Guardiola and Barcelona - A special relationship
Bayern Munich head coach Pep Guardiola spent most of his career at Barcelona. Starting as a player, he went on to be one of the club's most successful coaches. Ahead of his return home, DW takes a look back.
A strategist
After making it into Barcelona's famous football school "La Masia" aged just 13, Guardiola eventually became an integral part of the first team. Between 1990 and 2001, he won six league titles, two Spanish cups and a Champions League title at Barca.
Once partners, now rivals
In 1992, Guardiola (right) also won a gold medal at the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona. His partner in crime back then was Luis Enrique (left), Barcelona's current head coach. They've maintained a close relationship ever since, adding even more anticipation to their Champions League match-up.
Return as a head coach
In 2001, Guardiola left Barcelona as the club's then-coach Louis van Gaal turned his eye to younger players. After stops in Italy, Qatar and Mexico, Guardiola returned to coach Barcelona's youth team in 2007. One year later he was named first-team head coach. At 37-years-old he was the third youngest head coach ever at Barcelona.
No time for big names
Straight from the start, Guardiola planned a future without stars like Samuel Eto'o, Deco and Ronaldinho. Even Superstar Zlatan Ibrahimovic, who joined the club in a swap for Eto'o in 2009, did not stay long. Pep opted for team-oriented players who understood his idea of possession football and could deliver his famous tiki-taka style of play.
Golden era
Guardiola's style brought success - in a big way. The Catalonian club collected 14 titles in four years as the club became the blueprint on modern footballing success. In Pep's first year in charge, Barcelona won it all: La Liga, the Copa del Rey and the Champions League.
Catalonian hero
Guardiola became a hero throughout Catalonian for taking Barca back to the top and putting an end to the dominance of the "Galaticos" of rivals Real Madrid. Pep became pretty much synonymous with the club and the whole region.
Supernatural pivot
Guardiola's most prominent protégé was Lionel Messi (left). Pep put his faith in the diminutive Argentinean, and he responded by become one of the most lethal goal-scoring threats in ths game. Other players who rose to prominence under Pep were midfielders Iniesta and Xavi, defenders Puyol and Pique, and keeper Valdes.
Star pupil Thiago
One of Guardiola's favourite later pupils was Thiago (right). In 2011, when Guardiola won his second Champions League the midfield magician was in the squad. Pep also brought Thiago to Munich. When asked whom he wanted as a transfer, he allegedly said: "Thiago or no one."
The end of an era
After four years on the Barca bench, Guardiola stepped down. The constant stress had taken its toll, and the head coach needed a break. His last season at Barca showed it, as the club lost the league title to Real Madrid and was knocked out of the Champions League by Chelsea in the semifinals. A Spanish Cup was Guardiola's final trophy.
A tumultuous friendship ends
Guardiola's long-time assistant Tito Vilanova took over when Pep left. Vilanova was then diagnosed with cancer and treated in New York, but Guardiola didn't visit him, despite living in the city during his sabbatical. Vilanova died before the two could reconcile, and at the wish of Vilanova's widow, Guardiola was not invited to the funeral.
Once a fan, always a fan
Wherever Guardiola is employed, part of his heart will always be at FC Barcelona. In March, he and his father watched the club's Champions League game against Manchester City. During the match he was as emotional as any supporter. No surprise considering that he's a season-ticket holder.
The first time in the opposite dugout
Now Guardiola returns to "his" team and "his" stadium as as Bayern head coach. For Pep, Barca is certainly more than a club, and no opponent could be more special. Nevertheless, Guardiola was keepiung things low-key, saying "It's just a game." No one is buying that.