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He captained the team from 1997 until his departure from Barcelona in 2001. Guardiola then had stints with Brescia and Roma in Italy, Al-Ahli in Qatar and Dorados in Mexico. He was capped 47 times for the Spanish national team and appeared at the 1994 FIFA World Cup, as well as at UEFA Euro 2000. He also played friendly matches for Catalonia.
Italy: Carlo Ancelotti Italy: Milan [31] 2008 Scotland: Alex Ferguson England: Manchester United [32] 2009 Spain: Pep Guardiola Spain: Barcelona [33] 2010 Portugal: José Mourinho Italy: Inter Milan [34] 2011 Spain: Pep Guardiola Spain: Barcelona [35] 2012 Italy: Roberto Di Matteo England: Chelsea [36] 2013 Germany: Jupp Heynckes Germany ...
Pep Guardiola is the only manager to have won four FIFA Club World Cups; he won twice with Barcelona, once with Bayern Munich and once with Manchester City. [9] [10] He is also the first manager to win the tournament with three clubs. Guardiola also holds the record for the most appearances in the final, with the aforementioned four.
Pep Guardiola has managed Manchester City in 500 games. “That period feels like 500 months,” he said, and he wasn’t referring to the first 486 of those matches. It was two months of trauma ...
Under Guardiola, the Manchester club has so far won 14 major trophies in eight seasons. City's squad poses with its trophy haul from the 2023 calendar year at the Etihad. - Jan Kruger/Getty Images
City boss Pep Guardiola will not stand in McAtee's way if he wants to join the German champions. (Football Insider) Argentina midfielder Emiliano Buendia, 28, is on the verge of joining Leverkusen ...
Italy: Fabio Capello: Real Madrid ... Pep Guardiola: Barcelona: 2008–09, 2009–10, 2010–11 9 Fred Pentland: 2 Athletic Bilbao: 1929–30, 1930–31 Ricardo Zamora:
Pep Guardiola is the most successful manager in club history with eighteen trophies won, including the first-ever European Cup title.. This is a chronological list of Manchester City managers, comprising all those who have held the position of manager for the first team and its predecessors West Gorton (St. Marks) and Ardwick.