PIPA23
retired :)
- 21 June 2007
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Well, if you had to fire the underperforming players under Moyes that'd be:
Rio, Vidic, Giggs, Carrick, Van Persie, Nani, Rafael, Evra, Cleverley, Welbeck, Hernandez and even Fellaini seem to have regressed this year.
De Gea has been wonderful.
I would love to see a club -- not just United -- take a stand and actually do that. I know that sounds ridiculous, but it would be good reminder to any player currently playing for the club or looking to join it that the club, its traditions, and its fans are to be respected and cherished above all else.
Poor Moyes, it didn't work out well for him here. I hope he does better at a different club where he's given more control over unspoilt kids.
On second thoughts, that was not his only mistake, it was his biggest.
I agree with jonny: he shouldn't have gone for a new backroom staff.
If I were the chairman at one of Norwich, Sunderland, or West Brom and my club retains their Premier League status, I would jump at the chance to land someone like Moyes. He would provide the managerial stability those clubs have severely lacked over the last couple of seasons.
I wonder if Giggs (if he replaces Moyes) will be a permanent appointment? I have no idea how good of a manager he will be. Gary Monk is having a difficult time at Swansea, despite being "one of the guys". Could Giggs be on the receiving end of similar in-fighting and dissent?
That brings me to my next question: What is United's long-term plan regarding their managerial position? If the rumors are to be believed, Giggs will take over for the interim; van Gaal will take over during the summer. Van Gaal is not a permanent solution. He will be a stop-gap until a relatively young, ambitious individual becomes available.
Which top-flight managers fit that profile? The following list is composed of managers 55 years old and younger:
- Benítez - won CL, already managing a CL team for next season, ex-Liverpool, rotation policy is as good as it is bad
- Blanc - CL experience, MU ties, already managing a CL team for next season, tactically not dynamic
- Conte - CL experience, most underrated manager in Europe, one of the most tactically astute managers in the world (e.g., easily switches between 3- and 4-man defenses), rebuilt Juve into a dominant force in Serie A after Calciopoli, has struggled in the CL w/ a team that should make quarter-finals every season
- de Boer - CL experience, prioritizes youth, overly confident in domestic ties (probably because Ajax will most likely lift their third successive league trophy)
- Donadoni - CL experience as a player, attacking football, will he have the command of the MU dressing room (e.g., Euro 2008?
- Garcia - CL experience, a possible Mourinho in the making?, identifies bargains in the transfer window (e.g., Benatia, Gervinho, Strootman), consistently gets Totti to track back
- Guardiola - won CL, will be better prepared to adapt to English football now that he has managed in Germany, speaks English, wedded to attacking football, but tactically plays to the strengths of his teams, he is the trendsetter for European football ATM
- Klopp - CL experience, speaks English, too intense to sustain success at an English club for multiple seasons?
- Martínez - no CL experience, attacking football
- Montella - CL experience, attacking football, ability to gel w/ senior leaders on team (e.g., Totti), thriving at a club with good administrative stability
- Simeone - CL experience, has created a true sense of camaraderie from board to fans at Atleti, will his passion carry over to an English-speaking side?, can he get the best out of his players season after season like Ferguson, or is he a 3-4 year project where both he and the players burn out by the end?
- Spalletti - CL experience, adapts his tactics to his personnel, maybe he can get the best out of Rooney?
- Tuchel - no CL experience, attacking football, prioritizes youth, Klopp-lite
- Valverde - CL experience, attacking football, prioritizes youth, clubs consistently get results against Barcelona and Madrid