Manchester City past and present came together with 19,000 fans for a brilliant tribute to Pep Guardiola at the end of an unforgettable decade.
Would any of this be here without Pep Guardiola? Would any of us be here without Pep Guardiola?
Probably not assembled together on this roasting Bank Holiday in May is the answer, and almost certainly not in the Co-op Live Arena that hosted the after party to yet another open-top bus parade for Manchester City.
If Guardiola’s spiritual home is the City Football Academy over the road, where he has stalked every corridor for the last decade and demanded higher standards, the Etihad is where he has transformed English football over ten years of dominance and while there hasn’t been the European glory that was wanted, that 45 minutes against Real Madrid in 2023 will be watched again and again as the moment when Guardiola passed from human to divine in the football universe.
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Not that Guardiola or anybody at the club would want to admit it, but the manager has been like gold dust to the club. A manager who arrived in 2016 with his own sponsors and commercial commitments has catapulted the Blues to one of the biggest commercial behemoths in world football with his leadership of a team that has broken record after record in the game.
The newly expanded North Stand that will bear his name is part of a £300m extension in that area of the campus for City’s owners in addition to being major shareholders in the spectacular venue Co-op Live. Put simply, it is difficult to imagine City involved in this without Guardiola having done what he has done.
Perhaps that is a fitting finale for him on City duty then, stood in the middle of an arena of 19,000 Blues living on his every word as one of the great artists in football looks down on the capital that such brilliance can bring. Inflatable bananas and blue moons hung from the sky while Catalan flags were among the City banners being waved among a packed audience.
This arena is one of the masterpieces that has come out of the Guardiola era, and City knew just how to squeeze every bit of aura out of it. The roof had already come off when WSL top scorer Bunny Shaw announced that she would be staying at the football club, so when Vincent Kompany walked out minutes later carrying the 2017/18 Premier League trophy the noise could probably be heard all over Manchester.
Kompany was just one of a list of legends celebrating the epic trophy haul that Guardiola has managed at the club, from pivotal players and club legends to trusted friends and family in what was the send-off of all send-offs. Having greeted Guardiola ten years ago with pomp and circumstance, this time felt all the more beautiful for the memories that have been shared by everyone in the room over the last decade.
From Mike Summerbee to Txiki Begiristain, Noel Gallagher to Jack Grealish, it was an incredible lineup to mark an unbelievable ten years. What a treat for everyone inside the Co-op – another night to rub their eyes to go with so many over the last decade.
As far as the club have come though, Typical City will always be there. As Guardiola arrived on stage, he was greeted with a series of questions regarding his weird mannerisms over the last decade – shouting to nobody in the dugout, blasting players on the pitch and losing his temper in the changing room – with a blooper reel that has delighted supporters as well as the victories, with celebratory messages from his hero Michael Jordan.
Guardiola was steered towards the centre of the arena, but before he would go he made sure club legend Summerbee was helped off stage – the true mark of the man. When he did take to the spotlight, Noel Gallagher gave him the chance for some final words.
“Thank you so much for coming here tonight to say bye to John, Bernie,” he said. “Of course, other legends like Vinny, Fernandinho, Eddie and Jack and all the others coming too. I feel the connection that this club [has] from the first minute. Thank you so much, I don’t have enough gratitude. I will always have [that with me] for the rest of my life.”
Then came the final surprise – Catalan band Mishima shipped over from Barcelona to give him the final send-off in front of his family and friends. Nobody would have been here without Guardiola because nobody would have had the memories. And, as the final Oasis song suggested, all Blues have seen things over the last ten years that others will never see and will live forever.
The club, and the city, will never be the same again.





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