Guardiola on the rise as Bayern runs amok
BAYERN Munich coach Pep Guardiola weathered his first major crisis at the German Bundesliga club, coming out stronger after his team crushed Porto 7-4 on aggregate on Tuesday to move into the UEFA Champions League last four.
The Spaniard in his second season in charge was with his back to the wall after Bayern’s surprise 1-3 first-leg defeat in Portugal last week.
Never had one of his teams lost before the semifinals in the competition but that prospect suddenly seemed real.
Damned to succeed, Guardiola repeatedly said he was aware of what he needed to deliver at the five-time European champion for whom a league and German Cup double was just not enough.
He arrived at Bayern after its 2013 treble-winning season and expectations have not been lowered since. A semifinal exit last season only heightened pressure on Guardiola to deliver another treble this time round. But plagued by injuries in recent months and a rare internal strife when long-time team doctor Hans-Wilhelm Mueller-Wohlfahrt quit after 38 years, saying his medical team was blamed for the loss to Porto, Bayern had a far-from-perfect preparation.
The doctor is hugely respected by Bayern players with many saying they would continue taking his advice and Guardiola suddenly in the firing line for allegedly falling out with a Bayern icon.
Failure to advance against Porto would have added to an already difficult week and would no doubt fan speculation about the coach’s future in Munich despite having a contract until 2016.
With Premier League clubs circling, a slip-up on Tuesday could prove decisive for both the club and the coach.
But the Spaniard, who won 14 titles in his four seasons at Barcelona, thrived under adverse conditions with his team playing arguably its best game this season, even without injured Arjen Robben, Franck Ribery, Bastian Schweinsteiger and David Alaba.
“I felt it in the last few days that we would advance,” he said after Bayern fired five goals in 26 first-half minutes.
“This is about life or death and I know how very important it was,” Guardiola added. “I know what is expected of me in this team. It is about winning just like at Barcelona.”
Fans are now dreaming of a trophy on German soil in June’s final in Berlin, with the club flooded with ticket requests for their home Champions League semifinal following the Porto blowout, which saw Guardiola’s trousers rip in celebration.
Guardiola’s sideline jubilation after one of Bayern’s early goals led to the dapper Spaniard’s tailored suit ripping on his left leg in what the daily Bild has dubbed a ‘Goal-gasum’ (‘Tor-gasum’ in German).
“Ah, they broke. It’s not so bad, I’ll just put on a new pair for the next game,” grinned the Spaniard, who later quipped his partly exposed leg was “hot and certainly not cold” during the match.
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