Pep Guardiola's Manchester City have turned on the style during the early weeks of the Premier League season, but the Spanish manager is just as dapper off the pitch as his side are on it.

Guardiola has won each of his first 10 games in charge at the Etihad Stadium to guide his side to the top of the Premier League table, and at the same time has shown the English football public just why his spells at Bayern Munich and Barcelona were as entertaining as they were successful.

But that style isn't restricted to the confines of the pitch, as is proven by the former midfielder's appearance on the front cover of the October edition of the Spanish GQ magazine.

Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola appears on the front of October's Spanish GQ

Guardiola discusses 'Manchester, music, football and lots of rain' in his interview with GQ

Guardiola appears on the streets of Manchester with the headline 'the man that changes'

Guardiola is wearing a navy blue shirt and trousers for his cover shot, with the strapline 'Guardiola on Manchester (music, football and lots of rain)'.

An inside picture shows Guardiola adding a grey coat to his ensemble, helping him cope with the rain in the north west, while there is also an image of the Spaniard on the streets of Manchester with the headline translated as 'the man that changes'.

A speech bubble on the front cover makes reference to the 'blues of City and the reds of United' as well as Joy Division, Oasis, and the English climate.

Former Liverpool midfielder Xabi Alonso is also mentioned on the cover of GQ and is part of a feature entitled 'the 50 elegants of 2016.

Guardiola has won each of his first 10 games in charge since joining Manchester City

City's most recent win came at Swansea, but Guardiola believes they can still play better

GUARDIOLA'S PERFECT 10 Games played: 10 Games won: 10 Goals scored: 30 Goals against: 6 Advertisement

While Guardiola's City have enjoyed a perfect start to his time in English football, the 45-year-old insisted after their 3-1 win at Swansea on Saturday that he still wants more.

Worryingly for the rest of the Premier League, when asked if City were close to the level he wants against Swansea, Guardiola replied: 'No, we are far, we are far. It would be boring: if we are close I can go back home.

'We are here to get better, when you think it's done why should you keep going? It never ends in football. Always you can play better.

'Individual performance, collective performance, the reason why we play better… the opponents always create different things every game, how we solve that during the game, we don't have time before the game, that's why the game is nice.'

'I said many times I am so happy, because they work a lot, they know that all the staff are working 24 hours for them,' he added.

City will be aiming for win match No 11 of Guardiola's reign when they face Celtic in Glasgow on Wednesday, before returning to Premier League action with games against Tottenham and Everton.