Man City 'apparently' not Champions League contenders: Guardiola
Manchester City's Spanish manager Pep Guardiola gestures during the English Premier League football match between Manchester City and Manchester United at the Etihad Stadium in Manchester, north west England, on September 14, 2025. (Photo by Oli SCARFF / AFP)
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Pep Guardiola acknowledged that Manchester
City are not considered among the favourites to win the Champions League ahead
of their opening game against Napoli on Thursday.
City have regularly reached the sharp end
of Europe's top club competition in recent years, winning the trophy for the
first time in 2023.
They suffered a painful early exit last
season, losing to 15-time champions Madrid in a two-legged play-off with a
place in the knockout stages at stake.
According to the bookmakers Liverpool,
Barcelona, Arsenal and defending champions Paris Saint-Germain are all
considered more likely winners of this season's Champions League.
Guardiola was asked at his pre-match press
conference on Wednesday whether he saw City as contenders.
"Apparently, we are not," he
said. "And (we must) just enjoy the moment, the journey. We are happy to
be here.
"In the past, we have been. We just
won once, so that is a lot of difficulty. (We are) Just focusing tomorrow on
the game we have to play, starting this competition well."
City are intent on making their mark after
finishing last season without a trophy for the first time in eight years.
They started the Premier League season
slowly, with two defeats in their first three games, but bounced back to crush
Manchester United 3-0 on Sunday.
Guardiola has rebuilt his squad over the
past two transfer windows, with a clutch of long-serving players exiting the club,
including Kevin De Bruyne, Ilkay Gundogan and Ederson.
Thursday's game against the Italian
champions will feature an emotionally charged return to the Etihad for De
Bruyne, who joined Napoli in June after a 10-year trophy-laden stint in
Manchester.
Guardiola said he was looking forward to
seeing the midfielder but only "after the game"
The City boss said it was no surprise that
De Bruyne had settled quickly in Italy.
"The players in that level don't need
much time to adapt and perform well," he said, praising his former
player's "talent and vision".
City's new goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma
also spoke to reporters on the eve of the match against Napoli, underlining
that the club had been his top choice.
The Italy international won the Champions
League with PSG in May but was deemed surplus to requirements by the French
club, completing a £26-million ($36 million) deadline-day switch to City.
"My desire was to come here," said Donnarumma, who has replaced Ederson as first-choice goalkeeper. "That was my first and only option, the only thing I wanted."


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