Patrick Barclays thinks new manager and team are needed!

fbloke

Well-Known Member
Joined
26 Apr 2009
Messages
13,303
Manchester City need a fresh start and change of manager
Patrick Barclay
RECOMMEND?
So lacking in dash and vigour was Manchester City’s performance on Saturday that when Patrick Vieira came on, he hardly looked out of place.

The man who used to think nothing of a 50-50 ball with Roy Keane, is older (nearly 34) and more conservative these days, and his contribution was in keeping with a team display utterly inappropriate to the occasion, reminiscent of nothing more than the limp outing at White Hart Lane that got Mark Hughes the sack.

In truth, City were slightly better than when losing 3-0 to Tottenham Hotspur in December. But if they don’t take a bit more spirit and belief in each other into the return fixture with Harry Redknapp’s team on May 5, they can forget all about fourth place.

No neutral who excitedly saw Tottenham beat Arsenal on Wednesday, and then felt foolish for having beat an enthusiastic path to the City of Manchester Stadium, would want City to represent England in the Champions League anyway. Not on this form. Not when Tottenham could be there instead. The Champions League is about rising to occasions and twice in a week Redknapp’s men have done that.

RELATED LINKS
Injury rules Petrov out for the season
Scholes's late goal puts City in their place
Mancini needs to get City up for the fight
Too many of Roberto Mancini’s lot sank into their shoes and if the Italian thought it good enough — he did say City had played well, and reiterated this manifest drivel, presumably to maintain such enthusiasm as they may harbour for Saturday’s game away to Arsenal — he is the wrong man for the job of turning Manchester’s other club into one of the world’s most respected.

Let’s get some exceptions out of the way. Nigel de Jong was wonderfully defiant; Carlos Tévez did his best without close support; Vincent Kompany never hid; Shay Given remained alert in goal. As for the others, I was just glad for Robinho. Had the Brazil player not gone home to Santos, he’d have got the blame.

So what does this say about City and the revolution to be funded by Sheikh Mansour and his Abu Dhabi United Group? It’s going nowhere. The manager, for all his knowledge, seriousness of approach and high-class early experience, is not inspirational. At this level, it should not greatly matter. With this budget, you expect players who are self-starters. But City have bought too many of the other kind.

Passion was conspicuously absent from what had been billed as the most important derby since Alex Ferguson arrived in Manchester in 1986; at least from the City point of view, it proved the most forgettable. The highlights on Match of the Day were misleading because they concentrated on the last ten minutes. The rest of it could best be judged by the widespread opinion that Paul Scholes, who sat in comfort and sprayed at leisure before advancing to score the only goal, was outstanding.

My man of the match was Ferguson. After a couple of tactical off-days, he had his team not only better prepared psychologically than Mancini’s but more intelligently arranged.

Whatever work City had done on the creative side of the game was hard to discern. They played as individuals, counter-attacking in straight lines, not always giving the impression that they wanted the ball. It culminated in that 93rd minute with the slow, hesitant gesture at a break that culminated in Craig Bellamy’s pass being intercepted. United knew what to do with that ball.

City cannot afford to wait nearly a decade for their manager to grow a generation of Scholeses. The first thing I’d do when the season ends is start again. With a new manager and as many new players as he wants.
 
We lose a derby game that the rags had to win at all costs due to one lapse of concentration,just having scored 14 goals in the three previous outings.

Yep,sack the manager,sack the board,in fact-start again from scratch with another £300 million.Then the same twat bog-roll journos can get on their horses again about us "ruining football."

"Paddy" Barclay is at about the same level as Winter.Talks utter shite-aswell as looking suspiciously like the captain of the starship Enterprise.

But even by his standards,it's bollocks of the highest calibre.

Beam you up,twatty.
 
I quite like the bloke and he's normally quite measured in his points of view but the MOM being Ferguson is a bit much.

Manchini will be the manager next season and we need to get behind him. His points per game ratio is still good (a lot better than a certain Mr Hughes)
 
fbloke said:
Manchester City need a fresh start and change of manager
Patrick Barclay
RECOMMEND?
So lacking in dash and vigour was Manchester City’s performance on Saturday that when Patrick Vieira came on, he hardly looked out of place.

The man who used to think nothing of a 50-50 ball with Roy Keane, is older (nearly 34) and more conservative these days, and his contribution was in keeping with a team display utterly inappropriate to the occasion, reminiscent of nothing more than the limp outing at White Hart Lane that got Mark Hughes the sack.

In truth, City were slightly better than when losing 3-0 to Tottenham Hotspur in December. But if they don’t take a bit more spirit and belief in each other into the return fixture with Harry Redknapp’s team on May 5, they can forget all about fourth place.

No neutral who excitedly saw Tottenham beat Arsenal on Wednesday, and then felt foolish for having beat an enthusiastic path to the City of Manchester Stadium, would want City to represent England in the Champions League anyway. Not on this form. Not when Tottenham could be there instead. The Champions League is about rising to occasions and twice in a week Redknapp’s men have done that.

RELATED LINKS
Injury rules Petrov out for the season
Scholes's late goal puts City in their place
Mancini needs to get City up for the fight
Too many of Roberto Mancini’s lot sank into their shoes and if the Italian thought it good enough — he did say City had played well, and reiterated this manifest drivel, presumably to maintain such enthusiasm as they may harbour for Saturday’s game away to Arsenal — he is the wrong man for the job of turning Manchester’s other club into one of the world’s most respected.

Let’s get some exceptions out of the way. Nigel de Jong was wonderfully defiant; Carlos Tévez did his best without close support; Vincent Kompany never hid; Shay Given remained alert in goal. As for the others, I was just glad for Robinho. Had the Brazil player not gone home to Santos, he’d have got the blame.

So what does this say about City and the revolution to be funded by Sheikh Mansour and his Abu Dhabi United Group? It’s going nowhere. The manager, for all his knowledge, seriousness of approach and high-class early experience, is not inspirational. At this level, it should not greatly matter. With this budget, you expect players who are self-starters. But City have bought too many of the other kind.

Passion was conspicuously absent from what had been billed as the most important derby since Alex Ferguson arrived in Manchester in 1986; at least from the City point of view, it proved the most forgettable. The highlights on Match of the Day were misleading because they concentrated on the last ten minutes. The rest of it could best be judged by the widespread opinion that Paul Scholes, who sat in comfort and sprayed at leisure before advancing to score the only goal, was outstanding.

My man of the match was Ferguson. After a couple of tactical off-days, he had his team not only better prepared psychologically than Mancini’s but more intelligently arranged.

Whatever work City had done on the creative side of the game was hard to discern. They played as individuals, counter-attacking in straight lines, not always giving the impression that they wanted the ball. It culminated in that 93rd minute with the slow, hesitant gesture at a break that culminated in Craig Bellamy’s pass being intercepted. United knew what to do with that ball.

City cannot afford to wait nearly a decade for their manager to grow a generation of Scholeses. The first thing I’d do when the season ends is start again. With a new manager and as many new players as he wants.

Why? Is there some kind of rush. I'm sure we'd all like to win something sooner rather than later but will football cease to exist in 5 years? No. 10 years? No. 20 years? No. Another 35 years? No. And we'll still be here so really we can wait, if that's what it takes.

Oh and can I just add:

What a twat.
 
Imagine the abuse we'd get from the press if we sacked Mancini and started again. We can't win with these fuckers. Too many people who are paid to give their opinions talk utter shite and while seemingly every set of fans is paranoid about the coverage they get we do seem to get a disproportionate amount of negative stuff coming our way.
 
Ok hand on hearts here fella's, lets say we make 4th spot and can then as is widely predicted attract the very best on offer, how many of yesterdays starting 11 would make our best starting 11 to push on and better 4th spot next season as well as a demanding Champions League campaign. The players below are the ones I think can make a contribution to a team capable of competing at both high standards whilst integrating with a higher class of player brought in.

Given
Hart
Kompany
Lescott
Toure
Nedum
Johnson
Barry
De Jong
Adebayor
Tevez

I think we do need to offload quite a few players that we kid ourselves are of a better standard than they actually are. There's a number of players I have missed out on the fringes that really need to step up to the plate and show they want to become a part of 'the project'.
 
I agree with BALTI but I am also very interested to know quite why Blue2112 does not have Ireland in his list?

Are you hinting at something there, mate?
 
I have some trouble with a guy compairing losing to a team we matched for 90mins with pretty much the last kick of the game and the "performance" we turned at Spurs when we got outclassed for 90mins.
 
DTeacher said:
I agree with BALTI but I am also very interested to know quite why Blue2112 does not have Ireland in his list?

Are you hinting at something there, mate?

Speaking only as a fan of where this club is heading too, I just think its obvious he's had a poor season and he's one of about half a dozen players that are at a crossroads for varying reasons. I'm basing the above list on making the Champions League and am therefore going along with the expected addition of some genuine top class players coming here.
 
Blue2112 said:
DTeacher said:
I agree with BALTI but I am also very interested to know quite why Blue2112 does not have Ireland in his list?

Are you hinting at something there, mate?

Speaking only as a fan of where this club is heading too, I just think its obvious he's had a poor season and he's one of about half a dozen players that are at a crossroads for varying reasons.


Okay mate, that's fair enough.

I still harbour hopes that he will stay and come good but acknowledge that the competition will be intense next season.
 
Those who know me on here know I'm not the kind to get hot under the collar about a piece of journalism but that's a fucking shocking piece of work.

You lazy prick, you didn't watch the game, did you? Or if you did you were eating canopes in Holland PArk with half an eye on the game.

Because that isn't how it was. And that isn't how it is.

And I predict you will be eating shit within 12 months, if not sooner.

You're a disgrace to your profession. Not for what you've written, but for genuinely seeing a game that way.
 
fbloke said:
No neutral who excitedly saw Tottenham beat Arsenal on Wednesday, and then felt foolish for having beat an enthusiastic path to the City of Manchester Stadium, would want City to represent England in the Champions League anyway. Not on this form. Not when Tottenham could be there instead. The Champions League is about rising to occasions and twice in a week Redknapp’s men have done that.

Just like they rose to the occasion the previous week with a defeat at Sunderland then another limp defeat on one of the biggest occasions at Wembley in the FA Cup semi final?

fbloke said:
So what does this say about City and the revolution to be funded by Sheikh Mansour and his Abu Dhabi United Group? It’s going nowhere. The manager, for all his knowledge, seriousness of approach and high-class early experience, is not inspirational. At this level, it should not greatly matter. With this budget, you expect players who are self-starters. But City have bought too many of the other kind.

Regarding the first sentance, it says we are looking like a side and club still learning after this "revolution" started not even 2 years ago. TWO FUCKING YEARS.

Regarding the second not even SIX FUCKING MONTHS.

fbloke said:
City cannot afford to wait nearly a decade for their manager to grow a generation of Scholeses. The first thing I’d do when the season ends is start again. With a new manager and as many new players as he wants.

We've just got a new manager and he hasn't had a chance to get as many new players as he wants.

What an absoloute shoddy piece of journolism that is.
 

Don't have an account? Register now and see fewer ads!

SIGN UP
Back
Top