Guardiola: Referee's first job is to protect players

Dom Farrell

Guardiola: Referee's first job is to protect players image

Pep Guardiola has urged referees to protect his Manchester City players after teenage midfielder Phil Foden was ruled out for at least a month with ankle ligament damage.

The Premier League leaders found themselves on the end of some robust treatment during last weekend's thumping 4-1 win over Tottenham, with Raheem Sterling the recipient of a studs-up challenge from Harry Kane before Dele Alli went dangerously over the ball on Kevin De Bruyne.

Both De Bruyne and Sterling emerged unscathed, with the Belgium international scoring a brilliant solo goal moments after Alli's tackle, while Sterling netted a late brace.

During Tuesday's EFL Cup tie at Leicester City, in which Foden put in an assured showing on his second senior start, Guardiola felt City's luck ran out as the England Under-17 star hobbled off during stoppage time before his team-mates triumphed 4-3 on penalties.

Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho courted controversy by accusing City players of going to ground easily before the derby at Old Trafford earlier this month and referee Robert Madley booked Ilkay Gundogan and Kyle Walker for simulation during the match at the King Power Stadium.

Nevertheless, Guardiola maintained officials should not be distracted from their primary responsibility.

"He's injured, not good," Guardiola said of Foden. "In the next fixtures he will not be able to play.

"We were lucky with Rash [Sterling] and Kevin De Bruyne in the last game against Tottenham. Really, really lucky.

"We were not lucky with Phil against Leicester. It's a ligament. He will be out for a term.

"I accept the referees have to be careful about the diving players. Okay, keep going with that. But keep going as well and be careful to protect the players. The most important thing is protecting the players, that is the first target for the referees."

Guardiola will make a late call on club captain Vincent Kompany, who is close to a return from his latest calf injury, for Saturday's clash with Bournemouth while he is unsure whether David Silva will be available after the playmaker was excused from City's last two matches for personal reasons.

City lead the Premier League by 11 points having won 16 consecutive matches – the first of which came at Bournemouth in August when Sterling netted a dramatic 97th-minute winner.

"It was so important because we drew the game before against Everton at home," he added.

"Nobody expected we would be able to make 16 games in a row in that moment.

"It was the same when we won in the 95th minute against Southampton. When you win a lot of games, some of them you win comfortably because you play better.

"Other games you have to win in that situation. You are not able to win all 16 games with a big gap of goals.

"We were lucky in that moment and hopefully tomorrow we can make a good game."

Dom Farrell

Dom Farrell Photo

Dom is the senior content producer for Sporting News UK. He previously worked as fan brands editor for Manchester City at Reach Plc. Prior to that, he built more than a decade of experience in the sports journalism industry, primarily for the Stats Perform and Press Association news agencies. Dom has covered major football events on location, including the entirety of Euro 2016 and the 2018 World Cup in Paris and St Petersburg respectively, along with numerous high-profile Premier League, Champions League and England international matches. Cricket and boxing are his other major sporting passions and he has covered the likes of Anthony Joshua, Tyson Fury, Wladimir Klitschko, Gennadiy Golovkin and Vasyl Lomachenko live from ringside.