Guardiola: Managers endure more criticism in Spain than England

Speaking in the wake of Steve Bruce's statement post his Newcastle sacking, Man City boss Guardiola said journalists and social media are more intense in Spain than England.

Published : Oct 22, 2021 20:17 IST

Guardiola also sent Bruce his support, saying the 60-year-old should not listen to the criticism levelled at him but instead take heart from the messages of support he received from his players.
Guardiola also sent Bruce his support, saying the 60-year-old should not listen to the criticism levelled at him but instead take heart from the messages of support he received from his players.
lightbox-info

Guardiola also sent Bruce his support, saying the 60-year-old should not listen to the criticism levelled at him but instead take heart from the messages of support he received from his players.

The constant criticism that managers endure is worse in Spain than in England, Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola said on Friday in the wake of Steve Bruce's statement following his sacking by Newcastle United.

Bruce, who was the target of fans' ire since replacing the popular Rafa Benitez in 2019, left Newcastle by mutual consent on Wednesday, saying it was probably his last managerial role after dealing with abuse and criticism from day one in the job.

"No (it is not worse than Spain and Germany), here it is nicer. In Spain there are more radios, televisions," Guardiola told reporters ahead of Saturday's Premier League trip to Brighton & Hove Albion.

READ:

"You're treated in terms of results. When you win, 'what a genius'. When you lose, 'what a disaster'. Especially with social media, in Spain they are more involved, there are journalists at training sessions, it's the same but more intense.

"As managers, we are treated worse than the worst. That is sometimes a reflection of society. Nobody deserves to be treated like that."

Guardiola also sent Bruce his support, saying the 60-year-old should not listen to the criticism levelled at him but instead take heart from the messages of support he received from his players.

"I read the post on Twitter from (Allan) Saint-Maximin about what Steve Bruce is. This is, for me, what Bruce is - an exceptional gentleman, always took care of me so nicely when I came from another country," Guardiola added.

"I wish him all the best. I would tell him not to pay much attention to the comments because he knows that is bullshit."

ALSO READ:

Fourth-placed Brighton beat City 3-2 at the end of last season after Guardiola's side had already sealed the title but the Spaniard said they were not out for revenge.

"I know exactly the game we're going to face and the players know. Absolutely not (playing with revenge on their minds), in football you win and lose," he said.

"I enjoy watching Brighton, it's an exceptional team... Last season we were champions, we were preparing for Champions League final, this season we're fighting to be champions. I think they are the same."

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide to our community guidelines for posting your comment