Pep Guardiola warned Manchester City that the straight knockout format of the Champions League final stages in Lisbon means being favourites counts for little ahead of their quarter-final clash with Lyon on Saturday.
City can reach the last four for just the second time in the club’s
history and the first since Guardiola arrived
in Manchester four years ago with victory over the French side, who
finished seventh in the 2019/20 Ligue 1 season cut short due to the coronavirus
pandemic.
But Lyon knocked out Juventus on away goals to make the last eight and
after suffering plenty of Champions League heartbreak with Barcelona, Bayern
Munich and City since he last lifted the trophy as Barca boss in 2011, Guardiola is wary of his
side’s tag as competition favourites.
“There is no second chance, it is back in Manchester or stay here four
more days. The approach is completely different,” said Guardiola at facing a one
match shootout rather than the normal two-legged tie at this stage of the
competition.
City beat 13-time winners Real Madrid home and away in the last 16 to
record their first ever knockout win over a former winner in the Champions
League.
Another will await in one of Guardiola’s
former clubs, Barca or Bayern, in the semi-finals should City progress, but the
Catalan believes his side are now mentally ready to handle the pressures of the
Champions League later stages.
“Of course it was so important to beat the kings of the competition
(Madrid), but when you play this competition in just one game anything can
happen,” added Guardiola.
“These games the mentality, the spirit, the head leads all the other
things and I feel the players are ready to do it.”
Guardiola confirmed that Sergio Aguero remains in
Barcelona recovering from a knee operation so will not feature on Saturday and
is highly doubtful to return even if City make it all the way to the final on
August 23.
Lyon coach Rudi Garcia said that his team’s victory over Cristiano
Ronaldo’s Juventus showed that the French club are not just makeweights in the
tournament.
“It gave us more confidence. We want to stay a long time in Lisbon even
if we know that City remain the big favourites in this match,” he said.
“The first quarter-finals have showed that the big teams can be scared.
I hope that will continue on Saturday.”
The French side also showed what they are capable of in taking four
points from a possible six against City in the group stage of last season’s Champions
League.
“It was wonderful what they did back then but now it’s another moment,
and a knockout game. It shows that no game is lost,” he added.
“One of the keys is to keep the ball and to score. We are a team capable
of doing that. We must also be more dangerous up front.”