crazyg
Well-Known Member
"Not just beaten - HUMILIATED!"Wembley opened peoples eyes but the 6-1 was the confirmation. The 6-1 will forever live with SAF for the rest of his life. Not only did we beat them 6-1 but it was at Old Trafford.
"Not just beaten - HUMILIATED!"Wembley opened peoples eyes but the 6-1 was the confirmation. The 6-1 will forever live with SAF for the rest of his life. Not only did we beat them 6-1 but it was at Old Trafford.
League Cup semi when they scored the goal in added time added on to the added time added on to the added time was the turning point.
The way they celebrated that one was a dead giveaway that they could see the writing on the wall.
For me the turning point was the fa cup semi.
We were improving but when they needed to win they normally did it whoever they were playing.
To beat them at Wembley in such a big game said we had arrived, we were now going to take them on as equals and they didn't like it/couldn't understand it.
The 1-6 at the swamp next year confirmed it but Wembley started it.
Wembley opened peoples eyes but the 6-1 was the confirmation. The 6-1 will forever live with SAF for the rest of his life. Not only did we beat them 6-1 but it was at Old Trafford.
the turning point was the robinho transfer, the world suddenly realised that there was a new player in town
Just behind Alan Ball and Phil Neal and Steve Coppell.
Only joking - Pep then him for me.
On the pitch, definitely
As a statement, Tevez was the one for me. That poster might be the best bit of marketing in sporting history. Love it or hate it, everyone was talking about it, which is exactly what we wantend
... and we couldn`t give a fuckYep.
I'd even go one step further.
The initial takeover formed the catalyst for media scorn and ridicule: "RICH MAN'S PLAYTHING...THE OWNER WILL SOON GET BORED...CAN'T BUY SUCCESS..." yawn fucking yawm
The Tevez poster resulted in a shift from ridicule to pure, unadulterated hatred, which in hindsight, lasted until Ferguson retired.
Since 2013, there's been a gradual acceptance that City are here to stay, regardless of whether we're as popular as certain clubs in red shirts.
And this: )
^
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Any excuse to post this I suppose too
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That is the most beautiful piece of music I have watched in a long time. A real up yours to years of lording it up to us and taking the p!ss out of us. To use the song that they twisted to put us down, reclaim it and shove it up their ar@es is karma.
The appointment of Eriksson marked the start of something very special. Didn't he give us the double over Manure?
love Mario's couldnt give a f*** look! The fan cam of the 6-1 was also entertaining..."We're having that all day long!"![]()
This image should be as iconic as Sergio celebrating.
Was Mancini any less 'confrontational' than Ferguson? The only difference I could see was the level of support offered to both men.I don't think we realise how well our club is run. Mancini was absolutely the 'right man at the right time', exactly what the club and, more importantly, the players needed at the time. Most clubs have a piss poor record of managerial appointments, ours since the takeover, have been incredible. Mancini was never going to be long term, his style is confrontational and generally that has a limited shelf life but his impact was huge. He brought that elusive 'winning mentality' with him, a touch of arrogance and no sign of the inferiority complex towards Man U and Ferguson that plagued most managers in the PL at that time. The atmosphere and the confidence in the club changed noticeably and that FA Cup semi-final definitely signaled a changing of the old order even down to Mario's cheeky wink!
Was Mancini any less 'confrontational' than Ferguson? The only difference I could see was the level of support offered to both men.
Ferguson - Absolute Power
Mancini - Eroded Power (after Cooke's departure)
I've had utter knobheads to deal with in the workplace, & I learned several years ago to not allow one bad apple to spoil the barrel. A cliche, but very true.Interesting point and, in all honesty, probably not. However Mancini came in towards the back end of Fergusons time at Old Trafford and (a) he (Ferguson) had earned the right to exercise the control he did and (b) it's hard to know how long his management style would have lasted .... plus he didn't have to deal with a Balotelli every day!