city91 said:
The thing is Mancini has already come out and said he is not going to be here for the next 10 years so people who are hoping for him to be here as long as Taggert, Wenger and Moyes are sadly mistaken. Also long term managers are not always a good thing anyway. What has Moyes ever won at Everton? and when was the last time Arsenal won something? I'm not saying go with the Abramhovic approach but changing a manager every few years can be good for a club.
It is understandable why a lot of fans will want Mancini to stay after all he has won us back to back trophies but the worrying thing is that I Just dont see us improving. All this talk about not building on the team in the summer is just an excuse. We should have finished minimum 3rd in our champions league group not bottom with out a win. Also even if Mancini did leave us he would still be a part of our history and nothing will change that but there would be no shame in moving him on if the club felt we needed a new direction.
Another major criticism is the fact that the majority of our squad now is Mancini's and he has signed so many players who were stars at their previous clubs but have just not performed for us. Why sign Dzeko and not play to his strengths? Why sign Nasri and not play him in his most influential position?
If Mourinho is available and willing to join us at the end of the season then it an absolute 100% no brainer we have to get him. Yes he is an arrogant arsehole, however he is the best manager out there and he has the respect of everyone. Just like if we had to choose Ronaldo or Aguero then it would be Ronaldo every time.
If the linesman hadn't given offside in the Ajax game, we would have won it, and qualified for the EL. So, without Mancini doing anything different in any game, things would look a whole lot better (or not, if you think we're better off out of the Europa League). Same with Mourinho, who wouldn't have won the CL with Inter if the linesman had allowed Yaya's goal in the semi. It wouldn't have changed how well he'd coached the team, but he wouldn't be considered quite as amazing a manager if that one tiny thing, that was entirely out of his control, had happened differently. Similarly, Mancini's reputation would be significantly reduced if Aguero had missed against QPR - another incident entirely out of the manager's control.
So many random occurrences can affect individual games, you have to take the long view and judge a manager on how his team plays over a longer period than one game, or even six games against some of the best teams in Europe. If you look at his record in its entirety and still don't think Mancini's up to it, then fair enough, but managers aren't geniuses one match and f**kwits the next, so unless you've been unhappy with Mancini for most of last season, as well as most of this, to suddenly decide he's not good enough, based on a few performances in the CL is a bit ridiculous.