Man City must be 'perfect' to stun Real Madrid: Guardiola
Manchester City's Spanish manager Pep Guardiola gestures on the touchline during the English Premier League football match between Manchester City and Chelsea at the Etihad Stadium in Manchester, north west England, on January 4, 2026. (Photo by Oli SCARFF / AFP)
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Pep Guardiola admits Manchester City will have to play a
"perfect" game when they face the "massive" task of
overturning a 3-0 deficit against Real Madrid in the Champions League on
Tuesday.
Guardiola's side are on the brink of elimination after the
last-16 first leg loss in Madrid last week.
City must produce one of the greatest fightbacks in the
history of the Champions League to avoid being knocked out by Real for a third
successive season.
It is a daunting challenge against the 15-time European
champions and City boss Guardiola knows only a sublime display in the second
leg at the Etihad Stadium will give his team a chance of a miraculous escape.
"I have to admit the task is massive. To score more
than three goals against Madrid is not easy," Guardiola told reporters on
Monday.
"The result in the first leg was not the perfect one
but at the same time we are here. It's a football game, everything can happen.
"We have to create as much momentum as possible with
our people. It has to be a perfect game in many, many departments.
"Always we can create chances, we know that, but this
season we're not finishing. If we are able to be clinical there and defend
well, always we will be in the game."
Guardiola called on City to emulate the spirit of one of
their most memorable fightbacks as they seek inspiration against Real.
City came from 2-0 down with three goals in the final 14
minutes against Aston Villa in the last game of the 2021-22 season to win the
Premier League title.
"Aston Villa, the last game to win the Premier League -
74 minutes 0-2 and we made three goals in in 12 minutes," Guardiola said.
"Of course we have to take more risk in terms of
trying, but even if the results are not good in the first half we have to keep
going, carry on, go, because you never know."
City captain Bernardo Silva echoed Guardiola's belief that
the tie is not over yet.
"This sport has taught us that a lot of things can
happen in a football game," he said.
"Even though the result in Madrid was really bad, we
will fight until the end.
"After a big defeat, on the day you feel like
everything is very dark, then it gets brighter and brighter. We know what this
team is capable of."
City's preparations for the match have been unusual as
Guardiola opted to give his players a day off on Monday and not train the day
before the game.
That decision could potentially risk censure from tournament
organisers UEFA as clubs are obliged to allow media access to a training
session or match preparation for 15 minutes.
Guardiola's said the team's recent heavy schedule was behind
his decision, with a lacklustre 1-1 draw at West Ham on Saturday dealing a
major blow to their Premier League title hopes.
"I prefer today everybody be at home. We'll train
tomorrow," Guardiola said.
"Repetition for training will not make us play better
in the game against Madrid because today in modern football, in the top teams,
training doesn't much improve a lot."


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