Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Manchester City boss Manuel Pellegrini admits regrets over timing of Pep Guardiola announcement

The Chilean is approaching the end of his three-year reign at the Etihad, a spell which included one Premier League title and two Capital One Cup success

Samuel Stevens
Monday 30 May 2016 16:09 BST
Comments
Manuel Pellegrini
Manuel Pellegrini (Getty)

Manuel Pellegrini has confessed he harbours regrets over his mid-season announcement that Pep Guardiola had agreed to replace him as Manchester City manager this summer.

The Chilean is approaching the end of his three-year reign at the Etihad, a spell which included one Premier League title and two Capital One Cup success, after breaking with convention to confirm he was leaving this summer back in February.

City subsequently finished 15 points behind champions Leicester City, were knocked out of both the Champions League and the FA Cup and just scraped into the top four on the final weekend.

He told The Guardian: “After Guardiola said he was coming to England it was my decision [to go public] because all the media was talking about Guardiola here, Guardiola in Arsenal, Guardiola in Manchester United.

“It was not fair for all managers - when everyone knew he was coming here. If I ask if I would do that again... I have some doubts.

“I am very self-critical about what I do. Always. I don't want to use [this] as an excuse but it was so difficult to work after that - not for me, for the players.

“It's impossible to know if it was the right decision but when you see the consequence of losing immediately three games in a row, when you are winning the last five or something...

“The most difficult thing in a group is when you break something. Something was broken in that moment.”

Pellegrini leaves Man City

The 62-year-old also confirmed that he is looking for work but remains indifferent about the possibility of taking up retirement. “If I don't have a really interesting option I will stop until I find one,” he added.

“If I have to stop [completely], I will stop. It can be now, [until] December, one year or for ever. Of course, I would miss it. The challenge keeps me alive.”

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in