Mancini On Soriano

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George Hannah

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Spot on Bob

Mancini: I don't know why Manchester City sacked me... I deserved more respect

By Stephen Darwin 4 Jul 2013 08:00:00

The Italian manager believes "the numbers are clear" regarding what he achieved with the club and lifts the lid on his rocky relationship with chief executive Ferran Soriano

Former Manchester City manager Roberto Mancini has blasted the club's decision to fire him at the end of last season.

Mancini was relieved of his duties on May 14, exactly a year after he claimed City's first Premier League title in 44 years following a dramatic final-day victory over QPR.

The 2012-13 campaign saw the club struggle to keep pace with eventual champions Manchester United, however, with Mancini's side also crashing out of the Champions League group stages for the second season running, as well as losing out to Wigan Athletic in the FA Cup final.


The Italian ended City's 35-year wait for a trophy by winning the FA Cup back in 2011 and, almost two months after his departure from the Etihad Stadium, insists he is still baffled by the board's decision to let him go.

"I lost the FA Cup, in football it can happen," Mancini told Corriere dello Sport. "It was a bad day for the whole team. But I never expected what happened. I never believed that the rumours about [Manuel] Pellegrini were true. Two months after my sacking, I still don't understand the reasons and the timing.

"I think I deserved more respect for what I've done at City in three-and-a-half years. The club didn't win a title for 40 years, I won a Premier League, an FA Cup, a Community Shield and, in the worst season, I lost a final and finished second in the Premier League.

"The numbers are clear, my sacking still doesn't have a reason. I'm proud of my work. I'm not angry with [City owner Sheikh] Mansour and [City chairman] Khaldoon [Al Mubarak]. They are two great managers and I'll always be grateful."

Mancini also launched a scathing attack on City chief executive Ferran Soriano, suggesting the former Barcelona general manager became frustrated with the Italian's influence within the club and that the pair did not see eye-to-eye on football matters.

"Soriano? For him I was too big within the club," he added.

"A manager in full control, loved by the fans still today. He judged a person and a context without knowing nothing of the people he should have dealt with. I never thought of him as an interesting person from a football perspective, we never spoke the same language.

"And I'm not talking about Italian, Spanish or English. His past at Barcelona? I think he was coming from an airline. I've been in football since I was 13 and I had never heard anything about Soriano. He arrived in England with his manager role and I saw that he loves to speak, to get media exposure.
 
I thought Mancini was doing the right thing staying quiet and he should have done. Don't woman two months later, especially when it contradicts earlier statements that you could work with Soriano and Txiki.
 
Prestwich_Blue said:
Jog on Bob, more like. A man who can't see that pissing off his boss and most of his players is likely to end badly must have some sort of claim to be the most deluded in football.

Haha. Classic Mancini. He also lifted his skirt and whistled at Roma to come check him out in the same interview. Clearly the man's struggling to find a job, and I suppose he has to blame someone for his sacking because the alternative is anathema to such an arrogant, deluded, self important man.
 
BillyShears said:
Prestwich_Blue said:
Jog on Bob, more like. A man who can't see that pissing off his boss and most of his players is likely to end badly must have some sort of claim to be the most deluded in football.

Haha. Classic Mancini. He also lifted his skirt and whistled at Roma to come check him out in the same interview. Clearly the man's struggling to find a job, and I suppose he has to blame someone for his sacking because the alternative is anathema to such an arrogant, deluded, self important man.
I think we're keen that he gets a new job too, we're probably still paying him until he does.
 
George Hannah said:
I think we're keen that he gets a new job too, we're probably still paying him until he does.

I suspect Soriano sees it as a small price to pay in the greater of scheme of things ... ;)

And does anyone remember to absolute furore in the Mancini Out thread when Soriano told the exact same publication that Mancini is slagging him off in, that Mancini was a "champion".

This is all funny as fuck and I hope Mancini spends the rest of the summer openly being bitter.
 
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