Yaya Toure has questioned whether Pep Guardiola has a bias
against African players and accused the Manchester City coach
of being "cruel" to him, according to an interview with France
Football.
Toure, 35, played his final game for City last month after eight
seasons at the club, with his farewell match against Brighton
his only Premier League start of the season.
And the Ivory Coast international hit out at his former coach
in an interview to be published on Tuesday with the title, "Yaya
Toure: 'I want to be the one who destroys the Guardiola myth.'"
"He was cruel towards me," Toure said in excerpts released on
Monday. "Do you really think that he would have been able to do
that with [Andres] Iniesta at Barcelona? It reached the point
where I asked myself if it was because of my colour.
"I am not the first, either. Other Barca players asked the
question too. It may be that we Africans are not always
treated the same by certain people. When you realise that
[Guardiola] has often had problems with Africans wherever he
has been, I ask myself questions..."
Asked if he thought Guardiola had problems with players of
colour, Toure said: "He pretends not to have -- he is too
intelligent. He will never admit it. However, the day he fields a
team with five Africans, non-naturalised, I promise that I will
send him a cake!"
Manchester City declined to comment when contacted by ESPN
FC.
Toure previously played for Guardiola at Barcelona from 2008
to 2010 but left for Manchester City only to be reunited with
the Catalan coach six years later.
The midfielder made only 17 appearances in all competitions last
season, starting four games in the League Cup and three in
the Champions League, and he said he was frustrated in trying
to understand why he was often left on the bench.
"I have tried to understand -- I politely asked the fitness
staff for my statistics and when I discovered that they were
as good, sometimes even better, across training session and
matches, than those who were playing and younger than me, I
understood that this was not a physical question," Toure said.
"I do not know why but I get the impression that [Guardiola]
was jealous of me. He saw me as a rival, as if I was taking the
limelight away from him."
Toure had a falling out with Guardiola at the beginning of last
season after losing his starting place, but said in May that
they had "sorted it out" over the course of the season.
Ahead of Toure's final start, Guardiola credited him with
making the club "big and bigger and bigger and without doubt
he was one of the most important players in our history."
Also on Monday, UEFA suspended Guardiola for City's first
Champions League game next season for his reaction toward
the referee in the quarterfinals in April.
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