Widely considered the finest manager of his generation — architect of tiki-taka at Barcelona and record-breaking Premier League title winner at Man City.
Josep "Pep" Guardiola Sala was born in Santpedor, Catalonia in 1971 and joined Barcelona's La Masia academy at 13. As a player he spent 11 seasons at the club (1990–2001), making 479 appearances and winning 6 La Liga titles, the Champions League (1992), and achieving a pass accuracy of 93% — a figure that has not been matched by any player at elite level. He earned 47 Spain caps scoring 5 goals. As a manager his impact has been transformative: at Barcelona (2008–12) he won the Champions League twice, 3 La Liga titles and popularised the tiki-taka pressing philosophy that changed world football. At Bayern Munich (2013–16) he won 3 Bundesliga titles. At Manchester City (2016–present) he won 6 Premier League titles and the 2023 Champions League — completing the Treble. He has won 40+ major trophies as a manager — the most by any active manager. His top speed as a player of 27.1 km/h was unremarkable but his positional intelligence was exceptional. As a player he provided 132 assists in 527 appearances — extraordinary for a holding midfielder. He is considered the most influential football coach of the 21st century.
Revolutionizing football with tiki-taka and winning 14 major trophies in 4 years at Barcelona
How They Played
Deep-lying playmaker known for vision, passing accuracy, and tactical intelligence
Lasting Impact
Transformed modern football tactics with possession-based philosophy and influenced a generation of coaches
Career Honours
- As manager: Champions League 2009, 2011, 2023
- La Liga 3x
- Bundesliga 3x
- Premier League 6x
- Copa del Rey 2x
- DFB-Pokal 2x
- FA Cup 2x
- As player: Champions League 1992 (Barcelona)
- La Liga 6x
- Copa del Rey 3x
- FIFA World Cup 1992 (as player)
- European Championship 2000 (as player)
- FIFA Coach of the Year 2009
- FIFA Coach of the Year 2011
| Club | Period | Apps | Goals |
|---|---|---|---|
| Al-Ahli | 2003–2004 | 4 | 0 |
| Brescia | 2001–2002 | 5 | 0 |
| Roma | 2001–2001 | 4 | 0 |
| Bayern Munich | 2013–2016 | — | |
| Barcelona B | 1984–1990 | 479 | — |
| Barcelona | 1990–2001 | 263 | 6 |
| Dorados | 2005–2006 | 10 | — |
| — | 47 | 5 |