.
"Pep liked the set-up at Sabener Strasse
(Bayern's training complex), despite the fact that it was smaller than Barca's
training ground and had fewer technical facilities.
"The Catalan was impressed and told Manel
Estiarte privately: 'I like this place. I could see myself coaching here one
day.'
"Guardiola has always felt a deep admiration,
almost veneration, for the legendary teams and players of Europe."
Guardiola also turned down approaches from United's
Premier League rivals Manchester City and Chelsea to take charge at Bayern,
according to the book.
"During his sabbatical year in New York, the job
offers poured in," Perarnau wrote.
"His ex-colleague, Txiki Begiristain, the
director of football at Manchester City, was very insistent. He also met up in
Paris with Roman Abramovich, who was prepared to do anything to lure Pep to
Chelsea."
The book also reveals Guardiola's loathing for tiki-taka
football.
"I hate it. Tiki-taka means passing the ball for
the sake of it, with no clear intention. It's pointless," said Guardiola,
whose Barca team became renowned, apparently wrongly, for that style of play.
"Don't believe what people say. Barca didn't do
tiki-taka! It's completely made up! Don't believe a word of it! In all team
sports, the secret is to overload one side of the pitch so that the opponent
must tilt its own defence to cope. You overload on one side and draw them in so
that they leave the other side weak.
"And
when we've done all that, we attack and score from the other side. That's why
you have to pass the ball, but only if you're doing it with a clear intention.
It's only to overload the opponent, to draw them in and then to hit them with
the sucker punch. That's what our game needs to be. Nothing to do with
tiki-taka."
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