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Pep Guardiola says Manchester City's Champions League pursuit lacks 'something special'

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Pep Guardiola believes Manchester City are still not ready to win the Champions League, while urging fans to push on the team and create a special feeling

Pep Guardiola believes Manchester City still lack "something special" as they pursue a first Champions League trophy, and has urged the fans to help push the club towards European glory.

City take on Shakhtar Donetsk on Tuesday night, with the Premier League champions currently second in Group F, one point behind Lyon and one ahead of their Ukrainian opponents.

Guardiola is yet to steer City beyond the quarter-finals of the Champions League, with the club's best run coming under Manuel Pellegrini when they reached the semis in 2016.

But having guided Barcelona to two Champions League titles, as well as reaching three semi-finals with Bayern Munich, Guardiola suggested City lack the desire required to win a European trophy.

Pep Guardiola won two Champions League titles with Barcelona in four seasons
Image: Pep Guardiola won two Champions League titles with Barcelona in four seasons

He said: "In this competition you need something special, and still I don't feel it. I saw last season we are still not ready to win it. That's what I feel.

"That doesn't mean we are not going to try but to win this competition it's not enough just to have desire, or wanting to win. You have to have many circumstances, have experience and still we don't have enough in some moments.

"That's not enough that the manager wants to win it, it's not just the players. You have to have the desire - the club, chairman, owner, the fans, everyone has to push to be closer, to achieve the next stages. When it happens, everyone will feel it."

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Throughout his tenure at City, Guardiola has referred to the club's lack of European pedigree when discussing their Champions League shortcomings.

Kevin De Bruyne comes on for Bernardo Silva in the 60th minute
Image: Kevin De Bruyne could start in Ukraine on Tuesday after returning from injury on the weekend

The apparent lukewarm attitude of supporters towards the competition is also something he struggles to comprehend, given his past experiences.

City fans have been slow to take to the competition and this has been exacerbated by an antipathy towards organisers UEFA, which sees them routinely boo the Champions League anthem.

Guardiola added: "It's one important thing to win this kind of title, you have to be pushed, not just by the manager, by everyone surrounding Manchester City that we have to win it. And still we don't have that feeling - the feeling that the fans are pushing that we have to win the Champions League."

City will officially have 825 supporters behind them in Kharkiv, Shakhtar's adoptive home and a venue where they lost last season.

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