Manuel Pellegrini at Manchester City: From glory to decline
We assess Manuel Pellegrini's Manchester City legacy as he prepares to make way for Pep Guardiola.
Manuel Pellegrini's Etihad Stadium farewell rather summed up
the mood at Manchester City as they approach the end of his final
season in charge. Boos greeted the 2-2 draw with Arsenal as disgruntled
fans headed straight for the exits, and when the manager and his players
re-emerged from the dressing room, they were met by swathes of empty
seats.It was a sad way for the Chilean to say goodbye after three years at the helm, but the exodus was also an understandable reaction to yet another setback in a season in which City have fallen a long way short of expectations.
Manuel Pellegrini waved goodbye to City fans on Sunday after his final game at the Etihad
How did it come to this? The Capital One Cup triumph over Liverpool ensures the season has at least yielded silverware, but City could not have imagined the collapse that would follow the announcement of Pep Guardiola's appointment in February. Pellegrini's men were just three points behind leaders Leicester at the time. The gap now stands at 15.
Manuel Pellegrini and Yaya Toure pose with the Premier
League trophy after Man City's 2013/14 title triumph
"Pellegrini inherited a team that could win things," said Sky Sports pundit Graeme Souness on Sunday. "Then he spent £200m net, now he is leaving and how much further down the road is this team than when he walked in? Are they better? Have they stagnated? Or are they worse?"
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In all competitions, they struck a record-breaking 156 goals, and thoughts immediately turned to the future after they wrapped up the season with 2-0 win at home to West Ham. "Big teams cannot be satisfied with one title," said Pellegrini in his post-match press conference. "This club and players deserve more titles."
Manuel Pellegrini guided Man City to a second Capital One Cup win this season
They did finish as the Premier League's leading scorers for the second year running as they netted 83 goals, but it was the first time since 2009/10 since they had failed to win silverware. A steady decline was in motion, and the sense of underachievement has grown this season. Not since 2008/09 have City lost 10 Premier League games in a single campaign.
Man City's Premier League decline under Pellegrini
| Season | Won | Drawn | Lost | Goals for | Goals against | Points | Position |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2013/14 | 27 | 9 | 6 | 102 | 37 | 86 | 1st |
| 2014/15 | 24 | 7 | 7 | 83 | 38 | 79 | 2nd |
| 2015/16 | 19 | 8 | 10 | 70 | 40 | 65 | 4th |
But while City's aging squad contains 11 players aged 30 or over, there is still far more quality within its ranks than their league positions suggests. Pellegrini has been unable to get the best out of them, and City's dismal record of no wins from 10 games against the top-six opponents is a damning indictment of the man making the decisions in the dug-out.
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So while Pellegrini will be fondly remembered for the moments to savour in his unforgettable first season, he leaves having failed in his task to take City to the next level. The sparse crowd that stayed for his farewell speech told a tale. Guardiola has plenty of work to do to get them to where they want to be.
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