Of the many good things that Erling Haaland did on Tuesday night, his post-match interviews were right up there. Speaking to American broadcaster CBS after his five-goal haul, the Manchester City striker described the 7-0 win as a statement performance and result and indicated that he had been brought to the club to win the Champions League. "They didn’t bring me in to win the Premier League because they already know how to win it, so you can read between the lines", he said.
If that seems entirely normal, it is exactly the kind of message that Pep Guardiola has been refusing to give. Despite a sixth successive Champions League quarter-final, the manager is still going on about being a failure. Also read: Guardiola explains why he denied Haaland double hat-trick chance Bringing up Julia Roberts was a particular headscratcher, but was a (completely obscure) variation of a theme that Guardiola has been warming to for a while - the idea that he will not get credit for his achievements as City manager unless he wins the Champions League.
It has been brought up a number of times, and was again before this match when he expressed his incredulity at being told by media he was at City to win them the Champions League when he arrived in 2016.
Guardiola was asked after their 5-0 win over Sporting at this stage of the competition last year if he accepted it would be seen as a statement result, and within two sentences was talking about how they had gone all the way the previous year but "we lost the final and it was like 'what a f****** failure this team is'".