Guardiola urges City to become a European great
Pep Guardiola believes Manchester City must win the UEFA Champions League to be considered one of the competition's great clubs.
The City manager also vowed it should not be considered "a disaster" if his team misses out on European success during his tenure, yet he can now sniff glory after the Round of 16 victory over Real Madrid.
With LaLiga's champion ousted, and Serie A winner Juventus also eliminated, every team through to the quarter-finals will sense a genuine opportunity.
Lyon, the team that edged past Juve on away goals, is next in City's crosshairs, with a meeting scheduled for next Sunday (AEST) in Lisbon.
Guardiola says he "would love" to bring UEFA Champions League glory to City, having missed out with Bayern Munich after achieving 2009 and 2011 successes while in charge at Barcelona.
He recognises that although City is becoming part of the competition's establishment, there is still a next step it has to take.
"You have to lift it, this title, to be, 'OK, we've got it'," Guardiola said.
"We beat Real Madrid, of course for us it's so important. We know the credit, the value, the prestige that Real has.
"They are a massive club. To compete with them, beat them twice, for this season and for the future it will be so good."
Guardiola agreed when it was suggested the rest of the tournament could feel like a FIFA World Cup, saying it would feel "quite similar".
The last eight teams standing will head to Lisbon for one-off games in each remaining round rather than two-legged quarter-finals and semi-finals.
"Now every game is a final. You are in, or you are out. We will see a final against Lyon," he said.
But Guardiola's overriding message is that UEFA Champions League success can rest on fine margins, pointing to the errors from the usually unflappable Raphael Varane that helped City fend off Zinedine Zidane's side.
Whether City experiences UEFA Champions League success during his reign or not, Guardiola does not see it defining his stay at the Sky Blues.
"I live in Manchester, and an incredible club will be my memories. This is my happiness. Of course, we are going to try. But this competition is so difficult," he said
"But I don't want to live right now being here [saying] if we don't win the Champions League it will be a disaster.
"I know what I live is great. I've met incredible people. This is my life. And is it going to change my relations because I lift a title? Honestly, no.
"In Munich, we won a lot of titles but we didn't win the Champions League. Am I going to tell you I was unhappy in Munich? No. That I don't have friends in Munich? I have many.
"We're going to put in everything. But sometimes the opponents are better. Or you get wrong decisions of the strikers, or mistakes by the defenders. It's part of the life, it's part of the process, part of football. It's little details, margins, it happens."