Guardiola keeps his cool after City win
Pep Guardiola's Manchester City delivered a statement performance to move past Real Madrid and into the quarter-finals of the Champions League on Friday, putting aside questions about their mettle in Europe's top competition.
Under Guardiola, City have fallen short in the knockout stage, allowing games to run away from them in losses to Tottenham, Liverpool and Monaco in the past three seasons.
But in both the 2-1 win at the Bernabeu in February and in this victory by the same scoreline at an empty Etihad, City showed a maturity and control that suggests they may be ready for a real challenge this season.
Olympique Lyonnais are next up on Aug. 15 in Lisbon and on this form City will start as favourites to reach the competition's semi-finals for only the second time.
While City showed the kind of focus and discipline that had helped Real to three Champions League titles under Zinedine Zidane, the Spaniards were undone with the sort of sloppy defending that has cost Guardiola's men in the past.
Twice Raphael Varane gave the ball away inside his box to gift City goals - the first created by Gabriel Jesus for Raheem Sterling and the second finished by the Brazilian.
"This competition can punish you, we know from our experience but Gabriel (Jesus) made his contribution, he’s the best guy for these situations," said Guardiola.
"He’s the man of the match for these two games, he was decisive for us. He helped us when we suffered in the bad moments."
But Guardiola deserves credit himself for the way he set his team up to press Real's fragile back-line with the surprise decision to feature Phil Foden as part of his front three.
"The plan was to be on the front foot, show aggression and be right on them and we did that and with our pressing we got the two goals," said Sterling.
City fans may believe this could be their year but Guardiola knows there is so much quality and so many surprises awaiting in the 'Final Eight' knockout tournament in Lisbon.
"It’s an important first step, to beat Real Madrid is incredible, but we have to go to Portugal. Eat well, be together, laugh and work a lot and arrive in the best moment to play Lyon and try to get to the semis for only the second time. We have to be calm".
‘Hope I won’t be judged on one match’
Juventus coach Maurizio Sarri was devastated by his team's last 16 Champions League exit to Olympique Lyonnais but said he did not believe he would be judged solely on Friday's match which saw them go out despite a 2-1 win.
Despite winning a ninth successive Serie A title last month, Sarri's team have not managed to convince the critics during his first season in charge. Their failure to even match last season's quarter-finals performance in the Champions League has added to the pressure on the 61-year-old.
"If I wasn't devastated by not qualifying, I'd be happy with the performance," Sarri said after his side were knocked out on away goals following a 2-2 aggregate draw.
"I actually expected less from us, I think we played a great game. We fell behind to a penalty kick that could have made us lose our heads and we had three chances when we were 2-1 ahead."
Sarri pointed out that his side had dropped only two points in the group stage and were unbeaten in the competition until their 1-0 first leg defeat to Lyon in March, before the Covid-19 outbreak interrupted the season for three months.
"This competition doesn't take any prisoners," he said. "If it was a normal ranking, we would be first or second after six wins, a draw and a defeat."
On his future, he said: "I don't think top-level executives decide based on a single game. I think they make wider evaluations -- whether they be for or against."
He added that the coronavirus pandemic had made it an unusual season.
"We've had several months where we haven't done anything logical," he said. "We've been locked indoors, quarantined, individual training, then collective training, then 14 games in 48 days."