FA Cup
Guardiola and Hag: A tale of two coaches who worked together and are now asunder!
Erik ten Hag and Pep Guardiola meet in the biggest FA Cup final ever played as managers of Man Utd and Manchester City, but they have worked together previously in their careers
When Erik ten Hag was in charge of Bayern Munich’s B team some at the club had a nickname for him: Mini Pep. Before any follically challenged readers write in to complain, this had more to do than just a lack of hair.
The two men didn’t see an awful lot of each other at Saebener Strasse. In many ways, their jobs were quite separate. Their teams were competing in different leagues with different targets. But what they did share was an obsession for football and this led to the nickname that Ten Hag was, in effect, just a Dutch Guardiola.

In reality, the idea Ten Hag is a ‘mini’ version of Guardiola doesn’t really pass the litmus test. He’s actually the older man by 11 months, for starters. But the fact that’s how he was viewed during the time they shared in Munich also says a lot about their career paths which have converged this season and will do so again most compellingly of all at Wembley, when Manchester United will try and stop Manchester City taking a significant step towards the treble
Ten Hag gave up a job in the Eredivisie with Go Ahead Eagles, having just got the club promoted for the first time in 17 years, to take over a side that played their football in Germany’s fourth tier. Ten Hag once called it an “unlogical move”. Guardiola, meanwhile, had started just his own job in Munich after his year-long post-Barcelona sabbatical.
He might have begun his ascent to coaching with an eclectic end to his playing career, but his apprenticeship was one season in charge of Barcelona’s B team. Ever since his first season at the Nou Camp and that wondrous treble, he has had his pick of clubs. City spent years building the conditions to attract him to the Etihad.
Ten Hag, meanwhile, moved to Munich to take charge of a group of players who were looking to swap his training sessions for Guardiola’s. He spent two years in the job, from 2013 to 2015, and at that point, United might still have had dreams of landing Guardiola themselves one day. It’s fair to say the unknown Dutchman taking charge of games in places such as Wurzburg, Buchbach and Aschaffenburg was not on their radar.
But eight years later here we are, counting down the hours until what might just be the biggest Manchester derby ever played, in the biggest FA Cup final of all, with the two coaches who swapped tactics and theories in Munich now sharing a Wembley touchline in a game screened all around the world.
For Ten Hag, the opportunity to move to Germany and learn at the feet of Guardiola, came about due to links with Matthias Sammer, who as sports director of the DFB, the German football association, had taken an interest in his vision for developing young players. Sammer had even tried to recruit him as Germany’s Under-21 manager previously.
There were success stories, too. Pierre-Emile Hjoberg, a player who has now found his way to the Premier League, began with Ten Hag, graduated to Guardiola and played in the 2014 DFB Cup final. But the target was also promotion and Bayern’s B team twice agonisingly missed out on that feat.
For Ten Hag, however, it was a worthwhile career diversion. He got to watch countless Guardiola training sessions and compiled notes on what he saw and what he felt he could use going forward.
Speaking to author Maarten Meijer for his book Ten Hag: The Biography, released last year, the Manchester United manager discussed his time in Munich.
“I do not want to compare myself to Guardiola, his list of honours is unparalleled. But Guardiola certainly inspired me,” he said.
“Every coach wants to play attacking football like his teams do. Adventurous, fast, dynamic, technically excellent and with so much joy. Every coach who likes attractive football strives for that. Of course, I regularly talked with him about that. But most of all, I watched very carefully. His training sessions are a joy to watch.”
Sammer felt that Ten Hag was “a mixture between a Dutchman and a German”, which he defined as a coach wedded to the idea of beautiful football but also one with a disciplinarian streak. It’s a categorisation that people at Old Trafford and Carrington would probably agree with after his first year in charge of the club.
The quality of football at United has certainly improved this year, even if it remains some way short of Guardiola’s creation across town, but then these remains early days in what Ten Hag sees as a long-term project.

There are also reasons to believe there is more to come. Goalkeeper Lukas Raeder played for Ten Hag at Bayern Munich II, but also trained under Guardiola with the first team, and he could see similarities even back then.
“The football philosophy was very similar to Pep Guardiola’s football philosophy,” Raeder told Karan Tejwani for his book on Ajax’s recent rise, Glorious Reinvention.
“He wanted his team to have good passing qualities, keep the ball and always play with the ball. His teams needed to keep the ball well. That was the most important aspect.”
It’s hard to quantify exactly which parts of Guardiola’s approach have inspired Ten Hag. If anything, he’s proven himself to be pragmatic at United, rather than wedded to one particular idea. But his Ajax teams were similar to Guardiola’s approach and it’s clear how much he admires and respects his opposite number in Manchester.
“Pep was a pioneer, he changed football in Germany,” Ten Hag told Sueddeutsche Zeitung in 2019. “I learned a lot from him — how he gets his philosophy onto the pitch, build-up play, transition, attack, he had drills for everything.
“Sometimes in groups, sometimes with all parts of the team, sometimes with a player by himself.
“Everything was incredibly fixated on detail. His philosophy is sensational, what he did in Barcelona, Bayern and now with Manchester City, that attacking and attractive style sees him win a lot. It’s this structure that I’ve tried to implement with Ajax.”
At United, Ten Hag has used his full-backs in a similar, if not quite as daring, way as Guardiola and in Meijer’s book he spoke about how that was one area he had been interested in when watching his sessions with the Bayern Munich first team.
“I was able to experience his approach up-close, and I learned a lot from that,” he said. “Guardiola stands for dominant and attractive football, a way of playing that appeals to me. I remember how Pep practised moving in with the full-backs.”
For Guardiola, the presence of Ten Hag in Munich was something different. He was an aspiring coach in charge of a group that could produce players for the first team. The Catalan might have been interested in what the Dutchman was doing, but the relationship would obviously be different at that stage.
“We met in Munich, when I just arrived I remember he was training the second team in the same facilities. I approached him to say hi and introduced myself,” Guardiola told Sky Sports before the first derby of the season.
“He came up to our office sometimes to talk football, sometimes we needed to make training, discuss some players, not much – we were not going out for dinner in that period.
“The second team for Bayern Munich is just a step [for a manager], you will not be all the time there. He went to Holland and finished at the most important club in Holland, Ajax of Amsterdam, what he has done with his teams speaks for himself.”
Guardiola is right when he calls the job of second-team manager for a club like Bayern a step in a coach’s career. He started with Barcelona’s second team himself. Ten Hag was never going to make a career coaching at that level of German football.
He was too ambitious for that. Too committed to making the most of his coaching career and seeing just how far he could take teams. He lasted two seasons in Bavaria, twice narrowly missing out on promotion, before returning to the Netherlands and taking charge of Utrecht.
“Both [Guardiola and Ten Hag] want to have their success, and there was a time where it seemed difficult for Ten Hag to coach the second team,” remembered Raeder in Glorious Reinvention.
“This was because the second team sometimes had to give players to the first team or some player from the first team would drop down to the second team and then he had to integrate them, possibly even just one day before a match.
“You could feel that there were sometimes problems with it because he’d make his plans and would want to execute it in a certain way, but that may not have always been possible.”
Guardiola and Ten Hag weren’t equals at that point in their careers, but when they share the touchline at Wembley they will do so as the figureheads of Manchester’s two football institutions.
“I learned a lot from him,” said Ten Hag. “I have never regretted it. Working at such a big club with such influential personalities as Guardiola or Matthias Sammer was like winning the lottery.”
The journey of Guardiola and Ten Hag to this date with destiny is inextricably linked, even if it’s the latter who took more from the time they spent together in Munich, when the idea of them contesting one of the biggest FA Cup finals there has ever been must have looked remote.
-MEN
FA Cup
Haaland bags hat-trick as Man City hammer Liverpool 4-0 in FA Cup quarter-final

Erling Haaland scored a hat-trick as Manchester City crushed Liverpool 4-0 at the Etihad Stadium on Saturday to cruise into the FA Cup semi-finals.
Champions Liverpool played well in the opening half-hour with Mohamed Salah wasting an early chance, but once Haaland had scored from the spot in the 37th minute after a foul on Nico O’Reilly, their resistance crumbled.
Liverpool captain Virgil van Dijk conceded the penalty with a rash challenge, and there was little the Dutch defender could do as City played scintillating attacking football for the remainder of the game.
His blond hair swinging behind him in a ponytail, Haaland netted his second two minutes into first-half stoppage time with a well-placed header from an excellent Antoine Semenyo cross.
Semenyo got on the scoresheet himself five minutes after the break, latching on to a ball in behind from Rayan Cherki and chipping it beautifully past Giorgi Mamardashvili, and Haaland completed his treble with a shot off the underside of the crossbar in the 57th minute.
Liverpool’s woes continued when Mohamed Salah, who is set to leave the club at the end of the season, capped off a poor performance by having his penalty saved by James Trafford, snuffing out any faint hopes Liverpool might have had of a comeback
As the game turned into a victory parade, many Liverpool fans started heading for the exits, and City manager Pep Guardiola rang the changes, replacing Haaland with Omar Marmoush, the Norwegian striker receiving a standing ovation as he left the field.
In the other quarter-finals, Chelsea take on Port Vale and Southampton host Arsenal later on Saturday, with Leeds United travelling to West Ham United on Sunday.
The semi-finals will take place at Wembley, and Haaland is relishing a return to the stadium.
“First half, we struggled a bit, but then we after around 30 minutes we kept going and in the end it’s an amazing game. Another Wembley trip for us is amazing and important,” he told broadcaster TNT.
“I think (my form this season) has been a bit too much up and down, which is not good enough. I cannot keep on thinking about what I could have done differently or what didn’t happen, or what happened. I have to think about the next game.”
-Reuters
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FA Cup
Arteta keeps cards close to chest as injury-hit Arsenal eye FA Cup semis

Arsenal will be without injured England attacker Noni Madueke when they face Southampton in Saturday’s FA Cup quarter-final, but Martin Odegaard and Jurrien Timber may return from injury, manager Mikel Arteta said.
Madueke was among the 11 Arsenal players who withdrew from international duty last month over injuries and fitness management, as the club eye their first Premier League title since 2004.
“When you have to communicate the state of every player, we are always honest and a medical decision had to be made. That was clear what the conclusion was,” Arteta told reporters on Friday.
“It makes us so proud that we had that many players in the national team. Players are desperate to play for their nation. I know how important it is to them. We are fully supportive of that and when we can do it, we do it.”
Madueke picked up a knee injury during England’s friendly with Uruguay, missing the game against Japan. But Arteta said his condition was not as bad as a knee injury that kept him out for six weeks.
Martin Zubimendi, William Saliba, Gabriel Magalhaes, Timber, Leandro Trossard, Eberechi Eze, Bukayo Saka and Declan Rice were unavailable for their countries.
Arteta did not disclose how many of them will be available for Saturday’s game, as Arsenal look to shake off last month’s League Cup final loss to Manchester City with a return to Wembley in the FA Cup semi-finals.
“We’re in a position right now where we need to make the strongest line-up we possibly can to win every competition,” he said. ” We are two or three games away from the FA Cup and we know how important that competition is for us.”
-Reuters
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FA Cup
Guardiola eyes record eighth straight FA Cup semi-final for Man City

Manchester City will look to secure a historic eighth straight semi-final appearance in the FA Cup when they face Liverpool on Saturday, manager Pep Guardiola said.
City beat Arsenal to win the League Cup before the international break, and Guardiola is hoping his team maintain the momentum as they fight to add the FA Cup and Premier League to this season’s trophy haul.
“Once you finish one, it is the next one,” Guardiola told reporters on Friday.
“Tomorrow we have the chance to reach an incredible milestone, to make eight semi-finals in a row. It’s never happened… it is a prestigious competition, and one of the toughest, special opponents for all of us, Liverpool.”
City have dominated English football with six Premier League titles, two FA Cups and five League Cups since Guardiola joined in 2016, but Liverpool have been a constant thorn in his side throughout his coaching career.
As a coach, Guardiola has only nine victories and seven draws in 26 matches against Liverpool, his worst win rate against a Premier League club.
City have beaten Liverpool twice in the Premier League this season, but had to dig deep for a late comeback when they won 2-1 at Anfield in February.
“So many times they have been the rival, the biggest, biggest one… top contender, top class players, all of them. Hopefully we have to perform in the level we did against Arsenal to reach the next step,” Guardiola said.
The manager also praised Liverpool forward Mohamed Salah, who has announced his departure in the summer.
“Absolutely. One of the greatest. The numbers, the consistency. What a player… absolute legend, of course for Liverpool, but (also) for the Premier League,” Guardiola said.
Guardiola, however, avoided commenting on his own midfielder Rodri, who said he was open to a move to Real Madrid when his contract with City runs out at the end of this season.
“No clue, no opinion… because I know the intention of the club, I know the intention, I think, of him, but I don’t know,” Guardiola said.’
-Reuters
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