“Pep Guardiola’s Tactics Analysis”.

Guardiola’s problem is not a lack of football knowledge. It is not a lack of resources. It is not a lack of elite players.
His problem is his refusal to adapt.
Head Coach Business is as follows:
“The greatest managers understand that football is not about forcing players into a system. It is about building a system around the strengths and weaknesses of the players available. Elite management is adaptation. It is compromise. It is learning from mistakes and adjusting to reality.!

You put the player in the position that suits him, where he feels natural and is sharp. You put him where he is well; you don’t put him in positions where he is exposed and not good enough. You hide flaws, and you know your team’s weaknesses and flaws. You mask flaws and hide them from opponents as a great secret.
The best teams are built around their players. A manager’s job is to create a system in which his players can perform at their highest level, not force them into roles that do not suit their qualities.
Guardiola rarely compromises.

This is the concept of the “11 Messis” — a team in which every player is expected to possess elite technical security, flawless decision-making, and exceptional composure under pressure. On paper, it appears beautiful, a vision of complete footballing control and dominance.
“For nearly a decade at Manchester City, he has pursued the same ideal: defenders playing as playmakers, endless build-up from the back, and complete faith that technical superiority can overcome every obstacle. Yet football does not work that way.”
Football is played by human beings.
Human beings make mistakes.
Pressure creates errors.
Don’t spend billions; realise that. You should be smart enough to realise that!

Massage for Pep Guardiola:
Life is adapting; football is adapting. You can’t get perfection in football, and you should cherish the money much more
The Premier League is the most intense pressing environment in world football, and Guardiola continues to expose his defenders to situations where mistakes become inevitable. His philosophy demands perfection from imperfect players.
That is not adaptation.
That is stubbornness.
The greatest managers hide weaknesses. They protect flaws. They place players in positions where they can succeed. Guardiola often asks players to serve the system rather than asking the system to serve the players.

Manchester City have spent enormous sums building squads tailored to Guardiola’s vision. Despite that investment, the club has won only one Champions League under his management. For a coach presented as the greatest of all time, you would expect a way, way better head coach.
So we say, others don’t!
We are giving you a serious argument on the topic.
Not just repeating it; great arguments are on the table.
Football evolves.
Opponents evolve.
Managers must evolve.

Guardiola’s vision of football remains beautiful, ambitious, and influential. But beauty alone does not win every battle, and he spends money. Adaptation does.
Until Guardiola accepts that football is about managing average and masking rather than chasing perfection.
That is the Guardiola paradox.
Pep Guardiola is trapped by his own tactics. How nice?
That is a trap he created for himself, a refusal to change that trapped him.
“His stubbornness and refusal to change his principles are today pure madness and are childish behaviour, not the grown-up behaviour of Pep Guardiola.”

Grown-ups do not behave like this, and they do not cost tons of money.
This guy has to be stopped