Pep Guardiola: Man City playing with Champions League winning belief

Pep Guardiola: Man City playing with Champions League winning belief

Pep Guardiola feels his Manchester City side are playing like a team that believes they can win the Champions League again.

The City boss also saluted the team's consistency after they secured their place in the quarter-finals of Europe's elite club competition with a comfortable victory over FC Copenhagen.

City eased to a 3-1 win in the second leg of their last-16 tie at the Etihad Stadium to complete a convincing 6-2 aggregate success.

Guardiola said: "We are a team that believes we can do it. Listen, we're competing with Real Madrid and Bayern Munich, but the important thing is that seven years in a row we are here. Consistency.

"I felt the people when we arrived from a club like Barcelona and Bayern Munich - where they demand to always be there - I felt the club, not the players, didn't feel it.

"We are here because we needed time. People, managers don't get time, hierarchies don't get time. But they gave us time to lose against Monaco, lose against Liverpool, lose against Tottenham - all (part of) the process to do it, because when a team comes from never ever being in that position, you cannot do it.

"It is easy for clubs that have big history - start with the best ones, Real Madrid, Barcelona, Liverpool, Bayern Munich or Man United - they have been used to it.

"You need time and they gave me time. Now we are in a process where we can lose, definitely, but we can compete everywhere because we've come from the final, semi-final, final, now the quarter-finals again. That means our consistency in Europe."

A much-changed City largely went through the motions after early goals from Manuel Akanji and Julian Alvarez put them on course.

Mohamed Elyounoussi pulled one back for the spirited Danes but they were ultimately outclassed and Erling Haaland's 29th goal of the campaign wrapped up the scoring.

Guardiola said: "We went through against a difficult team. Bayern Munich felt it, Man United felt it, and Galatasaray. They are a difficult opponent, well organised.

"To win the titles we need everyone and we used them. I am really pleased for the performance. People may expect a lot of things but I know how difficult it is."

Copenhagen coach Jacob Neestrup felt his players could hold their heads high after what has been a memorable European campaign for the European champions having progressed from a tough group.

He said: "I could not ask for more from my players. I am proud of the campaign we had in the group stage and we advanced to play the best team in the world. I am filled up with pride.

"Obviously, you need to do everything you can because these are moments in your life you will not get back."

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