The 2025–26 Premier League campaign has closed with a rare kind of symmetry: two of the league’s most influential figures stepped away from its stage in the same weekend. Pep Guardiola’s final Manchester City match and Mohamed Salah’s final Liverpool appearance brought a defining era of English soccer to a dramatic stop.
For almost a decade, their careers helped shape the modern Premier League. One changed the tactical standard at the top of the table. The other became one of the most reliable match winners in the competition’s history. Together, they helped turn the Manchester City and Liverpool rivalry into must-see theater.
Guardiola’s City Chapter Ends
Guardiola’s run at Manchester City reached its conclusion after 593 matches, a stretch that began in July 2016 and delivered constant pressure, relentless control, and an unusually high bar for success. His final match at the Etihad followed another trophy-filled season, with the FA Cup and Carabao Cup already secured.
City also chose to honor him in a permanent way by renaming the north stand at the Etihad Stadium the Pep Guardiola Stand, a gesture that reflects just how deeply his work reshaped the club.
What his City legacy looks like
- Total major trophies: 17
- Matches managed: 593
- Signature achievement: the 100-point Premier League season in 2017–18
- Next step: a break from day-to-day management while serving as a City Football Group ambassador
His influence went far beyond silverware. Guardiola normalized positional rotation, aggressive pressing, and inverted fullbacks in English soccer, forcing rivals to adapt their own ideas just to keep pace.
“There is no reason, but deep inside, I know it’s my time,” Guardiola said in his farewell message. “Eternal will be the feeling, the people, the memories, the love I have for my Manchester City.”
Salah’s Liverpool Era Reaches Its Close
At Anfield, Mohamed Salah closed a nine-year spell that began with his arrival from AS Roma in 2017. He left as one of the most productive attackers the Premier League has ever seen, and his final outing brought the kind of emotion that usually comes only with a club legend’s departure.
Salah’s first season set the tone immediately. He scored 32 goals in a 38-match league campaign, breaking the scoring standard for the modern Premier League era and establishing himself as a constant threat from the right side of Liverpool’s attack.
Key numbers from Salah’s Liverpool career
- Goals scored: 255
- Appearances: 435
- All-time club ranking: third on Liverpool’s scoring list
- Premier League Golden Boots: 4
His pace, movement, and finishing helped power Liverpool through title runs, European nights, and several seasons defined by narrow margins. Whether under Jürgen Klopp or Arne Slot, Salah remained the player opponents feared most in the final third.
“It’s very tough to leave a place like this,” Salah said after receiving a guard of honor with Andy Robertson.
Why This Feels Like a Turning Point
The departures of Guardiola and Salah do more than close two long chapters. They mark the end of a rivalry that helped define the Premier League’s most intense era. Manchester City versus Liverpool became a battle of near-perfect standards, with title races often demanding more than 90 points to win.
That arms race pushed both clubs, and the league around them, to a new level of consistency. It also produced some of the most tactical and emotionally charged matches of the last decade.
- City’s edge: structure, depth, and control
- Liverpool’s edge: transition speed and decisive attacking moments
- The bigger result: a league that had to become sharper to keep up
With Arsenal now emerging as the latest champion, the spotlight is shifting toward a new cast of challengers. Even so, the Premier League will need time to replace what Guardiola and Salah represented: one as the game’s master organizer, the other as one of its most ruthless finishers.
The league goes on, but the feeling is unmistakable. A remarkable era has ended, and English soccer will spend years measuring what comes next against what these two made possible.




