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    Originally posted by rodo View Post
    Why would the Bitters want that lamentable turd back? They're better off without him.
    3rd place. Worst champions ever.

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        Manchester United were once the Goliath of English football.

        Then along came David.
        Was muß, das muß.

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          Haha.
          3rd place. Worst champions ever.

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            Manchester United will back David Moyes with a mammoth £200million to rebuild his beleaguered team.
            7.4 Fellaini's

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              What total guff. I bet they give him no more than £25m this summer.
              Was muß, das muß.

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                £200m?!

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                  I have massive doubts they'd trust him with that kind of money given the deals he pulled off in the summer

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                    50 million will be spent just getting Everton around the negotiating table for Barkley
                    Football without Origi is nothing

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                      They are being linked with exciting names but won't players at least stop and think about where the club is going? Why on earth should Koke for example go to United now? He is playing in a great team challenging for the La Liga under Simeone. Is it a wage thing purely or the fantasies of journalists?

                      I can see them overpaying for players in the near future and giving out big wages to try and buy themselves out this mess, hope they don't buy well
                      * The above is posted in my opinion. Feel free to disagree.

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                        David Moyes has been given free rein to dictate Manchester United’s transfer business this month, with the Old Trafford hierarchy handing the manager sole charge of club funds in an attempt to avoid a disastrous failure to qualify for the Champions League.
                        Despite a dreadful run of form that has left United in seventh position in the Premier League – five points adrift of Champions League qualification – and endure a third-round exit in the FA Cup, United’s owners, the Glazer family, remain fully supportive of Moyes and his decisions.

                        The Scot, who delivered a furious dressing down to his players following the FA Cup elimination at home against Swansea City on Sunday, admitted in the wake of United’s 2-1 defeat that it was “doubtful” he would add to his squad during the transfer window due to the difficulties of securing the best players in January.
                        But with Moyes yet to overcome a reputation for indecision and caution in the transfer market, forged during a decade of managing with budgetary restrictions at Everton, there is a desire within Old Trafford for the manager to adjust to a new reality of genuine financial muscle at United and embrace it by asserting the club’s heavyweight status.

                        Although the Glazers back Moyes’s determination to target only top players with a long-term value to the club, the Americans have made it clear that no restrictions will be placed on his recruitment plans should he identify players he deems capable of improving his squad.
                        Moyes is keen to avoid the acquisition of players he does not consider to be top-class performers, but with some at United referring to the Scot being handed a ‘hospital pass’ by Sir Alex Ferguson with the squad he inherited, the former Everton manager has also been told that he will be backed should he feel the need to add experience and manpower to a squad ravaged by injuries and a loss of confidence.

                        Moyes is understood to have handed a list of priority targets to Ed Woodward, the executive vice-chairman, with the likes of Luke Shaw, Marco Reus, Eliaquim Mangala and Ilkay Gündogan all highlighted as players wanted by the manager, who regards the addition of players in their mid-20s as crucial in rectifying an imbalance in a squad loaded with players in their thirties and emerging youngsters.
                        There is an acceptance, shared by Moyes and Woodward, that most or all of those targets will prove hugely difficult to sign this month, with clubs reluctant to sell and some of the players keen to wait for the summer in order to assess United’s state of health at the end of the season.

                        With Moyes and Woodward being criticised by supporters following the outcome of the summer window, in which £27.5 million was spent on the under-performing Marouane Fellaini following failed attempts to sign Cesc Fabregas, Cristiano Ronaldo and Gareth Bale, senior figures at United are keen to work quietly this month in an attempt to conclude deals behind the scenes.
                        But after identifying key weaknesses in the squad when he succeeded Ferguson last summer, Moyes believes his concerns are now being realised with four defeats in six home games during the past month highlighting the problems in the team.

                        The 50-year-old’s frustration with recent results and performances boiled over, with the manager warning players that many of them were fighting for their future at the club following Sunday’s defeat against Swansea.
                        At least 10 players are believed to face uncertainty beyond this summer, with Rio Ferdinand, Shinji Kagawa and Javier Hernández the most high-profile. Ryan Giggs, at 40, is also expected to depart the scene at the end of the season and become a full-time member of Moyes’s backroom team. The likes of Anderson, Fabio da Silva, Alexander Buttner, Federico Macheda and Bebe are also likely to be cleared off the wage bill.

                        Resolving the future of Wayne Rooney is an issue that will not be addressed until the closure of this transfer window, however, with neither the club nor the player making moves to instigate negotiations over a new contract this month.
                        With his contract due to expire in June 2015, a failure to qualify for the Champions League this season would leave United vulnerable to another summer of uncertainty over the 28-year-old, particularly with Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho ready to renew his efforts to sign the player after lodging two failed bids last summer.

                        It is understood, though, that United are prepared to allow the England forward to run his contract down in order to keep him at Old Trafford should they be involved in a battle to reclaim Champions League status next season, with the view being that retaining the player and risk losing him for nothing would make more financial sense than selling him without securing an adequate replacement.
                        Rooney is doubtful for the Capital One Cup semi-final first leg against Sunderland at the Stadium of Light on Tuesday due to an ongoing groin problem.
                        Robin van Persie, who has been restricted to two appearances in two months due to a series of injuries, will not figure on Wearside after only resuming light training following a period of fitness work at PSV Eindhoven in his native Holland

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                          Damn. One of his excuses removed.
                          Trey Nyoni: countdown to stardom- 2 years 1year 0.5 years

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                            Can't see Rooney or Rvp staying

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                              Think far too many excuses are being made for Moyes. Bar Van Percy, all of United's big signings in the past 3 years have been young players bought for the future, ie. now.

                              10/11: Smalling, Hernandez, Bebe ()
                              11/12: Young, De Gea, Jones.
                              12/13: Powell, Kagawa, Zaha.

                              Then you have previously bought or promoted players that should be in their prime or are well experienced: Valencia (28), Rafael (23), Evra (32), Evans (26), Rooney (28), Carrick (32), Nani (27), Welbeck (23), Cleverly (24).

                              While I as a Liverpool fan still look at that squad of players and think they are ****, they are still the same signings that Ferguson was getting lauded for as he was 'leaving his legacy for the next 10 years', and still the same players that walked the league last year and would be up challenging again under a better manager.

                              Much like Hodgson, Moyes greatest skill seems to be lowering expectations and shifting blame elsewhere and how they get the press on board is sickening. As fickle and as idiotic as they are though, the fact that Moyes now has a large section of the United fanbase blaming their all time hero for the clubs current demise, will probably go down as the greatest accomplishment he'll ever go on to achieve as manager.

                              Moyes.
                              If we are all only happy when we are really winning in the end, when your race finishes, what life would that be?

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                                Originally posted by Liverpel View Post
                                Anyone watching Keane & Vieira?
                                It's repeated tonight on ITV1 at 10.35pm if anyone missed it.

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