Guardiola admits rotation gamble backfired in loss to Leverkusen
Manchester City's Spanish manager Pep Guardiola gestures on the touchline during the UEFA Champions League league-stage football match between Manchester City and Bayer Leverkusen at the Etihad Stadium in Manchester, north west England, on November 25, 2025. (Photo by Oli SCARFF / AFP)
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Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola shouldered the blame
for his team's shock 2-0 Champions League defeat to Bayer Leverkusen on
Tuesday, conceding that his decision to overhaul the starting 11 was a massive
misstep.
The City boss made 10 changes from the weekend’s Premier
League game, a 2-1 loss at Newcastle United, leaving out key figures such as
striker Erling Haaland, who has 14 league goals this season. No other City
player has more than one.
"There were too many changes," were the first
words of Guardiola's post-match press conference.
"I believe that the long season, (games) every two
days, three days, two days, three days, everybody has to be involved. But maybe
it was too much seeing the result," he said. "So it’s the first time
in my life I’ve done it, and it was too much. So I realised,” Guardiola said.
The Spaniard defended his reasoning, pointing to the
relentless schedule that includes domestic fixtures and international duty,
particularly for Haaland, who shoulders the scoring load both for City and
Norway.
"I felt from my instinct, from my gut, the team is
training good, they are incredible, good vibes. So let's go, Champions League
at home, we are in good position," Guardiola said. "And for the
future, for the next games, we have Fulham, we have Sunderland, Real Madrid, a
lot of games together. Cannot play Erling all the time 95 minutes.
"I had the feeling, after the (international) break,
it's now three days, four days until March, and there is no human being who can
sustain it for that long."
Guardiola suggested Tuesday's starters were feeling too much
pressure.
"I think they played to not make a mistake, and to
avoid punishing the team," he said. "You are not free and
relaxed."
The loss ended City's 23-game unbeaten home run in the
competition's group or league stage, and left them provisionally sixth in the
table on 10 points after five games. The top eight after the eight games of the
league phase automatically move on to the last 16.
City's next Champions League game is at European giants Real
Madrid on December 10. Guardiola did not sound worried about missing a
top-eight spot.
"We have time (to prepare for Madrid)," he said.


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