Pep Guardiola insists he is not frustrated with Manchester City’s failure to sign Harry Kane from Tottenham last year.
The England striker appeared eager to leave north London for the Etihad Stadium, but City were unable to persuade Spurs chairman Daniel Levy to cash in on his star performer.
It looked as though not recruiting a new centre-forward could scupper City’s plans this season after they lost to Leicester City in the Community Shield and Spurs in the Premier League back in August, in a match Kane sat out amid the uncertainty over his future.
Yet City have since embarked on an imperious run of form, winning 20 and losing just one of their subsequent league games to open up a nine-point gap at the top of the table.
Kane, meanwhile, has scored just five times in the league in 2021-22, his minutes-per-goal rate of 358.4 more than twice as bad as at any other time in his career. Spurs, meanwhile, are on a three-match losing streak ahead of Saturday’s clash with City at the Etihad Stadium.
“I was never in my 11 or 12-year career disappointed in what the club I manage cannot do in the transfer market,” Guardiola said. “And I never created a fire here because I represent the club and the club is always beyond myself by far.
“When we have some talks and cannot agree, we do it internally. We tried [for Kane] but it was far away [from] being done because Tottenham were clear this is not going to happen. And when they say this two, three, four times, it’s over.
“Now you can say: ‘Harry Kane didn’t come and everything is going well.’ But at the time I didn’t know it. We lost to Spurs and Leicester in the Community Shield. And I [didn’t] know what will happen in the next few weeks.
“The club gave me players, and I’m always delighted – and it’s then what we can do together. Maybe if we had a proper striker we would play with a striker but with the players we have, we have to adapt.
“I know they [the club] do the best for me. When we lose we are sad, but nobody is pointing fingers saying: ‘Your fault, your fault, your fault.’ We don’t do that. That’s why I’m happy here. At other clubs when you lose it’s ‘what’s the problem?’.”
In 2016-17, when Antonio Conte was in charge of Chelsea, he became the first manager to inflict a league double over Guardiola in the same season.
In the first of those meetings in December 2016, Guardiola tried to match Conte’s back-three system and lost the game 3-1, a mistake he is unlikely to repeat.
“We played three at the back, we lost 3-1,” he said. “What a decision I made.”