Pep Guardiola believes Man City’s superiority over Man United counts for nothing in FA Cup final

City, fresh from celebrating their historic fourth successive Premier League title, face a United side sore from finishing way back in eighth place.

Andy Hampson
Saturday 25 May 2024 03:41 EDT
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Pep Guardiola has his sights on the FA Cup again but is taking nothing for granted (Nick Potts/PA)
Pep Guardiola has his sights on the FA Cup again but is taking nothing for granted (Nick Potts/PA) (PA Archive)

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Pep Guardiola insists Manchester City’s “obvious” recent superiority over arch-rivals Manchester United will count for nothing in the FA Cup final.

City, fresh from celebrating their historic fourth successive Premier League title, face a United side sore from finishing way back in eighth place at Wembley on Saturday.

Chasing back-to-back domestic doubles and a repeat victory over United after last season’s success, City are overwhelming favourites.

Yet Guardiola is taking nothing for granted.

The City manager said: “People think it’s going to happen because we finished 31 points in front of United, people say it will be easy.

“I understand that but it’s a different competition, one game. It can be 10 against 11, bad decisions, mistakes, whatever – and you can lose a game. We know we can lose a game.

“In long periods, we have been better than United these past years, it’s obvious. It’s facts – every game we are there.

“But in one game, anything can happen. The players know it and feel it. So I hope we are ready to play the last game of the season and to try to win the FA Cup.

“It’s the FA Cup. Wow! It’s nice. That’s why it deserves all of our focus.”

Guardiola has now won 17 trophies since taking charge at City in 2016.

Despite success becoming the norm at the Etihad Stadium, he maintains there is nothing routine about it and there are still nerves before big games.

He said: “I cannot deny that the mood in the offices is really high, it’s really good. People laugh a lot.

“I don’t want to be concerned too much because I want the players to enjoy, to celebrate the fact they won the Premier League.

“But we will have the butterflies, wondering what they do and what we can do, the decisions to take, how the players will feel. All of those questions you have before a game is going to happen.”

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