So we won then?
Pep himself has admitted he's learning - so maybe sometimes he does get it wrong - just like we do.
Pep gave the reason we didn't win in his post-match interview: We didn't take our chances.
If the reason was that we didn't win because he didn't start David Silva, well, it seems he isn't learning that lesson at all.
It's called debate and this sort of school yard "armchair coaches" and "better than the manager" nonsense has no place in it.
Sure it does, it's a perfectly legitimate point that you don't have access to the players like Pep does and it's foolish to think he could have played Silva without any difficulties/risks/regression but stubbornly didn't.
In fact, Pep made the same point a week ago to stave off criticism of Klopp's team selection in the FA Cup which contained 8 non-regular starters. Our side last night contained only 1.
Back up why it was a good idea to make changes then mate.
Dunno mate, might have something to do with those 4 games we are playing in 10 days.
if Silva is fit enough to come on and have to run his bollocks off to save the game then he is fit enough to start.
Is he fit enough to play 90 minutes though? That hasn't been established.
Perhaps he was fatigued.
We rotated at Sunderland by resting KDB, arguably our most important player last season and much of this, yet you weren't moaning about it because we didn't miss our chances.
If rotating a winning, confident team with momentum is a good idea please tell me why that is.
Dunno if you've noticed, but Pep hasn't played the same team two games in a row since he took the job. This "winning, confident team" idea is a myth. It's a winning, confident
squad.
I'm just not for changing for changing sake and even more so when we are in such good form, people defending him are underestimating the confidence and momentum these runs bring - just look at Chelsea.
I think Pep knows what he's doing, but whatever, the rotation wasn't the reason we didn't score. That's all.