Pep Guardiola patrolled the touchline in Sunday’s pivotal 2-1 Premier League win over Arsenal, virtually heading, shooting and throwing his body at seemingly every ball, but when it was over, the Manchester City manager reduced the night to a single word: hope.
Guardiola, who was wildly animated all night, scoffed when asked if he enjoyed the game.
“Enjoying! I don’t think is the right word,” the Spaniard said. “It’s fine. Hope, that game gave us hope. That’s all.
“I said to the guys after the game, enjoy the moment, but don’t lose the focus right now. We are there, but the reality is who is top of the league? We are not,” Guardiola added.
“Goal difference (if the two teams finish even on points), who is better? They are. But of course, we’ve got hope, to still extend the chance to fight and to live.”
Guardiola has made a habit of breaking Arsenal’s hearts, his Manchester City sides stalking them through spring before unleashing relentless late‑season surges that turn belief into dread and title races into familiar blue victories.
He described Sunday’s bruising contest as worthy of the title race, praising Arsenal’s resilience and physical edge.
“People say they don’t have momentum,” he said. “When you see them play and compete in duels, long balls, second balls and set pieces, they are an extraordinary team. Otherwise you cannot be top of the league all season.”
The City manager called the clash “the best advert worldwide and for England.”
In the heart of the storm was Haaland, back scoring in the league for the first time in two months and locked in a ferocious duel with Arsenal defenders William Saliba and Gabriel.
A tussle with Gabriel left Haaland’s shirt badly torn and he tossed it into the crowd.
“I would not like to be Erling Haaland and battle with William Saliba and Gabriel,” Guardiola said with a smile. “To be honest, I prefer to read a book.”
Haaland, who scored the decisive winner embraced the chaos that came with the game.
“I think it’s always like this, a lot of fighting,” the 25-year-old Norwegian said. “It’s up to others to decide if I won that battle or not. I scored the goal, so I won the battle in that moment. It was decisive, and we won.”
Guardiola said the striker’s mid-season scoring drought reflected the toll of a relentless campaign.
.Source: flash score.
