Guardiola’s side finished 18 points behind Liverpool last season, and after losing another key player from recent success in David Silva, Guardiola needed to act.
But City did not have the most auspicious start to the season, slumping to a 5-2 defeat in their opening home game to Leicester City.
Just a day later, Guardiola moved to fix the problem – and the signing of Ruben Dias changed the course of the season.
Dias brought the composure, leadership and stability that had been lacking since Vincent Kompany left and his partnership with the reborn John Stones established City as the league’s most miserly team.
Even so, when Tottenham beat City on 21 November to go top of a seemingly unpredictable division, City were 11th and eight points off the pace, and it looked as though this might not be their year again.
But though doubts arose and questions were asked about the Spaniard’s future, City quickly shut them up.
They went on to win 22 of their next 27 matches, including a 15-game winning run and a record-equalling 11 successive away league victories.
At Anfield in February, where they had not won in the league since 2003, City bullied and dominated the defending champions, with Phil Foden brilliant in a crushing 4-1 victory.
Stones and Dias’ partnership at the back was key, conceding just three goals in the 15 games after that Spurs defeat, while Ilkay Gundogan has been the star at the opposite end of the pitch, his 12 goals so far leading City’s goalscorers.
The chasing pack did not have enough to rein them in and the title returns to the blue half of Manchester.
City captain Fernandinho said leading the team was “an honour and a privilege”.
“I am so proud and so happy with what we have achieved,” he said. “The Premier League is the hardest league in world football – every single match is tough. To win it again means the world to me and the rest of the squad.
He added: “Football is everything to us and we strive every single day to be as good as we can be in the hope we can bring success to Manchester City.
“Winning the Premier League is the ultimate fulfilment of our ambitions. It’s what we all dreamed of as young players, so to do it is a wonderful feeling.
“We have missed the fans so much. We wanted to do this for them.
“We will enjoy this moment and we hope the fans do too. Rest assured we will continue to do everything we can to bring the Champions League home this season.”