‘I’m here to win games, lift trophies’: Josko Gvardiol eyes more glory with Manchester City

Pep Guardiola’s team face Arsenal on Sunday night hoping to reassert their Premier League credentials after a difficult last campaign. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 21 September 2025
Follow

‘I’m here to win games, lift trophies’: Josko Gvardiol eyes more glory with Manchester City

  • Pep Guardiola’s team face Arsenal on Sunday night hoping to reassert their Premier League credentials after a difficult last campaign

MANCHESTER: When Manchester City ended last season without a major trophy for the first time since 2017, it led to intense debate and conjecture about the club’s direction.

With Liverpool claiming the Premier League title in impressive fashion and spending big this summer, Arsenal have emerged as the side most likely to stop Arne Slot’s side from becoming the dominant force as City had been.

Yet despite a horrific run of just one win in 13 games, Pep Guardiola’s men rallied in the previous campaign to finish third in the table and claim a coveted Champions League place amid fierce competition. That provided hope at the start of a new era.

With an overhaul of the squad, icons such as Kevin de Bruyne, Kyle Walker, Ilkay Gundogan and Ederson departed, while Omar Marmoush, Rayan Ait-Nouri and France attacker Rayan Cherki were among the new arrivals.

Italy keeper Gianluigi Donnarumma also joined from Paris Saint-Germain, where he helped the French side win their first Champions League.

For defender Josko Gvardiol, the changes mean it may take time to shape their future, but the ambition remains the same for a club that won an unprecedented four league titles in a row and the 2023 Champions League.

“I’m here to win the games, to lift the trophies as well,” said the 23-year-old. “It’s not even a question (of whether) I want to win it. It is and it has to be like this, otherwise, if you don’t want it, then this is not the place for you.

“But I can tell you I see everyone still has the hunger and desire to win everything, too. This is what we need, and this is a bit of what we missed last season. I’m really happy to see that.”

There was concern again when City started sluggishly with two defeats in their opening three league games.

But a 3-0 derby win over Manchester United and a 2-0 success in their Champions League opener against Napoli have lifted confidence before they visit Arsenal today at Emirates Stadium.

Gvardiol “doesn’t read the comments” that have written City off as title contenders, but the Croatia international admitted: “We are still not at the level we want to be. We need to build slowly.

“Last season, it was not the best; we struggled a lot, but you can see we are still together as a team and having good results.

“We have quality. All we miss is a bit of confidence. The only way to build it back is to go game by game because the season is very long.”

Arsenal will have Viktor Gyokeres leading their attack following his summer move from Sporting, where he scored 54 times for the Portuguese club last season.

It included a hat-trick in a 4-1 Champions League win over City during their troubled period.

But the Etihad outfit have their own prolific striker in Norwegian Erling Haaland, who has scored 12 times this term for club and country.

Three have come this week against neighbors United and then Napoli, where he became the fastest player to reach 50 Champions League goals.

Haaland, 25, achieved the feat in 49 games, surpassing Ruud van Nistelrooy’s record, and is expected to challenge the competition’s scoring record of 140 held by Al-Nassr’s Cristiano Ronaldo.

“Everything he does is magic,” added Gvardiol. “It’s so nice to have him up front. I would say they are different, but Gyokeres is a good player. I remember him from the game against Sporting.

“We struggled and we lost the game. As always, Arsenal is going to be a good game, but we will go there and try to win.

“Most of their signings are bringing something new, the style of play, but I can also talk about our new signings, and we are more than happy to have them in our team, and they have adapted really quickly.”

While Egypt forward Marmoush, Algeria left-back Ait-Nouri and Cherki are currently injured, keeper Donnarumma has immediately proved his worth with clean sheets in his first two games.

“Look at Gigio,” said Gvardiol. “I know when I made my debut, it wasn’t that easy to accept everything, the rhythm, the pressure, so I want to congratulate him.

“I know what he did in the Champions League last season. I’ve never seen someone that big in the goal and he can cover everything.

“He gives the defense confidence. If we are to achieve things, it’s not just Erling, it’s about everyone,” he added. “We need to trust each other; it’s the only way we can fight together. If people make mistakes, we are here to support and push each other. That’s who we are and that’s why it’s so special.”

Gvardiol’s return has also helped tighten City’s defense after a knee injury sidelined him at the Club World Cup, where City were upset 4-3 by Saudi Pro League side Al-Ahli in the last 16.

The 23-year-old, who has played at left-back and in central defense, has impressed since his $103 million arrival from RB Leipzig in 2023. 

“If I tell you I want to be at the same level as two years ago, I wouldn’t be happy,” said Gvardiol. “Everyone wants to be the best version, but I think I can perform much better than I did in my first year.”


Olympic favorite Malinin pulls off stunning GP Final win

Updated 23 sec ago
Follow

Olympic favorite Malinin pulls off stunning GP Final win

  • Short program winner Yuma Kagiyama finished second overall on 302.41
  • Malinin becomes the first skater to land seven quads in competition and will head to the Milan-Cortina Games in February as clear favorite in his Olympic debut

NAGOYA: Ilia Malinin showed why he is red-hot favorite for Olympic gold by winning the Grand Prix Final with a world-record free skate score after landing an incredible seven quads.
The American “Quad God” lived up to his nickname, coming from third place after a disappointing short program to claim the title in Nagoya with an emphatic 332.29 points.
Short program winner Yuma Kagiyama finished second overall on 302.41, followed by Japanese countryman Shun Sato on 292.08.
Malinin becomes the first skater to land seven quads in competition and will head to the Milan-Cortina Games in February as clear favorite in his Olympic debut.
“It gives me a lot of confidence that I’m able to go out there and get this done,” said the 21-year-old.
“I know that right now I wasn’t at 100 percent, so being able to do this at what energy and what percent I am now gives me a lot of confidence for the future.
“I will take the next few months leading up to the Olympics trying to perfect everything,” he added.
Malinin botched his signature quad axel in his short program when he unleashed it for the first time this season on Thursday.
He nailed the ultra-risky move in style in his free skate and kept the fireworks going for the rest of his routine.
His free skate score of 238.24 was almost 10 points more than his old world record, set in his previous competition at Skate Canada last month.
Malinin said he was “thinking of trying to water it down to play it safe but then I remembered why I came to the Grand Prix Final.”
“I decided that I wanted to go full out and give myself a foundation of what it would look like,” he said.
“I’m really satisfied with my performance and I know that I’m able to get these jumps under pressure.”
Kagiyama, the 2022 Beijing Olympics silver medallist, had a job on his hands to beat Malinin even with his short program lead.
He made mistakes toward the end of his routine and placed fourth in the free skate.
- Chock, Bates win ice dance -

Madison Chock and Evan Bates of the United States won the ice dance title.
The husband-and-wife team claimed the Grand Prix Final title for the third straight year, racking up 220.42 points to finish ahead of France’s Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Guillaume Cizeron on 214.25.
Britain’s Lilah Fear and Lewis Gibson were third on 208.81.
“It feels like a sprint to get to the Grand Prix Final and then all of a sudden you have a month or two before we’ll meet again in Milan,” said Bates.
“It really is the first half of the season and then there’s a lot of progress that can be made in the next few months, which is something that we’re looking forward to.”