Juventus 2, Manchester City 5: Pep’s Hunger Returns, and So Does City’s Ruthlessness
There was something unmistakable in the Manchester City group hug that broke out after Savinho’s stunning fifth goal sealed a 5–2 thrashing of Juventus in Orlando — something that told you more than the scoreline ever could.
Pep Guardiola is hungry again.
It wasn’t just the goal, or the dominance, or the sweltering Florida heat. It was Pep — animated, locked in, surrounded by a newly assembled coaching staff that includes Yaya Touré and Pepijn Lijnders — who made it clear: this is personal. He’s not coasting. He’s not stepping back. If anything, he’s more hands-on than ever.
He personally named Bernardo Silva as captain instead of holding a player vote. He hand-picked his new lieutenants. These are not passive gestures. These are calculated moves from a man hellbent on building another band of serial winners.
And if Saturday’s performance is anything to go by, that band is already in tune.
Dominant, Fast, Ruthless: City Look Scary Again
From the opening whistle, Manchester City looked sharper, more fluid, and more dangerous than they did at any point last spring. In the oppressive heat of the Camping World Stadium, they played like a team with something to prove — and they did.
The left side was particularly electric. The partnership between Jeremy Doku and new signing Rayan Aït-Nouri — fresh from Wolves — looked almost telepathic. Doku, who earned Man of the Match honors, seemed liberated with Aït-Nouri behind him, a fullback who clearly gets what Pep wants from his wide defenders. Intelligent, aggressive, and positionally sharp, Aït-Nouri didn’t look like a new arrival — he looked like a solution.
Juventus had few answers. They were pinned back and punished. A brief moment of hope came when Teun Koopmeiners equalized after Doku’s opener, but that was about as good as it got for the Bianconeri. From there, it was one-way traffic.
Foden, Haaland, Cherki — and the Warning Shot to Europe
By the time Erling Haaland stepped on, Juventus’ defense had already begun to sink deeper and deeper. His presence alone made them retreat. His goal — along with one from Phil Foden — simply confirmed what was already clear: City were operating on another level.
We even got a glimpse of Ryan Cherki, and it didn’t take long for his confidence on the ball to earn trust from his teammates. City players didn’t hesitate to give him touches — and he didn’t disappoint.
This wasn’t just a win. It was a statement. Manchester City are already clicking, the hunger is back, and the boss is fully locked in.
Premier League and Europe, take note. Pep Guardiola isn’t done — he’s just getting started.