manimanc
Well-Known Member
Made up with this.
It's turning into a good week and there may be more news soon who knows..
It's turning into a good week and there may be more news soon who knows..
Has he changed his opinions of positional play then? He did an article for the athletic after the World Cup saying he regrets promoting this way of playing, that he doesn’t like it when the system is king and he wants it to be the players’ individuality that finds the solutions on the pitch. Very weird to write an article of all your regrets surrounding this style of play to then return to it so soon. Maybe I’m missing something.
Pep certainly seems pleased!
Lovely metaphorOr maybe he balances pep out? We need to be fluid and have different quivers to our bow.
Cryuff, Guardiola,Enrique and now Xavi have all done pretty well at Barca.I hope all our ex-players go on to have good careers elsewhere and only come to City if they really are good enough and are exactly what we need.
I don’t like the idea of ex-players coming back to the club just because they are ex-players. It’s what started the downward spiral at Liverpool with Souness and Evans etc. through the 90s and with United having ex-players in the background all last decade and eventually having Solskjaer as coach.
I think it’s the wrong way to go about things.
Ollie was good - for every PL club bar the Rags.I hope all our ex-players go on to have good careers elsewhere and only come to City if they really are good enough and are exactly what we need.
I don’t like the idea of ex-players coming back to the club just because they are ex-players. It’s what started the downward spiral at Liverpool with Souness and Evans etc. through the 90s and with United having ex-players in the background all last decade and eventually
having Solskjaer as coach.
I think it’s the wrong way to go about things.
Liverpool's dominant 80s could be chalked up as much to their continuity as much as the decline in the 90s. There's arguments for and against.Cryuff, Guardiola,Enrique and now Xavi have all done pretty well at Barca.
Zidane didn't flop at Real.
Tony Book was our best manager between Mercer and Mancini.
If the player is good I have no objections. I think the problem comes when the move is by an owner/board who is looking to appease the fans with someone popular.
Actually from day one Solskjaer was pretty successful, for Utd that was the problem, he was so good for the first three months or so that they made the appointment permanent.Liverpool's dominant 80s could be chalked up as much to their continuity as much as the decline in the 90s. There's arguments for and against.
One thing for clear is that Solskjær was obviously out of his depth from day one and whoever kept him in post for as long as they did doesn't have to buy a round in any pub I am in.
Lillo is highly respected by Pep for his vision, knowledge and hard work. Great move this.Fucking brilliant news. Pep's a genius, but he's at his best when he has someone next to him who will give it back to him if it's not going right. As much as I liked Rodolfo and maresca, they always just looked like pep was talking at them, whilst lillo looked like he was bollocking pep nonstop.
Plus he seems to play good cop with a lot of the players.