Article Praising Pellegrini

gordondaviesmoustache said:
The Pope said:
http://www.mirror.co.uk/sport/football/news/no-one-laughing-manchester-city-anymore-4095988?

What is Manuel Pellegrini’s greatest achievement as Manchester City’s manager?

Is it to harness the prowess of a ­forward line that is as potent as any in world football?

Is it to have taken the club one stage further in the Champions League, ­establishing them as ­significant players in Europe?

Or is it the triumph of a second Premier League ­title? Creating the winning ­mentality that is ­becoming second nature at the Etihad.

Yes, the cool Chilean, the ­master of the understatement, can be praised for all of the above.

But the real skill in Pellegrini’s ­current class of players has been two-fold.

First, he has managed to keep a dressing room of Galacticos all ­singing from the same hymn sheet.

More importantly, he has turned ­Manchester City into one of the most boring clubs in the Premier League.

That’s not a criticism. And I’m not talking about ‘boring’ on the pitch – far from it.

It is a sign of a healthy club when they don’t occupy the front pages of our national newspapers.

Obviously, it hasn’t always been this way. For football folk approaching their middle age, Manchester City were ­always good for a laugh.

Observers used to look back with fondness at the really good stories which made the rest of the watching football world smile.

You’ll remember them. It started with former chairman Peter Swales, who almost bankrupted the club at the turn of the ’80s with his purchase of a string of players who weren’t really capable of living up to their price tags. Steve Daley, Kevin Reeves and the rest.

That sparked a downward spiral at the club which spawned some ­memorable tales.

Getty
My way or the high way: Mancini wasn't a fan of compromise

Indeed, it was Franny Lee, shortly after taking over from Swales, who claimed: “If there were cups for cock-ups, then Manchester City’s trophy cabinet would be bursting.”

Me? Well, I particularly admired the one about Steve Lomas.

You’ll remember it. Last match of the 1995-96 campaign. Manchester City came back from two-down against Liverpool, thinking it would be good enough to save them from the drop. Manager Alan Ball orders the midfielder to take the ball to the corner flag, having been given some ­erroneous information.

Cue a desperate Niall Quinn charging down the players’ tunnel, telling a startled Maine Road that they needed to win the game.

Too little, too late. Manchester City are relegated. Ho ho! We all had a chuckle at that one. There’s been ­several since then. In 2003, Manchester City became the first team to lose a Premier League game without the ­opposition (Middlesbrough) having a direct shot on target – Sun Jihai putting through his own goal.

We had the sight of Stuart Pearce taking a stuffed toy – a horse called ‘Beanie’ – to sit on the sidelines with him for good luck. (A man nicknamed Psycho with a teddy?)

The whole episode with Thai owner Thaksin Shinawatra ended with former chairman John Wardle having to pay the players’ wages.

It didn’t stop after the Sheikhs took over, either. Chief executive Garry Cook firing off distasteful emails about Nedum Onuoha’s ­cancer-stricken mum ... to Onoua’s mum.

Then we had Roberto Mancini’s ‘my way or the highway’ ­dictats. Fireworks from Mario Balotelli on and off the field. And Carlos Tevez ­driving while disqualified.

Now? Twitter ­accounts ­celebrate ‘Boring James Milner’.


VIEW GALLERY
The dressing room is filled with high-class players who ­appear to enjoy ­playing for the club – the best of whom have been signed to long-term contracts.

The club means what it says ­regarding community involvement.

They do not appear to be merely paying lip service to it – although, with a bottomless pit of money to splash around, they don’t have to.

And now they have landed Frank Lampard – the current England captain – on a free transfer from their biggest title rivals. Gift-wrapped.

Pellegrini has either instigated – or been part of all of that.

No nonsensical spats in public, ­despite Jose Mourinho’s goadings.

A happy camp that knows how to grind out victories. And one that is set to have a decent crack at the Champions League this season.

And you know the best thing of all for England’s champions. Now that Mr Ferguson has departed, their biggest rivals, United, just cannot get it right, can they?.

So, yes, the club has been through the mill. But if there is such a thing as a higher being, he’s currently sat upstairs wearing a sky blue scarf.

Laughing with Manchester City. Not at them.
That's a very positive article, although assuming my occasional role as a pedant, that Francis Lee quote was from his days as a player at the club iirc.


STOP REPEATING THE WHOLE OP.
IT'S REALLY ANNOYING.

and stop shouting.
 
blueste41 said:
Wow that's some praise for us. Be honest though is their not a tiny part of you that misses a little bit of "the cups for cock ups"? It made us what we are.

Er, no.
 
hgblue said:
blueste41 said:
Wow that's some praise for us. Be honest though is their not a tiny part of you that misses a little bit of "the cups for cock ups"? It made us what we are.

Er, no.

Yep, I miss those days.
but i,m getting flashbacks to savour from the MUppet show at theatre.
just last week , check out the press conference with van gal sitting next to the new signing rojo or whatever..this being the new £20M "left sided defender" who has been brought to replace ..er.. the £30M "left back " , but who was over weight..and unfit...Anyway..
lets speak to our new saviour, .oops no. he can,t speak english...ok..will he be playing in your next game to shaw up the left side?no he couldn,t get a work permit......oh right...ok
The MUppet show rolls on.
 
dennishasdoneit said:
hgblue said:
blueste41 said:
Wow that's some praise for us. Be honest though is their not a tiny part of you that misses a little bit of "the cups for cock ups"? It made us what we are.

Er, no.

Yep, I miss those days.
but i,m getting flashbacks to savour from the MUppet show at theatre.
just last week , check out the press conference with van gal sitting next to the new signing rojo or whatever..this being the new £20M "left sided defender" who has been brought to replace ..er.. the £30M "left back " , but who was over weight..and unfit...Anyway..
lets speak to our new saviour, .oops no. he can,t speak english...ok..will he be playing in your next game to shaw up the left side?no he couldn,t get a work permit......oh right...ok
The MUppet show rolls on.

Haha! Brilliant!!

PD6346094_Televisi_2369698b.jpg
 
Bert Trautmann's Parachute said:
I enjoyed reading that. I would say that Kevin Reeves was a cracking little player, though. No Kenny Dalglish, but no Steve Daley either.


I agree about Reeves played for City at a time of struggle so was a bit underrated probably one of the best in the air that I have seen for his size and would have scored a lot more goals in a better team
 
Another one in the Mirror (I know!) today;

<a class="postlink" href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/29123608" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;">http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/29123608</a>
 
jimharri said:
Another one in the Mirror (I know!) today;

<a class="postlink" href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/29123608" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;">http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/29123608</a>

Can you copy and paste it please Jim as can't get on to BBC website at work.
 
jimharri said:
Another one in the Mirror (I know!) today;

<a class="postlink" href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/29123608" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;">http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/29123608</a>


The quiet man who has fixed Man City
11 September 2014 Updated 06:47
By Simon Stone - BBC Sport

Premier League: Arsenal v Manchester City
Date: Saturday, 13 September Kick-off: 12:45 BST Venue: Emirates Stadium
Coverage: Live commentary on BBC Radio 5 live, online, tablets, mobiles and the BBC Sport app, plus live text commentary
Manchester City manager Manuel Pellegrini had two players in tears at the club's training ground five days before the Premier League opener at Newcastle.
Yes, they were only 11. And yes, they were tears of joy at being invited by Pellegrini to watch City's first team train at close quarters.
But this touching little scene at Carrington provides a small insight into the affection in which he is held and the quiet, understated but tranquil atmosphere Pellegrini has brought to City in his 14 months in England.
It is all in stark contrast to the turbulence of his predecessor Roberto Mancini, whose tenure was a boom time for local photographers.
Daily they pitched up with their ladders, strode down the public right of way that runs down the side of City's training complex, climbed the steps and waited for the explosion.

Pellegrini's predecessor Roberto Mancini (r) had a tempestuous relationship with Mario Balotelli
Flare-ups amongst players were commonplace. Images from the day Mancini had to be pulled apart from Mario Balotelli were seen all round the world.
Pellegrini provides them with nothing.
The nearest you are likely to get to training ground drama from the Chilean is if he failed, on his way out, to sign autographs for waiting fans, a duty he carries out with a smile every day.
"There is certainly an element of that day with Balotelli appearing worse than it was, and I have sympathy for Roberto in that regard," said a source at City who transcends both eras.
"But Manuel will never appear in similar pictures. It just won't happen."
A home defeat by Stoke immediately before the international break may have taken some of the gloss off Manchester City's impressive start to the season.
Yet Pellegrini has already achieved enough in his short time at the Etihad to stand confidently in the dug-out opposite Arsene Wenger when City meet Arsenal on Saturday lunchtime.
The many moves of Manuel Pellegrini
Born: 16 September 1953, Santiago, Chile
Playing career: Spent his entire career as a defender with Universidad de Chile, making more than 400 appearances between 1973 and 1986. Won 28 caps for Chile
Early coaching career: Took charge of Universidad de Chile for the 1988-89 season. Has also coach Palestino, O'Higgins, Universidad Catolica, LDU Quito, San Lorenzo and River Plate in Chile, Ecuador and Argentina.
Coaching in Europe: Took charge of Spanish side Villarreal in 2004, taking the unheralded side to the last four of the Champions League and second place in la Liga. Coached Real Madrid 2009-10 and Malaga 2010-13 before taking over at Man City in the summer of 2013.
It is not just what he has achieved - winning the Capital One Cup and the Premier League in his debut campaign. It was the way he did it.
Unlike his storied managerial counterparts such as Chelsea boss Jose Mourinho, former Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson and current one Louis van Gaal, instances of irritation from Pellegrini are so rare, they are worth noting.
The only time he lost his temper in the dressing room during his first season in charge came in March following defeat to Wigan in the FA Cup, a game he did not feel his players had paid enough attention to.
Whereas Ferguson once got so angry at a press conference that he swiped a row of reporters' dictaphones to the floor as he furiously made his point, and Steve McClaren once stormed out after two minutes, snarling 'write what you want' (external) after a dismal England showing against Andorra, Pellegrini 'lost it' only once last season.

There was a rare outburst from Pellegrini after his team were defeated by Wigan last season
Jonas Eriksson was the subject of his ire, as Pellegrini accused the Swedish referee of being "not impartial" after he sent off City defender Martin Demichelis during a Champions League home defeat by Barcelona.
Pellegrini offered an unreserved apology to Eriksson (external) three days later.
"He has made a big impact on the dressing room," said City midfielder Samir Nasri.
"He is like an Arsene Wenger type of manager. Wenger is really cool, really calm and will tell you everything he thinks the day afterwards.
"Pellegrini is the same. He can get really upset, for example if he gave you his trust but you didn't give it back. But usually he is really calm."
This demeanour is nothing new, a persona adopted in a country where English is not his first language.

Edin Dzeko is one of the players to have benefitted from Pellegrini's calm and settled approach
Asked to recall if the 60-year-old lost his temper during the five years he spent in charge at Spanish side Villarreal, former midfielder Marcos Senna replies: "It was very rare.
"I can only recall one time, at half-time of a game when he got a little angry at the team because of a poor performance."
Compared to Mancini confronting Balotelli, it is tame stuff.
More pertinently, it goes some way to explaining why last season, when newspapers, radio phone-ins and television debate gorged on Manchester United's amazing fall from grace and the potential for Liverpool's first title in 24 years, the champions were something of an afterthought.
Many City fans felt their club was being victimised, perhaps because of jealousy at the way Sheikh Mansour's enormous wealth has transformed their fortunes (external).
It wasn't that. It was just that finding something interesting to say about Pellegrini was such hard work.
There are only so many ways you can say someone is a decent bloke.
Yet in essence, that is his quality.
Mancini's complex personality allowed him to charm the media at the same time as blaming then director of football Brian Marwood (external) for failing to execute transfer plans properly. He could be dismissive to members of staff, antagonistic towards some of his players and generally remain aloof from those in whom he saw little merit.
In contrast, Pellegrini is widely accepted as being challenging for the media, spurning the opportunities to pick fights or make outlandish statements so many of his peers accept with such regularity.
He is courteous but says little of attention-grabbing interest. Even in the relaxed environment of a pre-season tour to the USA this summer, when it is traditional for managers to give additional access to the UK media, he did not.
But behind closed doors at City, they respect and like him.
Pellegrini's near misses and successes
Pellegrini was at Universidad de Chile when they won the Copa Chile in 1979. He just missed out on the Chile 1982 World Cup squad.
He has won league titles in Chile, Ecuador, Argentina and England, as well as the Copa Interamericana and Copa Mercosur, both of which are now defunct cup competitions played by some of the top clubs in South America. He also won the Capital One Cup with Manchester City last season.
Finished second in La Liga with Villarreal and also reached the semi-finals of the Champions League with them. Finished second behind Barcelona in his season as Real Madrid boss. Later suffered an agonising semi-final defeat in the 2013 Champions League when Borussia Dortmund struck two late goals to defeat his Malaga side.
Pellegrini will say hello to people Mancini would have walked straight past. He sticks to the message, and most importantly, to his job.
The philosophy is to get the best from the players he has, rather than throwing out the ones he cannot get along with.
Bosnia and Hercegovina striker Edin Dzeko is one of those whose performances have lifted since Pellegrini's arrival. He was a bit-part player under Mancini but is now a central figure and signed a four-year deal last month.
"The way Manuel approaches his work is very methodical," said long-time friend and fellow manager Arturo Salah, who has coached six different clubs in Chile as well as a spell in charge of the national team in the early 1990s.

Pellegrini held his nerve and calm as City pipped Liverpool to the title last season
"He is not prone to outbursts or losses of temper. He tries to explain things in a rational way. He does not shout. He just wants to get the most from his players."
This methodical approach can be traced back to Pellegrini's training as a civil engineer alongside Salah in Santiago.
"Manuel's mind was very suited to engineering," added Salah. "He was always very inquiring. I think that is why he went into coaching."
A sturdy central defender, Pellegrini did not leave Chile during his playing career, making more than 400 appearances for Universidad de Chile between 1973 and 1986.
The desire to travel was always there, though.
In 1988, he attended coaching courses in Italy and at Lilleshall, when he came into contact with Ferguson, who at the time was struggling to make an impression at Manchester United.
"Even back then, his dream was to come back to Europe," added Salah, who has known Pellegrini since the 1970s.
Pellegrini coached numerous teams in Chile and Argentina, and in 2004 Villarreal president Fernando Roig offered the opportunity Pellegrini craved.
Under his guidance, the Yellow Submarines enjoyed the most successful era in their history, reaching the Champions League semi-final in 2006 and finishing second in La Liga behind Real Madrid two years later.
A single, trophy-less, season at Real followed, (external) at the height of Barcelona's dominance, then a stint at Malaga, where Pellegrini made light of a deteriorating financial situation to come agonisingly close to a place in the Champions League semi-finals in 2013, only for two injury-time goals from Borussia Dortmund to deny him.
"He gave players responsibility," added Senna.

Not everything is serious for Pellegrini (right) - here he shares a joke with coaches Ruben Cousillas and Brian Kidd
"He preferred tactics which centred around ball possession. He gave us an awareness of each opponent but he was very offensive-minded.
"The only reason he was not a success at Real Madrid was because they didn't give him time."
But by then his achievements had alerted City chief executive Ferran Soriano and director of football Txiki Begiristain - and when they wanted someone to bring stability to the club, they opted for Pellegrini.
They were not put off by an absence of medals, while Pellegrini does not lack self-belief. In his own mind, the 2007-08 season when Villarreal split Real and Barcelona in La Liga, confirmed him as a champion even if it brought no silverware.
In May, City's faith was rewarded when they beat Liverpool to the title, clinching it on the final day.
All the tributes to Liverpool and their bright young manager Brendan Rodgers that had been prepared had to be put in a drawer to be saved for another day.
It was almost as if, having done all that work once, the media as a whole could not bring themselves to do it all again for someone who prefers to blend into the background anyway.
But the quiet engineer is a champion now, emulating Jose Mourinho (Chelsea, 2004-05) and Carlo Ancelotti (Chelsea, 2009-10) as foreign managers who have won the Premier League in their first seasons.
"Manuel is a very simple person, a family guy," says compatriot Carlos Rivas, a team-mate with the Chile national side in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
It was from Rivas's soccer school in Toronto that the tearful children watching City's pre-season training session at Carrington came.
The invite came from Pellegrini, just as it did for Rivas when his old friend was at Villarreal, Real Madrid and Malaga.
No headlines were sought. None were received.
It is the way he prefers it.
In his quiet, methodical way, 'The Engineer' has fixed Manchester City.
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