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    The problem with the self proclaimed biggest club in the world is that they are always going to be looking for the next Ferguson and as soon as things get difficult the fans are up in arms and the pressure mounts.

    Any manager going into that club will be compared to Ferguson and has his legacy on their shoulders. After two decades of success the self entitlement of the club and fans is still strong. Even if Mourinho goes there he will last a couple of seasons at best before he has his melt down.

    As much as United are a bunch of ****s the one man who I have a lot of respect for is Bobby Charlton. The man is a true legend and a class act and he himself has spoken out against Mourinho joining United so for me it's a none starter.

    Got to be Giggs as next manager.

    Comment


      [ame]https://twitter.com/tomwfootball/status/681480282776727552[/ame]

      Comment


        It’s only a few weeks ago that a highly placed source on the Manchester United board was telling journalists that Louis van Gaal was a “genius manager” who was welcome to stay at Manchester United for as long as he wanted to.
        Since then, of course, United have lost a few games, which creates “a new situation”, to borrow a phrase from Van Gaal. It seems no board can be expected to keep faith with a coach who loses four in a row, even if a few days previously they were insisting he was a genius.

        That Van Gaal will soon be sacked now seems a question of when rather than if. Such debate as exists now centres on the identity of his successor. This is where things start to get a little confused.

        There appear to be only three options on the table. The first is to hire José Mourinho. The second is to hire Ryan Giggs. The third is to hire Giggs as the interim manager until the end of the season, and then appoint Pep Guardiola.
        For United supporters, the third option is probably the most desirable, and would also appear to be the preference of Alex Ferguson, who tried to convince Guardiola to succeed him at United on at least one previous occasion. However, it’s also the least likely to transpire, as most of the indications in Germany are that Guardiola has already agreed to join Manchester City next summer.
        That being so, it seems that José Mourinho is the only other experienced candidate under consideration.

        Portfolio
        Yesterday’s Sunday Times carried a report from a journalist close to Mourinho which appeared to lay out the Special One’s position – you could think of the piece as programme notes from a manager without portfolio. The report announced the surprising news that Mourinho was considering an offer from Real Madrid’s president Florentino Pérez to take back his old job as Real Madrid manager.

        In this account, Mourinho had decided to leave Madrid in 2013 purely on his own initiative, after becoming frustrated with “the multiple political difficulties” of managing the galáctico club. That is a delicate way of putting it. As far as everyone else could remember, Mourinho and Madrid had parted ways after his relationship with most of the key players had broken down.

        Mourinho was said to be thinking about Pérez’s offer but on balance his preference would be to manage a Premier League club, and “with the expectation of strong backing from the club’s executive vice-chairman, Ed Woodward”, it seems that he would be content if Manchester United were to be that club.

        There is a contradiction here, however. If you were convinced that Pep Guardiola was the ideal manager to take your club forward, then José Mourinho would be the very last manager you would want to appoint. They have completely opposite ideas about the game. A wishlist that has Pep in first place and José second is totally incoherent in football terms. The only way it could possibly make sense is in terms of celebrity: who’s the biggest name we could get to manage our team?

        But that, increasingly, is how top clubs think about the job of manager. The sheer quantity of money at the top of the game has promoted a deadening conservatism. Nobody cares about ideas any more, it’s all about big names – and the pool of names that are big enough to be trusted with one of the superclubs is getting smaller.

        Right now all of England’s biggest clubs want to sign Guardiola. Madrid apparently are trying to lure Mourinho back after tiring of Rafael Benítez, who like Mourinho has also managed Inter and Chelsea. The former Chelsea manager who replaced Mourinho in Madrid, Carlo Ancelotti, will now replace Guardiola in Munich.

        The only reliable way to break into that elite coaching circle, that small group of men who get offered the big club jobs, is to win the Champions League – Ancelotti, Mourinho, Guardiola and Benitez have won eight of the last 13 between them – but since the only way to win the modern Champions League is to manage one of those big clubs, we are beginning to see a stagnation in the pool of names who are considered every time a big job becomes available.
        The risk-averse board at a rich club like Manchester United will always be able to attract a superstar manager, but the superstar managers are the ones whose best work is already behind them. It’s much better to find a manager who becomes a superstar for the work he does at your club.

        Troubled regimes
        That’s the big argument in favour of United appointing Ryan Giggs rather than José Mourinho. There aren’t many other convincing arguments. Where Mourinho can point to two Champions Leagues and a string of league titles in four different countries, Giggs has nothing to recommend him beyond the quality of the coaching work he has done at Manchester United under the troubled regimes of David Moyes and Van Gaal.

        Woodward has had ample opportunity to observe Giggs at work and decide whether he’s suitable for the job, but trusting your own judgment and intuition is a nerve-racking business. That’s why, like most football executives these days, he’ll probably feel safer deferring to the power of a big name.


        That rug really tied the room together.

        Comment


          Originally posted by Liverpel View Post
          It’s only a few weeks ago that a highly placed source on the Manchester United board was telling journalists that Louis van Gaal was a “genius manager” who was welcome to stay at Manchester United for as long as he wanted to.
          Since then, of course, United have lost a few games, which creates “a new situation”, to borrow a phrase from Van Gaal. It seems no board can be expected to keep faith with a coach who loses four in a row, even if a few days previously they were insisting he was a genius.

          That Van Gaal will soon be sacked now seems a question of when rather than if. Such debate as exists now centres on the identity of his successor. This is where things start to get a little confused.

          There appear to be only three options on the table. The first is to hire José Mourinho. The second is to hire Ryan Giggs. The third is to hire Giggs as the interim manager until the end of the season, and then appoint Pep Guardiola.
          For United supporters, the third option is probably the most desirable, and would also appear to be the preference of Alex Ferguson, who tried to convince Guardiola to succeed him at United on at least one previous occasion. However, it’s also the least likely to transpire, as most of the indications in Germany are that Guardiola has already agreed to join Manchester City next summer.
          That being so, it seems that José Mourinho is the only other experienced candidate under consideration.

          Portfolio
          Yesterday’s Sunday Times carried a report from a journalist close to Mourinho which appeared to lay out the Special One’s position – you could think of the piece as programme notes from a manager without portfolio. The report announced the surprising news that Mourinho was considering an offer from Real Madrid’s president Florentino Pérez to take back his old job as Real Madrid manager.

          In this account, Mourinho had decided to leave Madrid in 2013 purely on his own initiative, after becoming frustrated with “the multiple political difficulties” of managing the galáctico club. That is a delicate way of putting it. As far as everyone else could remember, Mourinho and Madrid had parted ways after his relationship with most of the key players had broken down.

          Mourinho was said to be thinking about Pérez’s offer but on balance his preference would be to manage a Premier League club, and “with the expectation of strong backing from the club’s executive vice-chairman, Ed Woodward”, it seems that he would be content if Manchester United were to be that club.

          There is a contradiction here, however. If you were convinced that Pep Guardiola was the ideal manager to take your club forward, then José Mourinho would be the very last manager you would want to appoint. They have completely opposite ideas about the game. A wishlist that has Pep in first place and José second is totally incoherent in football terms. The only way it could possibly make sense is in terms of celebrity: who’s the biggest name we could get to manage our team?

          But that, increasingly, is how top clubs think about the job of manager. The sheer quantity of money at the top of the game has promoted a deadening conservatism. Nobody cares about ideas any more, it’s all about big names
          – and the pool of names that are big enough to be trusted with one of the superclubs is getting smaller.

          Right now all of England’s biggest clubs want to sign Guardiola. Madrid apparently are trying to lure Mourinho back after tiring of Rafael Benítez, who like Mourinho has also managed Inter and Chelsea. The former Chelsea manager who replaced Mourinho in Madrid, Carlo Ancelotti, will now replace Guardiola in Munich.

          The only reliable way to break into that elite coaching circle, that small group of men who get offered the big club jobs, is to win the Champions League – Ancelotti, Mourinho, Guardiola and Benitez have won eight of the last 13 between them – but since the only way to win the modern Champions League is to manage one of those big clubs, we are beginning to see a stagnation in the pool of names who are considered every time a big job becomes available.
          The risk-averse board at a rich club like Manchester United will always be able to attract a superstar manager, but the superstar managers are the ones whose best work is already behind them. It’s much better to find a manager who becomes a superstar for the work he does at your club.

          Troubled regimes
          That’s the big argument in favour of United appointing Ryan Giggs rather than José Mourinho. There aren’t many other convincing arguments. Where Mourinho can point to two Champions Leagues and a string of league titles in four different countries, Giggs has nothing to recommend him beyond the quality of the coaching work he has done at Manchester United under the troubled regimes of David Moyes and Van Gaal.

          Woodward has had ample opportunity to observe Giggs at work and decide whether he’s suitable for the job, but trusting your own judgment and intuition is a nerve-racking business. That’s why, like most football executives these days, he’ll probably feel safer deferring to the power of a big name.


          http://www.irishtimes.com/sport/socc...iggs-1.2477903
          This is spot on, not just about the Man Utd job but about football in general and has been the case for a number of years. I have been thinking exactly the same about Guardiola or Mourinho as their 2 options.

          I really don't want them to get Guardiola as I think he would do a great job, I'd be happy to see them appoint Mourinho I think he would be able to lift them a little above where they are now, but would need to spend a lot of money to have a hope of being successful and would leave in 2-3 years time with the club in a mess. Giggs is somewhat of an unknown quantity - he has little experience but his status at the club would get him alot of support and buy him time.
          The only gracious way to accept an insult is to ignore it; if you can't ignore it, top it; if you can't top it, laugh at it; if you can't laugh at it, it's probably deserved.

          Comment


            Originally posted by Shaggy View Post
            Thing is I'd have emotional detachment with most other clubs but not with them. I'd have negative emotional attachment....like wanting to **** them up all the time
            Imagine the devastation you could cause with a fake twitter account which hints at you having inside information. Leak a few harmless truth to get credibility among the scum fans and then drop the "Woodward and LVG identify Joe Allen as the replacement for Roy Keane and is currently preparing a 35 million bid."

            They will be frothing in their mouths.

            Comment


              Originally posted by peekay View Post
              Imagine the devastation you could cause with a fake twitter account which hints at you having inside information. Leak a few harmless truth to get credibility among the scum fans and then drop the "Woodward and LVG identify Joe Allen as the replacement for Roy Keane and is currently preparing a 35 million bid."

              They will be frothing in their mouths.
              Go for it!
              Glass Half Full

              Comment


                [ame]https://twitter.com/WarriorLFC/status/681523583298973696[/ame]

                Comment


                  Soz leyton, charlton is as big a **** as the rest of em. Sour faced old ******. Selling his tickets on the black market- like he needs the money.
                  3rd place. Worst champions ever.

                  Comment


                    How on earth has Martial won the European young player of the year

                    Comment


                      Originally posted by Roboklopp View Post
                      Soz leyton, charlton is as big a **** as the rest of em. Sour faced old ******. Selling his tickets on the black market- like he needs the money.
                      Didn't hear of that but if true then yes ****.

                      Comment


                        United haven't scored a home 1st half goal since Wolfsburg on 30th September and that was a penalty
                        Modifying post.

                        Comment


                          Originally posted by RichC View Post
                          How on earth has Martial won the European young player of the year
                          I actually think he looks a decent player, would seem a shrewd signing if he'd cost £8-10m. He's no young player of the year though.

                          What did he cost £30m. Bonkers stuff.
                          Modifying post.

                          Comment


                            Originally posted by Buzzo View Post
                            I actually think he looks a decent player, would seem a shrewd signing if he'd cost £8-10m. He's no young player of the year though.

                            What did he cost £30m. Bonkers stuff.
                            Crazy money but yeah good player there alright

                            Comment


                              Originally posted by Buzzo View Post
                              I actually think he looks a decent player, would seem a shrewd signing if he'd cost £8-10m. He's no young player of the year though.

                              What did he cost £30m. Bonkers stuff.


                              Something like £39M he cost them rising to £56 (maybe) decent young prospect but no more than that for me at the moment

                              Comment


                                Ridiculous. Surely someone like Sane would be a better winner?
                                Was muß, das muß.

                                Comment

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