Pep Guardiola ended speculation over his future Thursday by signing a new two-year contract with Manchester City that promises to keep him at the club until June 2023.
Guardiola’s previous deal was set to expire next summer.
Despite talk of a potential return to Barcelona in recent weeks, the Spaniard is sticking with City as they continue their search for a Champions League title.
“It is testament to the qualities of the man that Pep Guardiola’s passion and intelligent approach are now woven into the very fabric of the football we play and our culture as (a) club,” chairman Khaldoon Mubarak said in a statement.
“That impact has been central to our success during his tenure and it is why I am delighted that he shares our view that there is so much more to be achieved both on and off the field.”
Guardiola’s currently in his fifth season with City, the longest he’s ever spent coaching a single club. He left Barcelona and Bayern Munich, respectively, after just three years.
Since arriving in England in 2016, the 49-year-old has won the Premier League twice, the League Cup on three occasions, and the FA Cup. He steered City to an unprecedented domestic treble in 2018-19, winning in all three competitions.
But success has eluded City in Europe. They’ve yet to reach the Champions League semifinals under Guardiola, falling at the quarterfinal stage three times.
“The challenge for us is to continue improving and evolving,” Guardiola added, “and I am very excited and about helping Manchester City do that.”
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — The New York Giants fired offensive line coach Marc Colombo following a nasty verbal confrontation with head coach Joe Judge, sources told ESPN, and have replaced him with longtime NFL assistant Dave DeGuglielmo.
“We appreciate what Marc has done, but I felt like this move is in the best interest of the team,” Judge said in a statement released by the team Wednesday.
When Colombo was told of a plan by Judge to hire DeGuglielmo as a consultant on Tuesday night, it did not go down well.
Colombo did not agree with the move and felt that he was being undermined, a source told ESPN, due to DeGuglielmo’s background as an offensive line coach. Another source added that the hands-on Judge wanted to bring in “one of his guys” to capture more control at a position that is not his expertise.
Although there was plenty of name-calling, Colombo and Judge did not get into a fistfight, as one report indicated. A Giants spokesperson said the report of a physical altercation is “absolutely false in every way.”
La Liga president Javier Tebas took aim at Manchester City on Tuesday by saying the club can only sign Lionel Messi because it skirts UEFA’s Financial Fair Play regulations.
City were believed to be ahead of the queue to acquire Messi when the Argentine demanded a transfer from Barcelona in August. However, Messi withdrew his request to terminate his contract 10 days later to avoid a legal wrangle with the Catalonian outfit.
Messi’s Barcelona deal expires next June, allowing him to walk away from the Camp Nou for free if he doesn’t extend his paperwork.
“The only club in the Premier League that talks about registering Messi is Manchester City,” Tebas said in a news conference Tuesday when asked about the prospect of Messi leaving Spain, according to ESPN’s Sam Marsden.
“Since Man City compete outside the rules, what I am worried about is that they are able to access a player by breaching UEFA’s rules. It is not only me complaining about this. (Liverpool manager Jurgen) Klopp and (Tottenham Hotspur’s Jose) Mourinho have also complained about City.”
Tebas added La Liga is “ready” should Messi decide to leave and claimed it hasn’t “noticed any difference” from the departures of Neymar to Paris Saint-Germain in 2017 and Cristiano Ronaldo to Juventus in 2018, as quoted by BBC Sport’s Simon Stone.
UEFA declared Manchester City guilty of breaking its financial rules and banned the club from European competitions for two years. City maintained their innocence, and the Court of Arbitration for Sport cleared them of breaking UEFA’s guidelines in July.
“I have criticized what City do so many times, doing it one more time makes no difference,” Tebas said. “They are not affected by COVID-19, by pandemics, or by anything because they are financed differently and it’s impossible to fight against that.”
Sheikh Mansour, a member of Abu Dhabi’s royal family, took over City in 2008. The ownership group has since spent large amounts of money on the club’s facilities and in the transfer market to turn it into one of the strongest forces in the European game.




