Key Points

Manchester City has strengthened their coaching team by bringing in experienced Dutch coach Pepijn Lijnders from Liverpool. Lijnders, who previously worked under Jurgen Klopp, brings a wealth of elite-level coaching experience from clubs like PSV Eindhoven and Porto. Alongside set-piece coach James French, he joins Pep Guardiola's backroom staff ahead of the Club World Cup and 2025/26 season. The appointments signal City's commitment to maintaining their high-performance coaching standards.

Key Points: Pepijn Lijnders Joins Pep Guardiola's Man City Coaching Team

  • Lijnders joins City after successful tenure at Liverpool under Klopp
  • Brings extensive coaching experience from PSV, Porto, and Liverpool
  • Appointed alongside set-piece coach James French
  • Part of Guardiola's evolving coaching setup
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Pepijn Lijnders joins Man City as assistant coach

Dutch coach Pepijn Lijnders moves from Liverpool to Manchester City, bringing extensive Premier League and European coaching experience

"Their talent, application, work ethic and all-round commitment are totally aligned with the values that underpin how Pep wants football to be played - Hugo Viana, Director of Football"

Manchester, June 10

Manchester City have appointed Pepijn Lijnders as assistant coach, while James French joined as set-piece coach as part of Pep Guardiola’s first team coaching set-up.

Lijnders arrives at the Etihad armed with extensive elite-level coaching experience both in the Premier League as well as on the continent.

The 42-year-old Dutch native set out on his coaching career in 2002, working initially as part of PSV Eindhoven’s youth set-up before then taking up a similar role with FC Porto in Portugal.

Lijnders then made the move to England, joining Liverpool in 2014 initially as part of Brendan Rodgers' backroom staff before then working under Jurgen Klopp following the German’s appointment as Anfield manager in 2015.

After a spell away from Anfield as manager of Dutch side NEC at the start of 2018, Lijnders returned to Merseyside in the summer of that year.

Lijnders departed Anfield along with Klopp in the summer of 2024 and subsequently took over as manager of RB Salzburg, going on to spend six months in charge of the Austrian side.

Meanwhile, French moves to City from Liverpool in the key role of set-piece coach, also armed with extensive Premier League experience.

After having started his career working in roles at Swansea and then the FA of Wales, French joined Liverpool’s backroom team in 2012.

He has subsequently gone on to spend more than a decade at Anfield, working as first team opposition analyst with the Merseyside club.

Commenting on the appointments, Director of Football Hugo Viana said, "We are all delighted that Pepijn and James have joined our senior coaching set-up. Pepijn and James have each amassed huge experience working in their individual roles over the past few years. Their talent, application, work ethic and all-round commitment are totally aligned with the values that underpin how Pep wants football to be played.

"And I have no doubt at all that both will prove to be very important assets for Pep and his coaching team as we prepare for the Club World Cup and then the 2025/26 season."

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
Interesting move! Lijnders worked wonders with Liverpool's youth development. Hope he brings that same magic to City. But as an Indian football fan, I wish our ISL clubs would hire such quality coaches too! 🇮🇳⚽
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Priya M.
Guardiola is assembling a dream team of coaches! But honestly, I'm more excited about the set-piece coach appointment. Indian teams could really benefit from specialists like French - our dead-ball situations need so much improvement!
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Arjun S.
Liverpool to Man City? That's like moving from Ambani to Adani! 😂 Jokes aside, this shows how professional football is - rivalries stay on the pitch. Hope Indian football develops this maturity too.
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Sunita R.
While this is great for Man City, I wonder if such frequent coach movements between rivals affects team loyalty. In Indian sports, we value long-term associations more. Maybe that's why our cricket coaches stay for years!
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Vikram J.
The Dutch connection continues at City! First Cruyff's philosophy, now Lijnders. Wish Indian coaches would get such global exposure. Our AIFF should arrange more foreign internships for Indian coaches.
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Neha P.
Not sure about this move. Lijnders had mixed results at Salzburg. Hope City knows what they're doing. Meanwhile, our Indian Super League teams should look at such available European coaches - might get them at reasonable rates now!

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