Archive August 4, 2025

Why Guardiola’s new number two could be Man City’s biggest summer signing

Images courtesy of Getty
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Manchester City signed five new players this summer for less than £150m, but Pep Guardiola’s biggest signing did not cost any of that, and he won’t play any football either.

The second-most significant coach of Jurgen Klopp’s time, Liverpool, became Guardiola’s right-hand man at Manchester City in early June.

Really, it should have been a bigger story because Guardiola is considering undergoing a significant tactical overhaul with the addition of Pep Lijnders, who is credited with providing the majority of Klopp’s day-to-day training and a significant portion of the German’s tactical evolution post-Borussia Dortmund.

What’s even more impressive is that those tactical adjustments were made with the significant input of a coach who collaborated with Klopp on concepts like counter-pressing and attacking in vertical lines and on ideas that served as Guardiola’s renowned positional play.

Mind, that contrast is frequently overstated. Both Guardiola and Klopp borrowed from one another, and their combined victories at Liverpool and Man City almost seem to converge into one perfect fusion of Guardiola’s dynamism and control.

Guardiola used Klopp’s ideas to adapt to the rough-and-tumble of Premier League life, while Klopp’s “heavy metal” football was tempered by an appreciation of territorial dominance.

Lijnders, like Klopp, is much more concerned with the opportunities that arise when the ball changes hands and the aggressive, high-voltage attacking football than Guardiola.

Manchester City assistant coach Pep Lijnders talks to the club's playersImages courtesy of Getty

Guardiola’s territorial suffocation used to sever inferior opponents, but as middle-class teams improved, those who were brave enough to press hard and disrupt the build-up play began to reap rewards.

They literally pushed back until the division was flooded with transitions made in the most effective way, and Guardiola struggled to keep things in check with their slow passing and rigid positioning.

Pep Guardiola once told TNT Sports, “Today, modern football is the way Bournemouth, Newcastle, Brighton, and Liverpool play.” Football in the modern era is not positional. You must follow the rhythm.

That’s a big statement from a man whose tactical philosophy of “positional play” has pretty much defined the sport’s past 15 years, but it’s accurate.

Guardiola was already beginning to experiment with a subtly more direct style of play when he made those remarks about contemporary football.

When City’s possession rate was compared to that of their 2023-24 and 24-25 campaigns, the total number of fast breaks increased by 36%, while City’s possession share decreased from 65.5% to 61.3%.

More notable was Ederson’s use of long balls to obstruct the opposition’s high press and the January signing of Omar Marmoush’s direct dribbling through the lines.

According to what people, Marmoush was Man City 2.0’s first signing, the rebuild that will move Guardiola, Lijnders, and City in a more Klopp-like direction. Since then, more players have followed that type.

Both signings, like Marmoush, point to more passing triangles and more neatly choreographed passing triangles due to the arrivals of Rayan Cherki and Tijjani Reijnders from Lyon and AC Milan, respectively.

To put it another way, Cherki, Reijnders, and Marmoush are the players who like to ride the rhythm.

Because Guardiola has largely deployed central midfielders or centre-backs in the full-back positions over the past two seasons, an obvious nod to control, order, and discipline, the signing of Rayan Ait-Nouri also makes an allusion to Klopp-esque or Lijnders-esque football.

One of Europe’s most vicious fullbacks is Ait-Nouri. He placed second in the Premier League last season (63) and sixth in full-backs for progressive carries (89), which is comparable to the other three 2025 signings we have discussed.

He also placed among the top three defenders in terms of touches in the opposition box (96) and expected assists (5.5%), which was even more impressive.

Ait-Nouri’s arrival indicates that Guardiola has given up on bringing midfielders into the team and is allowing for more urgent, vertical football.

Manchester City fans can stop worrying about their team’s slow, passive football in favor of a dynamic attacking pair like Ait-Nouri and Jeremy Doku working together on the left or how Marmoush and Cherki will fit into the same attacking midfield space.

Before the 2025-26 Premier League campaign kicks off, they will undoubtedly have more questions than answers because the majority of their newcomers, both on and off the pitch, don’t typically fit the Pep mold.

related subjects

  • Premier League
  • Manchester City
  • Football

Pep talks – how Klopp’s ex-assistant is shaping Man City

Images courtesy of Getty
  • 151 Comments

Manchester City signed five new players this summer for less than £150m, but Pep Guardiola’s biggest signing did not cost any of that, and he won’t play any football either.

The second-most significant player from Jurgen Klopp’s time, Liverpool, became Guardiola’s right-hand man at Manchester City in early June.

Really, it should have been a bigger story because Guardiola is considering undergoing a significant tactical overhaul with the addition of Pep Lijnders, who is credited with providing the majority of Klopp’s day-to-day training and a significant portion of the German’s tactical evolution post-Borussia Dortmund.

What’s even more impressive is that those tactical adjustments were made with the significant input of a coach who collaborated with Klopp on concepts like counter-pressing and attacking in vertical lines and on ideas that served as Guardiola’s renowned positional play.

Mind, that contrast is frequently overstated. Both Guardiola and Klopp borrowed from one another, and their combined victories at Liverpool and Man City almost seem to converge into one perfect fusion of Guardiola’s dynamism and control.

Guardiola used Klopp’s ideas to adapt to the rough-and-tumble of Premier League life, while Klopp’s “heavy metal” football was tempered by an appreciation of territorial dominance.

Lijnders, like Klopp, is much more concerned with the opportunities that arise when the ball changes hands and the aggressive, high-voltage attacking football than Guardiola.

Manchester City assistant coach Pep Lijnders talks to the club's playersImages courtesy of Getty

Guardiola’s territorial suffocation used to sever inferior opponents, but as middle-class teams improved, those who were brave enough to press hard and disrupt the build-up play began to reap rewards.

They literally pushed back until the division was flooded with transitions made in the most effective way, and Guardiola struggled to keep things in check with their slow passing and rigid positioning.

Pep Guardiola once told TNT Sports, “Today, modern football is the way Bournemouth, Newcastle, Brighton, and Liverpool play.” Football in the modern era is not positional. You must follow the rhythm.

That’s a big statement from a man whose tactical philosophy of “positional play” has pretty much defined the sport’s past 15 years, but it’s accurate.

Guardiola was already beginning to experiment with a subtly more direct style of play when he made those remarks about contemporary football.

When City’s possession rate was compared to that of their 2023-24 and 24-25 campaigns, the total number of fast breaks increased by 36%, while City’s possession share decreased from 65.5% to 61.3%.

More notable was Ederson’s use of long balls to obstruct the opposition’s high press and the January signing of Omar Marmoush’s direct dribbling through the lines.

According to what people, Marmoush was Man City 2.0’s first signing, the rebuild that will move Guardiola, Lijnders, and City in a more Klopp-like direction. Since then, more players have followed that type.

Both signings, like Marmoush, point to more passing triangles and more neatly choreographed passing triangles due to the arrivals of Rayan Cherki and Tijjani Reijnders from Lyon and AC Milan, respectively.

To put it another way, Cherki, Reijnders, and Marmoush are the players who like to ride the rhythm.

Because Guardiola has largely deployed central midfielders or centre-backs in the full-back positions over the past two seasons, an obvious nod to control, order, and discipline, the signing of Rayan Ait-Nouri also makes an allusion to Klopp-esque or Lijnders-esque football.

One of Europe’s most vicious fullbacks is Ait-Nouri. He placed second in the Premier League last season (63) and sixth in full-backs for progressive carries (89), which is comparable to the other three 2025 signings we have discussed.

He also placed among the top three defenders in terms of touches in the opposition box (96) and expected assists (5.5%), which was even more impressive.

Ait-Nouri’s arrival indicates that Guardiola has given up on bringing midfielders into the team and is allowing for more urgent, vertical football.

Manchester City fans can stop worrying about their team’s slow, passive football in favor of a dynamic attacking pair like Ait-Nouri and Jeremy Doku working together on the left or how Marmoush and Cherki will fit into the same attacking midfield space.

Before the 2025-26 Premier League campaign kicks off, they will undoubtedly have more questions than answers because the majority of their newcomers, both on and off the pitch, don’t typically fit the Pep mold.

related subjects

  • Premier League
  • Manchester City
  • Football

South Korea dismantles border loudspeakers to ease tensions with N Korea

As the new government under President Lee Jae-myung attempts to ease strained relations with Pyongyang, South Korean authorities have begun removing loudspeakers blaring anti-North Korean broadcasts along the nation’s border, according to Seoul’s Ministry of National Defence.

The military has started removing the loudspeakers, according to Lee Kyung-ho, a spokesman for the South Korean Defense Ministry, who spoke to reporters on Monday.

In order to resume stalled talks with its neighbor, Lee’s administration immediately turned off propaganda broadcasts criticizing the North Korean regime in June.

However, North and South Korea recently rejected the requests and said it had no interest in speaking with South and South Korea.

Because the Korean War of 1950-1953 ended with an armistice rather than a peace treaty, and relations have deteriorated over the years, the two countries continue to be technically at war.

According to the ministry’s statement on Monday, “it is a practical measure aimed at easing tensions with the North, provided that such actions do not compromise the military’s state of readiness.”

By the end of the week, he added, but he did not specify how many would be removed. All loudspeakers set up along the border will be removed.

In a bid to “restore trust,” President Lee, who was recently elected after his predecessor was impeached over an abortive martial law declaration, had ordered the military to stop the broadcasts.

In the wake of Russia’s massive invasion of Ukraine, Seoul had taken a hard line against Pyongyang, which has since become even more close to Moscow. This was at one of their lowest relations in years.

In response to a wave of trash-filled balloons being flown south by Pyongyang, the previous government started the broadcasts last year.

Lee, however, promised to ease tensions on the Korean Peninsula and improve relations with North Korea.

North Korea has turned down pursuing a dialogue with its neighbor despite his diplomatic prowess.

Nothing is a more serious miscalculation than the Korean Republic, Kim Yo Jong, Kim Jong Un’s sister, said last week using the acronym for South Korea’s official name, Republic of Korea. “If the ROK… expected to reverse all the results it had made with a few sentimental words.

Trump says US envoy Witkoff to travel to Russia ‘next week’

Donald Trump, the president of the United States, announced that Steve Witkoff, his special envoy, would travel to Russia the following week to continue discussions over the Ukraine war.

Trump promised Witkoff would visit, “I think next week, Wednesday or Thursday,” according to Trump’s statement to reporters on Sunday.

The US president responded to reporters’ questions about possible sanctions against Russia by saying, “Yeah, find a deal where people stop getting killed.”

If Russia doesn’t soon reach a ceasefire agreement with Ukraine, Trump has threatened to impose “very severe tariffs” on Russia.

Trump added that Dmitry Medvedev, the former president of Russia, and two nuclear submarines he deployed after an online dispute with him were now “in the region.”

Trump hasn’t stated whether he meant submarines with nuclear weapons or nuclear-powered ones. Additionally, he did not provide more details about the US military’s secret deployment locations.

Trump’s most recent comments come after he previously described Russia’s actions as “disgusting” following a Thursday Russian attack that targeted an apartment block in Kiev’s capital.

A record number of 6, 297 Russian long-range drone attacks on Ukraine were capped by the attack, which rose 14 percent from July 2024.

Trump has promised to deliver a US-made Patriot surface-to-air missile system, but Ukraine is anticipating receiving funding from Ukraine’s European allies, not the Trump administration.

Ukraine has continued to attack Russia, with the most recent attack on Sunday causing major fires to hit an oil refinery and killing three people across the country.

A train station in Russia’s Volgograd region was set on fire by a Ukrainian drone attack on Monday morning, according to the regional administration’s Telegram post.

Russian and Ukrainian officials in Istanbul, Turkiye, have held a number of meetings in recent months as the conflict has persisted.

According to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the most recent meeting resulted in an agreement to exchange 1,200 prisoners.

Russia has not yet made a comment.

In his capacity as a White House special envoy, Witkoff, a real estate magnate and Trump golf partner, has already had multiple meetings with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow.

Hamas says open to ICRC delivering food to Israeli captives in Gaza

After Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he wanted the international organization to step in, Hamas has stated that the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) could provide aid to Israeli prisoners in Gaza.

Palestinian organizations released videos last week showing two abused Israeli prisoners being held in Gaza, where about 2 million Palestinians are struggling to survive the Israeli-induced starvation crisis.

Netanyahu claimed on Sunday that he had spoken with the ICRC delegation’s leader in Israel and asked for “immediate involvement” in providing food and medical care to the prisoners still imprisoned in Gaza.

Netanyahu claimed in a post on X that he had told Larson that Hamas was spreading a “lie of starvation” in the enclave, but that “systematic starvation is being carried out against our hostages” in Hebrew.

Later on Sunday, a Hamas armed wing spokesman said in a statement that Israeli prisoners in Gaza “eat what our fighters and all our people eat.”

According to the spokesman, known as Abu Obeida, “They will not receive any special privileges amid the crime of starvation and siege.”

He continued, noting that the organization is “ready to respond to any request from the Red Cross to deliver food and medicine to enemy prisoners.”

“Humanitarian corridors must be opened in a normal and permanent manner for the passage of food and medicine to all our people in all areas of the Gaza Strip,” according to Abu Obeida.

He further stated that Israeli attacks of all kinds must end when prisoners’ packages are received.

The ICRC reiterated its request to be given “granted access to the hostages” in a statement released on Sunday that it was “appalled by the harrowing videos” of the captives held in Gaza.

The ICRC stated in the statement shared on X that “these videos are stark proof of the life-threatening conditions in which the hostages are being held.

The ICRC continued, “We know the conditions in which their loved ones are held in are horrifying and heartbroken,” adding the ICRC.

The ICRC states on its website that “all parties involved must co-operate to secure access.” Additionally, the ICRC states on its website that it has not been able to visit any Palestinian detainees detained by Israeli authorities since October 7, 2023.

The ICRC said in a separate statement on Sunday that it was “appalled” that a staff member of the Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) had died in a “clearly marked Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) building in Khan Younis, southern Gaza.

The ICRC statement did not mention who was at fault, despite the PRCS’ earlier assertion that the attack was carried out by Israeli forces.

One million girls and women are starving.

Meanwhile, the families of Israeli prisoners imprisoned in Gaza on Sunday claimed that Netanyahu’s continued stance that a “military resolution” was the only option was “a direct danger to our sons’ lives, who live in the hell of tunnels and are threatened by starvation and immediate death.”

The families have claimed in a statement that an agreement is futile because the public has been sold the idea that military pressure will bring back the hostages for 22 months.

In Gaza, there are still about 50 captives. More than half of the population is thought to still be alive.

The Government Media Office in Gaza reported that 22, 000 aid trucks are waiting outside the Strip to deliver desperately needed food to Palestinians there on Saturday, according to the government media office there.

Additionally, 1 million women and girls in Gaza are currently starving, according to a warning from the UN office in Geneva on Sunday.

The UN stated in a post on X that “one million.” In Gaza, that is how many women and girls are battling hunger. This horrific circumstance must end.

We continue to demand the immediate release of all hostages, a ceasefire, and the delivery of lifesaving aid to all women and girls.

White House advisers defend Trump’s firing of official behind jobs data

Following her dismissal, concerns were raised about the future reliability of crucial economic data, which is why Donald Trump fired the top official responsible for compiling employment statistics.

Trump fired its director of the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), Erika McEntarfer, on Friday, alleging that the most recent jobs report had been “rigged” to make him look bad.

The White House National Economic Council director, Kevin Hassett, &nbsp, disputed Trump’s claim that he was “shooting the messenger” and that hiring was significantly lower than previously thought.

According to Hassett, “the president wants his own people there so that when we see the numbers, they’re more transparent and reliable,” the decline in job growth for May and June was “unprecedented” and “historically significant outlier” according to Hassett on NBC News’ Meet the Press.

We want to know why there are significant changes and significant revisions, such as those that are anticipated for the jobs data in September. We want to hear what it means.

Hassett once more cast doubt on the official figures on Fox News, implying without any proof that employment statistics can occasionally contain “partisan patterns.”

He told Fox News Sunday, “I believe what we need is a fresh pair of eyes at the BLS, someone who can clean this thing up.”

Jamieson Greer, the president’s representative for trade, defended Trump’s dismissal of McEntarfer, claiming that the jobs data “were real concerns.”

Greer told CBS News’ Face the Nation, “You want to have some dependable numbers.”

“There are revisions always,” he said, “but occasionally you see revisions that are very extreme.” And it’s the president, as you all know. He has the option of who is employed by the executive branch.

The most recent employment statistics released on Friday revealed that there were 258, 000 fewer jobs created in May and June than previously anticipated, and that fewer than expected 73, 000 more jobs were added in July, undermining Trump’s claim that his sweeping tariffs haven’t had a negative impact on the economy.

Within the next few days, Trump promised to name a new BLS director and a candidate to fill the opening position left by resignation of governor Adriana Kugler.

Economicians and Republican and Democratic lawmakers have condemned Trump’s dismissal of McEntarfer, a career bureaucrat who was appointed in 2024 with overwhelmingly bipartisan support.

The Friends of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, a group led by former BLS directors William Beach and Erica L. Groshen, accused Trump of politicising the agency and undermining trust in official government data in a statement released on Friday.

The organization claimed that US official statistics are the world’s gold standard.