Discuss Pellegrini....

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SuperYaya said:
It makes me sad that we got him when he's 60.

If he was younger he could have been like Arsene Wenger for City, I think something like that is the 'holistic' approach. I hope Vieira can learn from him for when he inevitably takes over as manager.

Typical City would've sacked him after 18 months anyway!

I finally heard his name being chanted on Wednesday night. There were a couple of renditions of "Manuel give us a wave" but he was concentrating on the match... A light hearted jeer before they sang his name and he waved with a wry smile on his face. As ridiculous as it sounds, it's good to finally hear he's getting some vocal support as I've not heard too much so far.

Like others, I was slightly underwhelmed by his appointment as I'd originally expected Guardiola, Klopp or Mourinho but he's done phenomenally well considering it's his first season. Nobody is playing football like we do.
 
Far_southerner said:
Perhaps this old article from Talksport may help with some clues about this formations thing:

<a class="postlink" href="http://talksport.com/magazine/features/130514/tactical-analysis-how-manuel-pellegrini-will-bring-south-american-flair-197550" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;">http://talksport.com/magazine/features/ ... air-197550</a>

Not read that or watched the video since the summer; rewatching it, with hindsight, allows you to appreciate that Pellegrini stays true to is approach. I think he has tweaked things: we are not Villareal clones but there are obvious similarities in style and he most assuredly focuses most of the training on getting his team to play his way and work on reducing errors rather than worrying about the opponents. That approach disconcerted plenty of people on here but, regardless of how this season ends, I think that he has already proved it is a great way to go about your business.
 
SuperYaya said:
It makes me sad that we got him when he's 60.

If he was younger he could have been like Arsene Wenger for City, I think something like that is the 'holistic' approach. I hope Vieira can learn from him for when he inevitably takes over as manager.

Comments like this after 8 months are a bit like saying a sprinter could set the marathon record 'if he just kept going'.

Managing a team over 1 year, 5 years and 20 years are all completely different propositions and success in one time frame doesn't necessarily translate to the others.

Let's see if he's still here in 5 years first.
 
Rammy Blue said:
I'd say the team pretty much picks itself for MP on Monday, about the only potential decision he has to make is does he go for Dzeko or Jovetic. I'd expect him to go for Dzeko although if it was me I'd be tempted to go for Jovetic and play a more fluid formation with him and Merlin roaming about behind the Beast.
Put money on Beast and Jovetic starting.
 
SWP's back said:
Rammy Blue said:
I'd say the team pretty much picks itself for MP on Monday, about the only potential decision he has to make is does he go for Dzeko or Jovetic. I'd expect him to go for Dzeko although if it was me I'd be tempted to go for Jovetic and play a more fluid formation with him and Merlin roaming about behind the Beast.
Put money on Beast and Jovetic starting.

I get the impression MP is very much a creature of habit.
I think he'll go with Negredo & Dzeko.
 
TGR said:
SWP's back said:
Rammy Blue said:
I'd say the team pretty much picks itself for MP on Monday, about the only potential decision he has to make is does he go for Dzeko or Jovetic. I'd expect him to go for Dzeko although if it was me I'd be tempted to go for Jovetic and play a more fluid formation with him and Merlin roaming about behind the Beast.
Put money on Beast and Jovetic starting.

I get the impression MP is very much a creature of habit.
I think he'll go with Negredo & Dzeko.

I think so too, certainly in such a big game I can't see him changing anything.
 
Simply love the fella, chatting with a rare breed last night, a game going open minded rational rag.
He was telling me he thinks we'll piss the league, lumped a load on us in October.
He thinks the football we play is as good as he's ever seen.

He did however think as entertaining as Pellegrini's team were, the man himself was too boring, and yes he doesn't like Moyes.

I showed this comment in reference to Monday's game and Mourinho, "I don't know which way Chelsea will play on Monday. They have a style of play, maybe it's not the same style that I like, but everyone can play the way they want."

He pissed himself and said if United can't win it, he wants the best team to win it, a rag wanting us to win the league, would you believe it??
 
http://www.theguardian.com/football/2014/feb/01/manuel-pellegrini-manchester-city-enigma?CMP=twt_gu

Manuel Pellegrini: Manchester City's enigma by those who know him
The genteel City manager, who has turned his side into heavy goalscorers, is largely unknown despite his long career

For an insight into Manchester City's enigmatic manager, Manuel Pellegrini, rewind four years and Madrid's Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía. Back in May 2010, the Chilean was in charge of Real Madrid, though his tenure was about to end abruptly. Pellegrini had just taken Real to a record 96 points in La Liga to finish second behind Pep Guardiola's great Barcelona side when Florentino Pérez, the Real president, called.

Pellegrini was in the office of Manuel Borja, the director of the Reina Sofia, the Spanish capital's national museum of 20th-century art, when he spoke to Pérez. On finishing the call Pellegrini turned to Borja and said: "I think they're going to fire me." Arturo Salah, Pellegrini's closest friend for more than 40 years, says it comes as no great shock to discover that the Real Madrid manager was to learn of his fate while studying Picasso's Guernica and works by Damien Hirst, Man Ray and Francis Bacon.

"He loves art and museums all over the world," says Salah. "He is a great reader and possesses great culture which was taught by his parents and a consequence of his uncountable trips."

Within days of Pérez's telephone conversation Pellegrini had left Madrid. By November he had taken over at Málaga, before going on to replace Roberto Mancini last summer at City. Yet his inscrutable style means that despite the glare fixed on the world's richest club, beyond Pellegrini's penchant for attacking football that has piled up 110 goals this season and given City a chance of claiming an unprecedented quadruple, he remains largely unknown.

How this genteel 60-year-old could end a personal trophy drought since entering European management a decade ago by winning the Premier League title, the Champions League, the Capital One Cup and FA Cup is a story that began in his homeland. Pellegrini was a defender who played for Santiago's Universidad de Chile in a 13-year career that ended in 1986 with 28 international caps and no major honours.

Salah, who, when Chile manager in 1990, appointed Pellegrini as the Under-20 coach, says: "We had parallel lives as players and also as university friends with an education in engineering. Manuel has a strong personality, he has clear goals, so his actions and decisions are oriented towards those goals without falling into [complications]. He respects people and therefore demands respect. Values are above any other consideration. He is reliable and his word is worth more than any paper."

Pellegrini's clear focus is evident in a philosophy that puts attack first with an emphasis on winning possession back when lost. His man-management is also an asset in an age of prima donna players. After the tempestuous Mancini era that alienated many of City's stellar talents Pellegrini's softly, softly ethos is a prime factor in the upturn in fortunes.

Roque Santa Cruz, the former City striker who played under Pellegrini at Málaga last season, says: "One of the best things he has is his football knowledge and the way he manages relationships with the players and staff. He is a genuine guy, very polite to people."

Pellegrini steered Málaga to last year's Champions League quarter-finals. He also guided Villarreal to a semi-final and quarter-final of Europe's elite club competition when in charge of the club for five years before his departure in 2009 for Real.

Santa Cruz says: "Pellegrini came and the club started to play a different way from what it was used to. He obviously plays a very attractive football, he loves the possession of the football. It comes with a lot of practice. That way of playing gives you the chance to really compete in the Champions League."

City are Pellegrini's 11th club in a career that has taken in Chile, Ecuador, Argentina and Spain. His first job included an ignominious relegation in his debut campaign managing Universidad de Chile. The 25th anniversary of that demotion, Universidad's first and only and on goal difference, was on 15 January. Pellegrini maintains he still owes a "big debt" to the Santiago club – among whose nicknames are El Romántico Viajero, the Romantic Traveller – blaming himself for leaving in mid-season for a fortnight to attend a managers' seminar in England.

Universidad de Chile, Palestino – in three separate spells – O'Higgins, Universidad Católica (all Chilean), LDU Quito (Ecuador), San Lorenzo, River Plate (Argentina), Villarreal, Real, Málaga and City form the roll call of Pellegrini's clubs. Yet Manuel Luis Pellegrini Ripamonti's move into coaching – or the sport at all – was hardly inevitable due to resistance from his family and the polio he fought hard to recover from when aged 11.

Pellegrini's late parents – mother, Silvia, and father, Emilio – wanted him to study. The grandson of Julio Pellegrini, an Italian from Tuscany who emigrated to Chile in the first decade of last century, he is one of eight children and the only one who has made a career in the game. While one sibling, Pablo, is an architect, and another, Silvia, a journalist, only Pedro, a lawyer who manages Pellegrini's contracts, has any involvement with football.

Pellegrini's desire to guard his privacy was illustrated when the Observer contacted Pedro. Speaking in perfect English Pedro politely declined to comment, saying: "It would go against the promise I have made to my brother."

With Emilio having created a successful family business, Constructora y Arquitectura, which flourished between the 1950s and 1970s, Pellegrini was urged to gain an academic grounding rather than pursue football. He chose both, taking classes from 8.30-10am at Pontificia Universidad Catolica, then training with Universidad de Chile – the institutions' clubs have a rivalry akin to that of City and Manchester United – from 10.30-1pm, before returning to class.

Pellegrini had wanted to be a doctor after going to Saint George's and Sagrados Corazones de Manquehue (Sacred Hearts of Manquehue), two private schools in east Santiago attended by wealthy families. But having been an honour pupil, the teenage Pellegrini failed the PAA, the Chilean university entrance test to take medicine.

Instead he decided on engineering. "It took me eight years to get my degree, not six like it was supposed," he said. "In that time there was no consideration for students who played sports. I studied in 'Católica' and played in 'La U' [Universidad de Chile] and you know what that means. It was not easy for me to get together and study because I was playing on the weekends. My greatest rival was structural calculus. The classes were given when I was training and I did what I could."

Pellegrini made his debut in September 1973 for Universidad, the same month the socialist government of President Salvador Allende was overthrown by the coup d'état of General Pinochet's armed forces. Pinochet's military junta ended 41 years of democracy in the country but Pellegrini has admitted to being "a dissident to the government of Salvador Allende and participated in several protests. The country was very complicated and so was I."

Pellegrini the player was moderately talented. Salah, with whom Pellegrini owns a sports complex, El Refugio, says: "I played against Manuel in the final years of my career. But we were team-mates for more than seven years in Universidad de Chile, him as a defender, me as a forward. Manuel was very efficient, always part of the starting line-up, had a great aerial game, was intelligent and a tactical player. His technique was adequate, but not his greatest asset. His assets were intelligence, physical condition and leadership that he learned from his position in the pitch."

Pellegrini, who is married to Carmen Gloria Pucci and has three sons, Manuel Jose, Juan Ignacio and Nicolas, realised his playing days were over when he came up against a young Ivan Zamorano, saying: "It was against Cobreandino [the Andes club now called Trasandino]. Our keeper deflected a shot and I jumped to head the ball away. A 17-year-old kid jumped at least half a metre and headed to the net. That day I decided I couldn't keep playing."

On retiring in 1986 he was again encouraged to enter the family business. But after helping the rebuilding effort following the damage caused by the earthquake in Algarrobo on the Chilean coast the year before that killed 177 and left around a million homeless, Pellegrini was convinced by his mentor, Fernando Riera, the former national coach who took Chile to the semi-finals of the 1962 World Cup on home soil, to enter management. He would go on to win cups in Chile – with Universidad Catolica - and titles in Ecuador (Quito) and Argentina (San Lorenzo and River Plate), though in Europe Pellegrini has claimed only the 2004 Intertoto Cup with Villarreal.

With a bullish and revitalised City challenging forcefully on four fronts that omission is set to change. On Monday José Mourinho, who replaced him at Real and is reinstalled at Chelsea, must somehow find a way of halting his side at the Etihad, where City have won 17 of 18 games this season and racked up 68 goals in 23 league games.

The Portuguese may decide against any attempt to get under the skin of the unreadable Pellegrini. "He never shouted," Santa Cruz says of his former manager. "He is very emotional but he keeps in a lot of disappointments at results because he is always very proud of his players and how they are putting in a lot of effort to perform and win. People who knew him expected his City team to be this good."
 
peoffrey said:
SuperYaya said:
It makes me sad that we got him when he's 60.

If he was younger he could have been like Arsene Wenger for City, I think something like that is the 'holistic' approach. I hope Vieira can learn from him for when he inevitably takes over as manager.

Typical City would've sacked him after 18 months anyway!

I finally heard his name being chanted on Wednesday night. There were a couple of renditions of "Manuel give us a wave" but he was concentrating on the match... A light hearted jeer before they sang his name and he waved with a wry smile on his face. As ridiculous as it sounds, it's good to finally hear he's getting some vocal support as I've not heard too much so far.

Like others, I was slightly underwhelmed by his appointment as I'd originally expected Guardiola, Klopp or Mourinho but he's done phenomenally well considering it's his first season. Nobody is playing football like we do.
Hate the "manager, manager give us a wave" emfuckinbarrasing
 
BlueDejong said:
http://www.theguardian.com/football/2014/feb/01/manuel-pellegrini-manchester-city-enigma?CMP=twt_gu

Manuel Pellegrini: Manchester City's enigma by those who know him
The genteel City manager, who has turned his side into heavy goalscorers, is largely unknown despite his long career

For an insight into Manchester City's enigmatic manager, Manuel Pellegrini, rewind four years and Madrid's Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía. Back in May 2010, the Chilean was in charge of Real Madrid, though his tenure was about to end abruptly. Pellegrini had just taken Real to a record 96 points in La Liga to finish second behind Pep Guardiola's great Barcelona side when Florentino Pérez, the Real president, called.

Pellegrini was in the office of Manuel Borja, the director of the Reina Sofia, the Spanish capital's national museum of 20th-century art, when he spoke to Pérez. On finishing the call Pellegrini turned to Borja and said: "I think they're going to fire me." Arturo Salah, Pellegrini's closest friend for more than 40 years, says it comes as no great shock to discover that the Real Madrid manager was to learn of his fate while studying Picasso's Guernica and works by Damien Hirst, Man Ray and Francis Bacon.

"He loves art and museums all over the world," says Salah. "He is a great reader and possesses great culture which was taught by his parents and a consequence of his uncountable trips."

Within days of Pérez's telephone conversation Pellegrini had left Madrid. By November he had taken over at Málaga, before going on to replace Roberto Mancini last summer at City. Yet his inscrutable style means that despite the glare fixed on the world's richest club, beyond Pellegrini's penchant for attacking football that has piled up 110 goals this season and given City a chance of claiming an unprecedented quadruple, he remains largely unknown.

How this genteel 60-year-old could end a personal trophy drought since entering European management a decade ago by winning the Premier League title, the Champions League, the Capital One Cup and FA Cup is a story that began in his homeland. Pellegrini was a defender who played for Santiago's Universidad de Chile in a 13-year career that ended in 1986 with 28 international caps and no major honours.

Salah, who, when Chile manager in 1990, appointed Pellegrini as the Under-20 coach, says: "We had parallel lives as players and also as university friends with an education in engineering. Manuel has a strong personality, he has clear goals, so his actions and decisions are oriented towards those goals without falling into [complications]. He respects people and therefore demands respect. Values are above any other consideration. He is reliable and his word is worth more than any paper."

Pellegrini's clear focus is evident in a philosophy that puts attack first with an emphasis on winning possession back when lost. His man-management is also an asset in an age of prima donna players. After the tempestuous Mancini era that alienated many of City's stellar talents Pellegrini's softly, softly ethos is a prime factor in the upturn in fortunes.

Roque Santa Cruz, the former City striker who played under Pellegrini at Málaga last season, says: "One of the best things he has is his football knowledge and the way he manages relationships with the players and staff. He is a genuine guy, very polite to people."

Pellegrini steered Málaga to last year's Champions League quarter-finals. He also guided Villarreal to a semi-final and quarter-final of Europe's elite club competition when in charge of the club for five years before his departure in 2009 for Real.

Santa Cruz says: "Pellegrini came and the club started to play a different way from what it was used to. He obviously plays a very attractive football, he loves the possession of the football. It comes with a lot of practice. That way of playing gives you the chance to really compete in the Champions League."

City are Pellegrini's 11th club in a career that has taken in Chile, Ecuador, Argentina and Spain. His first job included an ignominious relegation in his debut campaign managing Universidad de Chile. The 25th anniversary of that demotion, Universidad's first and only and on goal difference, was on 15 January. Pellegrini maintains he still owes a "big debt" to the Santiago club – among whose nicknames are El Romántico Viajero, the Romantic Traveller – blaming himself for leaving in mid-season for a fortnight to attend a managers' seminar in England.

Universidad de Chile, Palestino – in three separate spells – O'Higgins, Universidad Católica (all Chilean), LDU Quito (Ecuador), San Lorenzo, River Plate (Argentina), Villarreal, Real, Málaga and City form the roll call of Pellegrini's clubs. Yet Manuel Luis Pellegrini Ripamonti's move into coaching – or the sport at all – was hardly inevitable due to resistance from his family and the polio he fought hard to recover from when aged 11.

Pellegrini's late parents – mother, Silvia, and father, Emilio – wanted him to study. The grandson of Julio Pellegrini, an Italian from Tuscany who emigrated to Chile in the first decade of last century, he is one of eight children and the only one who has made a career in the game. While one sibling, Pablo, is an architect, and another, Silvia, a journalist, only Pedro, a lawyer who manages Pellegrini's contracts, has any involvement with football.

Pellegrini's desire to guard his privacy was illustrated when the Observer contacted Pedro. Speaking in perfect English Pedro politely declined to comment, saying: "It would go against the promise I have made to my brother."

With Emilio having created a successful family business, Constructora y Arquitectura, which flourished between the 1950s and 1970s, Pellegrini was urged to gain an academic grounding rather than pursue football. He chose both, taking classes from 8.30-10am at Pontificia Universidad Catolica, then training with Universidad de Chile – the institutions' clubs have a rivalry akin to that of City and Manchester United – from 10.30-1pm, before returning to class.

Pellegrini had wanted to be a doctor after going to Saint George's and Sagrados Corazones de Manquehue (Sacred Hearts of Manquehue), two private schools in east Santiago attended by wealthy families. But having been an honour pupil, the teenage Pellegrini failed the PAA, the Chilean university entrance test to take medicine.

Instead he decided on engineering. "It took me eight years to get my degree, not six like it was supposed," he said. "In that time there was no consideration for students who played sports. I studied in 'Católica' and played in 'La U' [Universidad de Chile] and you know what that means. It was not easy for me to get together and study because I was playing on the weekends. My greatest rival was structural calculus. The classes were given when I was training and I did what I could."

Pellegrini made his debut in September 1973 for Universidad, the same month the socialist government of President Salvador Allende was overthrown by the coup d'état of General Pinochet's armed forces. Pinochet's military junta ended 41 years of democracy in the country but Pellegrini has admitted to being "a dissident to the government of Salvador Allende and participated in several protests. The country was very complicated and so was I."

Pellegrini the player was moderately talented. Salah, with whom Pellegrini owns a sports complex, El Refugio, says: "I played against Manuel in the final years of my career. But we were team-mates for more than seven years in Universidad de Chile, him as a defender, me as a forward. Manuel was very efficient, always part of the starting line-up, had a great aerial game, was intelligent and a tactical player. His technique was adequate, but not his greatest asset. His assets were intelligence, physical condition and leadership that he learned from his position in the pitch."

Pellegrini, who is married to Carmen Gloria Pucci and has three sons, Manuel Jose, Juan Ignacio and Nicolas, realised his playing days were over when he came up against a young Ivan Zamorano, saying: "It was against Cobreandino [the Andes club now called Trasandino]. Our keeper deflected a shot and I jumped to head the ball away. A 17-year-old kid jumped at least half a metre and headed to the net. That day I decided I couldn't keep playing."

On retiring in 1986 he was again encouraged to enter the family business. But after helping the rebuilding effort following the damage caused by the earthquake in Algarrobo on the Chilean coast the year before that killed 177 and left around a million homeless, Pellegrini was convinced by his mentor, Fernando Riera, the former national coach who took Chile to the semi-finals of the 1962 World Cup on home soil, to enter management. He would go on to win cups in Chile – with Universidad Catolica - and titles in Ecuador (Quito) and Argentina (San Lorenzo and River Plate), though in Europe Pellegrini has claimed only the 2004 Intertoto Cup with Villarreal.

With a bullish and revitalised City challenging forcefully on four fronts that omission is set to change. On Monday José Mourinho, who replaced him at Real and is reinstalled at Chelsea, must somehow find a way of halting his side at the Etihad, where City have won 17 of 18 games this season and racked up 68 goals in 23 league games.

The Portuguese may decide against any attempt to get under the skin of the unreadable Pellegrini. "He never shouted," Santa Cruz says of his former manager. "He is very emotional but he keeps in a lot of disappointments at results because he is always very proud of his players and how they are putting in a lot of effort to perform and win. People who knew him expected his City team to be this good."

Thanks for posting that.

Like someone above said, it's too bad he's 60 and not 50. I could watch this football for the rest of my life.
 
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-2549739/Kevin-Kilbane-Manchester-City-best-team-England-Euro-battle-Barcelona-decide-Manuel-Pellegrinis-men-world-beaters.html

Man City are the best team in England but their Euro battle with Barca will decide whether Pellegrini's men are world-beaters


According to Tim Sherwood, Manchester City are the best team on the planet at the moment.
Bayern Munich and Barcelona might have something to say about that in the weeks and months to come but after Tottenham were so easily torn apart by City in the week, who are we to argue with the Spurs boss?
Under Manuel Pellegrini’s command City are deservedly top of the Barclays Premier League, and he has transformed the team, with considerable additions to the squad to help him.

Last season was a missed opportunity. City should have kicked on from their first Barclays Premier League title, but the players just didn’t like Roberto Mancini and the way he managed them. It was that blatant and it held them back.
Pellegrini came with considerable pedigree after his success in Spain and he earned the respect of his players with his teams at Villarreal and Malaga, who should have knocked Borussia Dortmund out of the Champions League last season.
He came over to England in the 80s and attended courses with coaches like Don Howe, Sir Bobby Robson and Mick Wadsworth and has always been a big fan of the British game. When he returned to work here, he had extensive knowledge of the Premier League.
He certainly knew how to handle the City dressing room and made it his first objective to make it a happy dressing room, which can make such a massive difference to any team.

If you go in to work every day knowing you will enjoy yourself, you take that confidence and exuberance into games.
During matches Pellegrini looks relaxed. He looks like a manager who trusts his players with his instructions and his demeanour is playing a part in getting the best out of his players.
It helps that City have the most expensively assembled group of players in the world who, we are told this week, are paid nearly £639,000 a day between them.
I don’t know about value for money but what a squad he’s got.
Going forward there is nothing like them, with David Silva and Jesus Navas, Samir Nasri, when fit, pulling strings in all directions.

Fernandinho has settled in as if he’s been here for years, Negredo has arguably been the signing of last summer and is a constant threat, Stevan Jovetic is now back to full fitness and scored the other night, and Aguero is up there with Luis Suarez as the best striker in the Premier League. It is a shame the Argentine will miss the first leg of City's Champions League clash against Barcelona after he was ruled out for a month with a hamstring injury.
As for Yaya Toure, I don’t know if there is a better all-round midfielder in the world. Box-to-box there is no one with his power, pace and strength and this season, just to add to his game, he has discovered he can take free-kicks.
You look at his game, and there are no weaknesses, although as Didi Hamann pointed out recently, he doesn’t always offer the greatest protection to his back four.
Didi was one of the best at it, so I take his point, and Toure will need to take that responsibility more seriously when they play Barcelona.
Negredo is an interesting one and his relationship says a lot about Pellegrini who released the striker when he was in his early 20s at Real Madrid.

Many players would have a problem with that, and certainly with the manager. Negredo can’t speak highly enough of Pellegrini because he told him to go out and play and develop that way because he wasn’t going to play at the Bernabeu.
He did have Ronaldo, van Nistelrooy, Higuain, Benzema and Raul in front of him. Negredo knows his manager was right.
I was at Hull City when we made a £12million bid for Negredo at that time but for some reason he didn’t fancy the move and he went to Sevilla instead.
Pellegrini was right about Joe Hart too. There was all sorts of fuss when the England keeper was dropped, but Pellegrini remained calm throughout. He clearly just felt Hart needed a break, and no doubt he told the keeper that too. Hart will be in top form come the World Cup Finals.
Defensively there are problems, even if you always get the feeling they will just got and score if they do concede.

Pablo Zabaleta is one of the best right-backs in the country, (along with Seamus Coleman of course), and it is no coincidence that City’s recent run has coincided with Vincent Kompany’s return to the side, because they miss his organisational skills and influence. But they do concede silly goals and I’m not convinced by Dimichelis, Nastasic or Lescott.
What I also like about Pellegrini is the way he has used his strikers.
He plays two all the time and shares the starts between Sergio Aguero, Alvaro Negredo and Edin Dzeko. And when one is left out, or substituted, or asked to come off the bench, there are no complaints, only smiles and high fives. His strikers understand what he is trying to do and they have embraced it.
Tuesday February 18. Wednesday March 12. Manchester City v Barcelona. A last 16 Champions League knock-out tie. And perhaps the battle to be the best team on the planet. I can’t wait.
 
schfc6 said:
Simply love the fella, chatting with a rare breed last night, a game going open minded rational rag.
He was telling me he thinks we'll piss the league, lumped a load on us in October.
He thinks the football we play is as good as he's ever seen.

He did however think as entertaining as Pellegrini's team were, the man himself was too boring, and yes he doesn't like Moyes.

I showed this comment in reference to Monday's game and Mourinho, "I don't know which way Chelsea will play on Monday. They have a style of play, maybe it's not the same style that I like, but everyone can play the way they want."

He pissed himself and said if United can't win it, he wants the best team to win it, a rag wanting us to win the league, would you believe it??

I'm afraid if your mate said "he's too boring" then he's just another clueless football muppet, mate.

He's not there to do a comedy routine, he's there to win trophies.
 
SWP's back said:
Rammy Blue said:
I'd say the team pretty much picks itself for MP on Monday, about the only potential decision he has to make is does he go for Dzeko or Jovetic. I'd expect him to go for Dzeko although if it was me I'd be tempted to go for Jovetic and play a more fluid formation with him and Merlin roaming about behind the Beast.
Put money on Beast and Jovetic starting.

Yep ... I reckon Manuel will go for Jovetic and the Beast too. I'd be very surprised if we went with the two big men.

Just watched the boss's press conference from Friday and it's so funny seeing him being so dismissive of Mourinho and his mind games.

I knew there was bad blood between the two but I was never aware of just how much Pellegrini gets under Mourinho's skin. I can see it now and I can see why too.
 
BillyShears said:
SWP's back said:
Rammy Blue said:
I'd say the team pretty much picks itself for MP on Monday, about the only potential decision he has to make is does he go for Dzeko or Jovetic. I'd expect him to go for Dzeko although if it was me I'd be tempted to go for Jovetic and play a more fluid formation with him and Merlin roaming about behind the Beast.
Put money on Beast and Jovetic starting.

Yep ... I reckon Manuel will go for Jovetic and the Beast too. I'd be very surprised if we went with the two big men.

Just watched the boss's press conference from Friday and it's so funny seeing him being so dismissive of Mourinho and his mind games.

I knew there was bad blood between the two but I was never aware of just how much Pellegrini gets under Mourinho's skin. I can see it now and I can see why too.
I think we will start with those two, too. Quite happy to see it, too, having seen what jovetic offers.

If Pellegrini wins on Monday expect a glint in the eye, if Mourinho wins expect a full on lap of the stadium and maybe a moonie towards the bench.

Mourinho is jealous of pellegrini's job and squad. And Pellegrini has a point to prove.

Great fun.
 
Didsbury Dave said:
Great fun.

I genuinely believe that if we win tomorrow night, Mourinho will actually have a proper meltdown. His rivalry with City/Pellegrini isn't on the scale of his problems with Barca/Pep - but we represent a similar all encompassing problem for him.

It's going to be so much fun.
 
Pellegrini has the rest of the managers in his pocket, its fucking hilarious and Wenger and Mourinho in particular are having a meltdown.
 
BillyShears said:
Didsbury Dave said:
Great fun.

I genuinely believe that if we win tomorrow night, Mourinho will actually have a proper meltdown. His rivalry with City/Pellegrini isn't on the scale of his problems with Barca/Pep - but we represent a similar all encompassing problem for him.

It's going to be so much fun.
The away technical area can be a lonely place when the eyes and the voices of an ascendant home crowd bear down upon it.
 
gordondaviesmoustache said:
BillyShears said:
Didsbury Dave said:
Great fun.

I genuinely believe that if we win tomorrow night, Mourinho will actually have a proper meltdown. His rivalry with City/Pellegrini isn't on the scale of his problems with Barca/Pep - but we represent a similar all encompassing problem for him.

It's going to be so much fun.
The away technical area can be a lonely place when the eyes and the voices of an ascendant home crowd bear down upon it.

Rarely have I wanted us to win a game more than tomorrow night's.
 
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