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By AFP
London, England
Pep Guardiola was eulogised on Monday for his relentless
hunger for success that propelled Manchester City to a second consecutive
Premier League title after a titanic battle with Liverpool.
Guardiola claimed his eighth league title in 10 seasons as a
coach in charge of Barcelona, Bayern Munich and City as the English champions
followed up their record 100-point campaign last season with another stunning
98-point season thanks to a 4-1 victory at Brighton.
That meant Liverpool's long wait for a first league title
since 1990 continued despite the Reds posting the third-highest Premier League
points tally ever with 97 after they beat Wolves 2-0 on Sunday.
"Pep's party," ran the headline in the Guardian
newspaper. "The only real world star in this set-up is the manager.
"They didn't go for (Cristiano) Ronaldo or (Lionel)
Messi but invested in fine young players, almost all of whom have been pushed
to the outer levels of their talent."
City became the first side in a decade to retain the title
as Guardiola's demands ensured there was no drop-off at the Etihad as has
happened in the seasons that followed title wins under Roberto Mancini and
Manuel Pellegrini.
"Manchester City could buy great players, good enough
to take them up the mountain, but they could never stay there. Because you
cannot buy hunger, the sustaining daily hunger that drove the greatest teams of
other eras," said the Independent.
"Senior officials at City say that they have never seen
as much focus and character from a City side in the modern era as what they
have seen this season.
"This is the opposite of what we have come to expect
from champion City sides. And it is a vindication of the daily intensity and
demands of their obsessive manager."
Liverpool, whose season could still end in glory if they win
the Champions League next month, were also praised for the contribution they
made to a thrilling race.
"Nothing underscores the brilliance of Pep Guardiola's
team more than the presence of Liverpool a short neck behind. Liverpool are,
without doubt, one of the greatest teams the competition has ever seen,"
said the Daily Mail.
"Encapsulating this campaign is a battle of
superlatives. Liverpool were amazingly good. Incredibly, City were even
better."
Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp said this season is just the
beginning of a journey for his side, but in their three-decade wait to win the
league, the Reds have finished second before and failed to build on it the
following season.
"They're entitled to wonder, given that they've pulled
one of the most stupendous league campaigns in history and still fallen short,
what more can be done?" added the Independent.
Klopp pointed to City's financial power, backed by the
club's Abu Dhabi owners, as a principal reason why they will not be easy to
overhaul.
However, unlike Manchester United, who ended the season as
close to the relegation zone as they were to City, 32 points behind the
champions in sixth, City have invested their money wisely.
"More than half a billion pounds lavished on one of the
most expensive and brilliant squads ever assembled. But we only have to look
down the road at Manchester United to know that you can pour millions down the
drain," said The Times.
"The danger, when City have smashed so many records in
two years of domestic domination -- 198 league points from a possible 228, 19
domestic cup ties won out of 20 -- is that it is regarded as easy, normal,
expected. Those figures suggest a relentless machine.
"It is in watching Guardiola on the sidelines that we
see the stress, the agony, the pressure that has been relentless since setting
out last August, requiring 18 wins out of 19 since Christmas to stay ahead of
Jurgen Klopp's brilliant Liverpool."
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