Sport Insight

Inside Man City's rebuild and plan for life without Guardiola

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Pep Guardiola holds up six fingers to fans to indicate the six Premier League titles won after their match with Liverpool in December 2024 Image source, Getty Images
By
Senior football correspondent

The January transfer window has heralded encouragement at Manchester City.

Not necessarily because Antoine Semenyo and Marc Guehi have strengthened their squad, but more that the marquee acquisitions show City are maintaining their powerbase in the transfer market.

The mere thought of transition can be enough to strike fear into any football club, particularly one that has been as successful as City in recent years.

Old habits die hard when winning becomes the norm, but sometimes key decisions are taken out of your hands.

At the Etihad Stadium, there are clear signs of evolution.

On the pitch, a host of new players have arrived, while stalwarts Kevin de Bruyne, Kyle Walker and Ederson have left. In the executive team, long-serving sporting director Txiki Begiristain has departedand handed the reins to Hugo Viana.

Then there's manager Pep Guardiola and the growing uncertainty over his future.

In attracting players, City have leaned heavily on the unique selling point of working with Guardiola. They can still use his aura to their advantage - but no longer to the same extent.

Here, BBC Sport looks at the club's evolution and why the January window has offered renewed belief at City that change and ambiguity over their manager's future won't derail their efforts to deliver success.

City face 'tangible uncertainty' over Guardiola

When Guardiola signed a new two-year contract in November 2024, the perceived doomsday scenario of his departure at the end of that season was prevented.

At the time, the club's greatest ever manager had just over six months left on his contract. Now there is no such urgency, with 18 months left on his deal.

But that doesn't tell the full story.

The football industry has been rife with speculation over Guardiola's future, though City's perspective is talk of him departing this year is just that - speculation.

Unsurprisingly, it would be City's preference for him to stay for as long as possible. The 55-year-old continues to publicly insist he loves working at the club, and has shown no clear outward indication he is preparing to leave.

But sources have told BBC Sport there is tangible uncertainty over whether Guardiola will see out the final year of his contract.

The expectation is a decision on whether he stays will be made towards - or after - the end of this season.

And if Guardiola does stay, it is seen as improbable that he will renew his contract.

It is fair, then, to deduce we are likely to be at the beginning of the end of his trophy-laden tenure in the blue half of Manchester.

Whether that moment comes in six or 18 months remains to be seen.

Recruitment of big names 'not dependent on Guardiola'

Marc Guehi celebrates with Antoine Semenyo after Semenyo scored against Wolverhampton Wanders last monthImage source, Getty Images
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Semenyo and Guehi joined for £84m in the January window

Semenyo and Guehi entered negotiations with their eyes open.

Both had the Premier League's elite to choose from last month.

Semenyo was a target for Manchester United, Chelsea and Tottenham. Liverpool, too, were credited with an interest in the 26-year-old, who had a £65m release clause at Bournemouth. He prioritised a move to City.

Guehi was admired on an even greater scale. Out of contract at Crystal Palace at the end of this season, the England defender had suitors across Europe.

Bayern Munich, Inter Milan and Atletico Madrid had serious interest in signing him on a free transfer at the end of the season, while Real Madrid and Barcelona were also in the running. Liverpool's interest was well-documented. Arsenal and Tottenham also tried to convince him to agree to move across London this summer.

Guehi chose City.

It is inconceivable either player decided to sign a long-term contract without knowing it is likely the majority of that time will be spent under a manager who isn't Guardiola.

Of course, the opportunity to work for him - even if it is for six months - is one most players aren't afforded. But that alone is unlikely to have been enough to compel Semenyo and Guehi to sign five-and-a-half-year deals.

City can no longer lean heavily on the idea of flourishing under Guardiola in their pitches to players.

According to sources, rival club executives have used the emerging narrative over the managerial situation to persuade players to ignore advances from the Blues - as if to suggest their success will wane once Guardiola is gone.

Nevertheless - certainly for Semenyo and Guehi - City's pitch remains among the most competitive around, despite the uncertainty over Guardiola.

There is no escaping the fact they are one of the best payers in Europe, and it would be disingenuous to suggest finances weren't a big factor in the two new signings.

That said, it is understood Tottenham's offer to Semenyo was the most lucrative he received last month.

Indeed, sources close to both transfers say it was City demonstrating they gave a virtual guarantee of competing for the biggest trophies and consistent Champions League qualification that proved pivotal in the decision-making process.

Their state-of-the-art infrastructure and off-field ambitions are key features of their pitch to new players, but ultimately it centres on on-field success.

They impress on prospective signings the world-class squad already assembled, combined with their commitment to continue recruiting elite players.

Their strategy of extending the contracts of their best talent in search of continuity and stability also features prominently in their pitch - the 10-year contract striker Erling Haaland signed last year a case in point.

But it is City's body of work under their Abu Dhabi ownership - even prior to Guardiola's arrival - that is their truly unique selling point for prospective signings.

The trophies speak for themselves.

That's not to say there aren't some uncertainties. The implications of City's prolonged legal battle over the much-documented 115 charges in relation to alleged Premier League financial rule breaches weighs heavily over the Etihad. The club strongly deny any wrongdoing.

The outcome of the case will resonate, and any punishment may alter the landscape of English football and City's history.

While no-one knows where the case is up to, the rebuild City have carried out over the past year suggests they are not actively preparing for the worst.

Regardless of what lies ahead in that respect, they will continue to prepare the football operation for success way beyond when Guardiola is gone.

For those at City, the arrivals of Semenyo and Guehi have provided tangible proof their recruitment operations are not dependent on Guardiola's employment.

'No big decision made without Al Mubarak'

Al Mubarak and Guardiola pictured together smiling after Manchester City won the league in 2024Image source, Getty Images
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Khaldoon Al Mubarak has been club chairman since 2008

Amid the ongoing changes, there remains a key constant at City.

Chairman Khaldoon Al Mubarak is the club's agenda-setter. The idea the Spanish triumvirate of Guardiola, Begiristain and Ferran Soriano - the club's CEO - ran the show in the absence of a distant Al Mubarak is a false narrative.

He has been, and remains, at the heart of City's operation. No big decisions are made without his input.

To that end, Al Mubarak will be at the centre of the process to appoint Guardiola's eventual replacement. Viana will lead the search - a task that will unquestionably be his most significant since his appointment as Begiristain's replacement was confirmed in October 2024.

For the successful candidate, replacing Guardiola will be an unenviable task.

That said, replacing Begiristain may have been just as daunting for Viana given his predecessor's reputation as one of the leading player-trading executives in world football.

With that in mind, those at City will tell you the move to keep Begiristain to conduct what was effectively a six-month handover to Viana until the summer of 2025 was crucial in the Portuguese's ability to hit the ground running.

According to sources, Begiristain hand-picked Viana as his successor - a dynamic that eased the transition.

That Ruben Amorim - as manager of Manchester United - was also in town helped.

The pair - and their wives - grew close during their time working together at Sporting Lisbon, where Viana and Amorim had become two of the most sought-after non-playing commodities in European football.

Viana's track record at Sporting was excellent. Alongside Amorim, who he appointed, the 43-year-old helped transform them from a team stuck in malaise into one of the most dynamic in European football.

The signings of Viktor Gyokeres, Morten Hjulmand and Pedro Porro were viewed in recruitment circles as among the most economically sound.

He also sold Porro,Matheus Nunes,Joao Palhinha,Nuno Mendes and Manuel Ugarte for combined fees of more than 200m euros (£170m).

Of course, City are a different beast.

Begiristain and Viana worked in tandem during the 2025 January window in signing Nico Gonzalez, Abdukodir Khusanov and Omar Marmoush - something seen as hugely important in Viana's development.

Similarly, the groundwork for City's £20m capture of Guehi was started by Begiristain but executed by Viana, who is asserting his authority and personality on the club.

Begiristain, Guardiola and Soriano are very close, but Viana is forging relationships with the latter two - and they are already said to be on a strong footing.

Those who have worked under both Viana and Begiristain speak of similarities between them: they are unassuming in their demeanour but diligent and structured in the way they operate.

"There is a plan for everything," said a source.

Agents have also spoken positively of their dealings with Viana, describing him as straightforward and courteous.

Man City gearing up for busy summer window

Viana pictured ahead of the Champions League match between his old club Sporting CP and Manchester City and Sporting CP in 2022.Image source, Getty Images
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As a player, Viana joined Newcastle for £8.5m in 2002 from Sporting Lisbon

Viana is now two transfer windows into the rebuild of City's squad.

De Bruyne, Ederson and Walker all departed on his watch, and fellow stalwarts John Stones and Bernardo Silva could leave when their contracts expire in the summer.

There is uncertainty, too, over the future of Nathan Ake - and the same could be said for Manuel Akanji, Jack Grealish and Kalvin Phillips, who are all out on loan.

It is gearing up to be a busy summer window for Viana, something made trickier by it being a World Cup year.

Last summer, he didn't have it all his own way. City had genuine interest in Florian Wirtz, who eventually went to Liverpool, but felt compelled to drop out of the running for the German over the total cost of the deal.

While City maintain it was their decision, the fact they didn't sign Wirtz was felt deeply given how highly they rated the player.

Viana pivoted to a more economical option - Rayan Cherki, who has been a bright spark in City's season.

Wirtz appears to be finding his feet in England, but City will argue Cherki has had the more impressive campaign so far.

The signings of goalkeepers Gianluigi Donnarumma and James Trafford - after Ederson's departure - were two key acquisitions, with the former's arrival seen as particularly important. Tijjani Reijnders and full-back Rayan Ait-Nouri were also important arrivals.

Viana will now target a new central midfielder, with Nottingham Forest's Elliott Anderson among the primary targets.

They will want further defensive reinforcements too should Stones and Ake depart, though there remain high hopes for central defender Vitor Reis - on loan at sister club Girona - with the expectation he will be integrated into City's senior squad in the not-too-distant future.

With Viana at the controls, City's transition is in full swing - and their ambitions are no longer contingent on the presence of their iconic manager.