Aguero - 'Born to Rise'

In all seriousness, the way he describes (in some detail) the exchanges on the pitch and in the dressing room, his understanding of English must be pretty decent.
 
FantasyIreland said:
His book.

looks interesting.....an extract.

In an exclusive extract from Sergio Aguero's forthcoming book, Born to Rise, read his take on the bust up between Carlos Tevez and Roberto Mancini during a Champions League game.

“I was on the pitch at the time so I had no idea what was happening on the bench in that part of the field. It was obviously very heated in the dressing room after the game and Mancini was going mad at Tevez telling him to go back to Argentina and then he told some other players to go back to their countries.

"I was sat next to Carlitos and at one point I thought Mancini was telling me to go back to Argentina! I was thinking, ‘What? Me as well? okay, I’ll go and see my family for a few days.’ Of course, he wasn’t speaking to me. As for speaking to Carlitos afterwards, he didn’t really say too much and the next day, he had gone back to Argentina as the manager had suggested and it was maybe four months before I saw him again when he came back to Carrington for a meeting.

"I believe there had been a number of fall-outs between Carlitos and Mancini in the past so this was the straw that broke the camel’s back. Tevez can have a short fuse at times, just as Mancini did, so it was perhaps inevitable that it would explode at some point."

Just wow. Little wonder his regime fell apart the way it did.
 
Mister Appointment said:
FantasyIreland said:
His book.

looks interesting.....an extract.

In an exclusive extract from Sergio Aguero's forthcoming book, Born to Rise, read his take on the bust up between Carlos Tevez and Roberto Mancini during a Champions League game.

“I was on the pitch at the time so I had no idea what was happening on the bench in that part of the field. It was obviously very heated in the dressing room after the game and Mancini was going mad at Tevez telling him to go back to Argentina and then he told some other players to go back to their countries.

"I was sat next to Carlitos and at one point I thought Mancini was telling me to go back to Argentina! I was thinking, ‘What? Me as well? okay, I’ll go and see my family for a few days.’ Of course, he wasn’t speaking to me. As for speaking to Carlitos afterwards, he didn’t really say too much and the next day, he had gone back to Argentina as the manager had suggested and it was maybe four months before I saw him again when he came back to Carrington for a meeting.

"I believe there had been a number of fall-outs between Carlitos and Mancini in the past so this was the straw that broke the camel’s back. Tevez can have a short fuse at times, just as Mancini did, so it was perhaps inevitable that it would explode at some point."

Just wow. Little wonder his regime fell apart the way it did.

The two paragraphs before that quote state:

I always got on well with Roberto Mancini and never had a problem with him.

Every manager has their own way of working, tactics and style of play.

As a player, you do what the manager says. There are misunderstandings but generally, everything was fine under Mancini.

Some people find it impossible to let go, they really do
 

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