Man City players were 'calm, no cheering' - Guardiola warns Champions League semi-final is not over

Jonathan Smith

Man City players were 'calm, no cheering' - Guardiola warns Champions League semi-final is not over image

Pep Guardiola says his Manchester City players remained calm after their victory over Paris Saint-Germain, knowing that their Champions League semi-final is far from over.

City have a 2-1 advantage ahead of the second leg at the Etihad Stadium after turning around the first leg with second half goals from Kevin De Bruyne and Riyad Mahrez.

But PSG have won away at European giants Manchester United, Barcelona and Bayern Munich earlier in the competition and Guardiola is taking nothing for granted.

What’s been said?

“I'm sure the second leg will be different because Mauricio [Pochettino] will learn and see the game,” Guardiola said.

“We will also see the game and change something to be more fluid and aggressive in our game and do it.

“Now rest. I was happy that in the locker room afterwards the players were so calm. No cheering, just calm, because we know anything can happen in the second leg.”

The bigger picture

City were effective in shutting down the threat of Neymar and Kylian Mbappe after falling behind to Marquinhos’ 15th-minute header.

But Guardiola says his side will have to perform at the same level or even better if they are to reach the Champions League final for the first time in the club’s history.

“We faced a team that scored four goals at Camp Nou, that scored three goals in Munich - it is a team that is able to do whatever they want because they have the quality to do it,” he added.

“That's why when you start the game you are a little bit cautious. I'm not complaining. At half-time I said I'm not complaining, I understand you feel the responsibility because you want to get to the final.

“It's just to understand how to handle this and be ourselves, don't be shy. If we lose, we lose. If we don't get to the final we will try again next season, but try to play our game like we spoke without the ball.”

What next?

City head to Crystal Palace on Saturday lunchtime for a Premier League clash.

Guardiola’s side need two victories to secure the title and they could win it this weekend if they win and second-placed United lose at home to Liverpool.

But he is likely to make plenty of changes to his side with the second leg against PSG next Tuesday.

Further reading

Jonathan Smith

Jonathan Smith Photo

Jonathan Smith is Goal's Manchester City correspondent, covering the club home, away and abroad. He joined Goal in August 2019 after three years in the same role for ESPN and having previously spent more than four years on the sports desk at the Manchester Evening News. Jonathan has become a trusted and respected journalist on the club - regularly appearing on media outlets such as Love Sport radio, beIN Sports, Esporte Interativo, Premier League Productions as well as the club's own media site and City podcasts such as Blue Moon.