Joe Hart takes 'selfish' approach to prove Pep Guardiola wrong but door looks shut on Manchester City return
In his first in-depth interview since leaving for Torino on loan, Hart says that he does not need to change his style despite Guardiola bringing the curtain down on his City career
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Your support makes all the difference.Joe Hart has indicated that he does not feel the need to change his way of goalkeeping to win over Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola, declaring in his first in-depth interview since the Spaniard indicated he was unimpressed with him that he has to “think selfishly about the whole thing and try to be what I'm capable of being.”
In a wide-ranging discussion which makes it obvious that he feels there is no way back to City for him now, Hart avoided mentioning Guardiola by name and passed up several opportunities to say that he would seek to evolve into a more proficient ‘keeper-sweeper.’
Asked whether he, like Guardiola, felt there were two distinct styles of goalkeeping, Hart said: “I don't know. I have to think selfishly about the whole thing and try to be what I'm capable of being. People have their opinions and will make statements on how things are and what they are.
“They might be right; they might be bang on. Some people you struggle to argue with – they've got a lot of strong backing to what they say and what they do. But I can only really look after me. I'm always looking, I'm always watching – I see new ideas, I like new ideas and I've got to work to my capabilities. Whatever I'm capable of, I need to be the best I can.”
Hart was also asked whether he felt he needed to change his game but replied to say his future entailed finding a manager who valued him, rather than seek to win over one who did not have a “great opinion” of him.
Hart said: “Football is a game of opinions and some people have a great opinion of me and some people probably think I'm absolutely useless.
“Unfortunately for me, one of the guys' opinions in charge of my club at the time wasn't as strong as it needed to be. So I needed to find someone who had an opinion of me who thought I could help their team. I need to improve and improve all the time because I'm still learning the game and the game is changing all the time.”
Asked whether the challenge now was to change opinions about his ability to operate well with the ball at his feet, as well as operate as a shot stopper and commanding aerial presence, the 29-year-old said: “Not really. I've got quite a few people who I hold close to my heart and I trust and a lot of footballing opinions that I care about.
“But it's hard to please everyone and I learned quite early that that's never going to happen. So I've got my people who I trust and whether I'm right or wrong is to be debated. But in terms of changing everyone's opinions and making everyone think I'm great, you're not going to win. You can't win.”
Hart did not seek to disguise that the move to Torino came because of the precious few options available to him when Guardiola dropped him at the start of the season and moved for Claudio Bravo from Barcelona.
"It was what it was,” he said of the move. "I’m not going to lie, I wasn’t sat there with 25 options. I wasn’t.”
Asked if it was a realistic goal to return to City after this season, Hart said: “I'm at Torino for this season and it's hard to look past these internationals. I love football and I love to play and I want to play until I physically can't – whatever age that is.”
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