{"id":291234,"date":"2023-09-19T14:20:32","date_gmt":"2023-09-19T14:20:32","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/tellmysport.com\/?p=291234"},"modified":"2023-09-19T14:20:32","modified_gmt":"2023-09-19T14:20:32","slug":"guardiola-and-ancelotti-could-be-set-for-a-champions-league-rematch","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/tellmysport.com\/soccer\/guardiola-and-ancelotti-could-be-set-for-a-champions-league-rematch\/","title":{"rendered":"Guardiola and Ancelotti could be set for a Champions League rematch"},"content":{"rendered":"
AC Milan owner and former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi complained when his club signed Carlo Ancelotti in 1987.\u00a0<\/p>\n
‘\u2018We have a conductor who can\u2019t read sheet music,\u2019 he told his coach Arrigo Sacchi. \u2018I told him I would teach him to sing in tune,\u2019 Sacchi responded. It turned out Ancelotti was a maestro.<\/p>\n
Likewise, Johan Cruyff always had belief in Pep Guardiola even when he was a skinny teenage making little impression.\u00a0<\/p>\n
\u2018They told me they had a skilful player in the youth team,\u2019 said Cruyff on becoming coach of Barcelona in 1988. \u2018So l looked for him the B team, but he wasn\u2019t there. And then I looked for him in the C team, and he wasn\u2019t there either. I asked why and they said: \u201cOh he\u2019s so small!\u201d I said: \u201cHe\u2019ll grow.\u201d And I put him in the first team squad.\u2019<\/p>\n
We didn\u2019t know it then but football was being reinvented by these four names, masters and apprentices. Cruyff and Sacchi bestride the modern era, a constant reference for anyone who coaches.\u00a0<\/p>\n
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Pep Guardiola (left) and Carlo Ancelotti (right) deserve to be seen as the best managers of their generation<\/p>\n
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Guardiola learnt from Johan Cruyff (left) after playing under him at Barcelona<\/p>\n
Your browser does not support iframes.<\/p>\n
And then, a generation on, you come to this year\u2019s Champions League, kicking off tonight, assess the contenders and conclude it is likely to be a contest between Manchester City and Real Madrid, between Ancelotti and Guardiola. Pep versus Carlo.<\/p>\n
Greatness is bestowed on those that dominate Europe, not domestic leagues. That is why Guardiola\u2019s Manchester City can only now enter that debate.\u00a0<\/p>\n
The Real Madrid team nicknamed Quinta de Buitre \u2013 the Vulture Squad – won five Spanish titles in a row but never the European Cup and were taken apart by Sacchi\u2019s AC Milan, losing 5-0 in the 1989 European Cup semi final. The first goal-scorer of that definitive game, showcasing Sacchi\u2019s tactical superiority over the world? Ancelotti.<\/p>\n
You might of another more recent semi-final with which to compare that. Manchester City\u2019s 4-0 win over Real Madrid was similarly defining, a triumph of Guardiola over Ancelotti.\u00a0<\/p>\n
Teams win and lose all the time but sometimes a game stands out. It is very rare for two so well-matched sides with similar economic resources to come together and for one to prevail quite so emphatically.<\/p>\n
It wasn\u2019t just that they lost: Real Madrid simply couldn\u2019t cope with City. Guardiola\u2019s team were on a different level to the club that had won four of the last seven Champions League trophies.\u00a0<\/p>\n
The principles of Cruyff were predominant again, just as they were when Guardiola won his Champions League trophies as coach at Barca in 2009 and 2011. Or when Cruyff took that skinny teenager and made him to pivot of a team with Ronald Koeman, Michael Laudrup and Hrsitov Stoichkov and won Barcelona\u2019s first European Cup in 1992.<\/p>\n
That dates resonates as that was the last of the old style European Cups. From thereon in we would have a revamped tournament known as the Champions League. Something called the Premier League had just been set up in England.\u00a0<\/p>\n
Football\u2019s rule-makers would outlaw the back pass to the goalkeeper, something that would transform the game and privilege those that can play from the back. That is, Cruyff-like teams.<\/p>\n
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Ancelotti was part of the great AC Milan side from the late 1980s and early 1990s that achieved major success under Sacchi<\/p>\n
Two years before the offside rule had been amended to make a player who was level onside, which made it significantly harder to set an offside trap and play for a 0-0 or a quick counter 1-0 win.\u00a0<\/p>\n
The age of negativity was over. TV\u2019s big bucks now dominated. Attacking football was give rocket fuel. And Cruyff was in the ascendant, the Total Football, attacking view of the game, which gave licence to great individuals such as Stoichkov and later Romario, very much the mode of the day. Cruyff had reincarnated his great Dutch side of the 1970s as the new dawn rose.<\/p>\n
Not that Sacchi was so different. He had great individuals in Marco van Basten and Ruud Gullit. His team played extraordinary passing football.\u00a0<\/p>\n
But if you wanted a one line summary \u2013 which is, of course, ridiculously insufficient \u2013 AC Milan controlled space, where Barcelona controlled the ball. Cruyff believed the team\u2019s system was designed to support individual brilliance where Sacchi believed predominantly in his team.\u00a0<\/p>\n
\u2018Many believe that football is about players expressing themselves,\u2019 said Sacchi. \u2018But that\u2019s not the case. The player needs to express himself within the parameters of the manager.\u2019<\/p>\n
Cruyff\u2019s team were also well drilled and yet somehow the individual always seemed king. His longstanding philosophical difference with Louis van Gaal boiled down to the fact that he believed his fellow Amsterdammer overcomplicated the game. \u2018The difference is that he always organises a lot of things for people,\u2019 said Cruyff. \u2018And I always use the basic quality of people to achieve what I want to achieve.\u2019<\/p>\n
Yet just as quickly Cruyff\u2019s football took hold in the 1990s, it was systematically dismantled in what may the greatest and most significant Champions League final since Real Madrid beat Eintracht Frankfurt 7-3 in 1960.\u00a0<\/p>\n
The 1994 final, which AC Milan won 4-0 against Cruyff\u2019s Dream Team, was even more astonishing that City\u2019s display last May. \u2018The press, especially the foreign media, had given us no hope,\u2019 said Paolo Maldini, mainstay of the extraordinary Milan back four. And it is true that everyone was a little bit in love with Cruyff\u2019s extraordinary team which had many of City\u2019s attributes.\u00a0<\/p>\n
They were taken apart, 4-0 down within the hour, barely laying a glove on AC Milan. Ancelotti had retired by then and was now an assistant to Sacchi with the Italian national team.\u00a0<\/p>\n
This victory was Fabio Capello\u2019s and though, as Jonathan Wilson points out, there was an evolution from Sacchi to Capello, AC Milan was still Sacchi\u2019s creation just as Liverpool\u2019s was Bill Shankly\u2019s, even though Bob Paisley won much more.<\/p>\n
Ancelotti will surely be dwelling on this tactical duel as Real Madrid prepare for this year\u2019s competition, which may be his last if he is off to coach Brazil next summer. Last year\u2019s semi final was chastening.\u00a0<\/p>\n
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AC Milan showed Cruyff’s Barcelona could be beaten when they thrashed them 4-0 in the 1994 Champions League final<\/p>\n
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Ancelotti will hope to draw inspiration from this when his Real Madrid side try to stop Guardiola’s Man City this season<\/p>\n
Yet he has lived long enough to know it isn\u2019t a permanent marker, more a line in the sand. Ancelotti has won the trophy twice as a player and four times as a coach to Guardiola\u2019s one triumph as a player and three as coach. So this duel, their struggles on behalf their mentors, cuts through the modern tournament like no other.\u00a0<\/p>\n
And Ancelotti can take heart. Not least because it was his Real Madrid team that exposed Guardiola\u2019s limitations at Bayern, the 4-0 win at the Allianz Arena in the 2014 semi-final a masterclass in counter attack versus possession football.<\/p>\n
With Jude Bellingham playing behind Vinicius and Rodrygo perhaps he has fresh kryptonite for Pep\u2019s supermen? There is a joyful pragmatism to what Ancelotti is creating without a centre forward.\u00a0<\/p>\n
Perhaps the ascendancy of Cruyff will be as quickly overturned as it was in the 1990s. For now, though, this seismic battle of wills will dominate the tournament. And, at some stage, we must surely be given Manchester City v Real Madrid Part II? Preferably in the final.<\/p>\n
It’s All Kicking Off is an exciting new podcast from Mail Sport that promises a different take on Premier League football.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n It is available on MailOnline, Mail+, YouTube, Apple Music and Spotify.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n Your browser does not support iframes.<\/p>\n