Why The Hell Would Anyone Want Mancini Sacked ?

Yaya_Tony said:
LoveCity said:
Yaya_Tony said:
What makes you think Dan Taylor (who) knows who an agent represents?

Because he's a journalist (a pretty good one too I have to say, a rarity among them) and probably did some research on it? Made a few phone calls? There are still some among the press pack who fact check.
You assume he is honest, first mistake. No honour among thieves, PrestwichBlue's thread confirms that.

You can't paint them all with one brush. Dan Taylor has written some outstanding pieces on City in the last couple of years, he is one of the few good ones.

But let's pretend they're all wrong when it suits us.

PS: Taylor is the one Mancini chose to give an in-depth interview to: <a class="postlink" href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2013/feb/22/roberto-mancini-interview-angry-every-day" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;">http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2013 ... -every-day</a>
 
Blue Heaven said:
Yaya_Tony said:
Blue Heaven said:
Ahhh...it's the Weaselly Welshman's fault, is it? Haven't I heard that one before?
I didn't actually say that though, did I? I said that he left us with overpriced squad members, which he did. FFP loomed, and we have been dealing with it ever since. Mancini has never had a true "blank chequebook" with us. Won us the league and cup anyway though.

So, he gets full credit for the successes, but a complete pass on the failures, simply because we're not past the four-year mark in our post-Hughesian plan? A blank check isn't enough for you, as you will, of course, insist on a 'blank chequebook' instead?

Wow your a nasty, negative person
 
Gaylord du Bois said:
Blue Heaven said:
karen7 said:
this. there has not been any indication he has anything but a good constructive working relationship with the barca boys and khaldoon.if you have concrete evidence otherwise ,lets hear it

Bickered with countless players in the media, with the medical staff, with Marwood, and has even taken potshots at the owner's transfer policies. All that made manifest by Bobby with his very public pronouncements.
Give over with histrionics you tart.

If I'm a 'tart' then you're a fart...!

-- Sat May 04, 2013 4:26 pm --

Yaya_Tony said:
Blue Heaven said:
Yaya_Tony said:
We won the league last year, cup year before, 2nd this year and in another cup final. Just watch what we do over the next 3 years mate, you'll love it I promise you.

Your promises are worth very little to me, but thanks anyway.
Cheers for that. That's charming, that is.

-- Sat May 04, 2013 8:51 pm --

Blue Heaven said:
Yaya_Tony said:
Something like "shit, it's Real Madrid, we didn't qualify last year we'd better win tonight" to "wow we're winning, this was a piece of piss" to "bollocks, we should have hung on"? The lads seemed to have a mental block in the way of playing like we know they can. Pressure mounted over the remaining games and we went out. Next season is a clean slate for all. Lets see who we draw before making predictions of "success"/"failure" in Europe next season. As you say, tactically we were and are fine. Tight margins.

To be clear, 'As you say, tactically we were and are fine' is not what I wrote, but I see your point. However, Txiki is under a lot of pressure to make huge recommendations regarding the retention (or not) of the manager and quite a few players. Time will tell...
Didn't mean to mis-quote you. The only impression I get from the club is Txili and Mancini are on the same page and working together towards a common goal, the success of MCFC. I know what I personally hope for, we'll see if it happens. I agree, time will tell.

One thing I do know, is that even if my personal vision doesn't materialise, City are on the up and not stopping.

I'm worried about Unfair Play Regs, but beyond that, I agree with you. We simply shall not be denied...<br /><br />-- Sat May 04, 2013 4:29 pm --<br /><br />
rastus said:
Blue Heaven said:
Yaya_Tony said:
I didn't actually say that though, did I? I said that he left us with overpriced squad members, which he did. FFP loomed, and we have been dealing with it ever since. Mancini has never had a true "blank chequebook" with us. Won us the league and cup anyway though.

So, he gets full credit for the successes, but a complete pass on the failures, simply because we're not past the four-year mark in our post-Hughesian plan? A blank check isn't enough for you, as you will, of course, insist on a 'blank chequebook' instead?

Wow your a nasty, negative person

Yes, and an insult from an idiot is really a compliment in disguise. Have a lovely day.
 
LoveCity said:
Yaya_Tony said:
LoveCity said:
Because he's a journalist (a pretty good one too I have to say, a rarity among them) and probably did some research on it? Made a few phone calls? There are still some among the press pack who fact check.
You assume he is honest, first mistake. No honour among thieves, PrestwichBlue's thread confirms that.

You can't paint them all with one brush. Dan Taylor has written some outstanding pieces on City in the last couple of years, he is one of the few good ones.

But let's pretend they're all wrong when it suits us.

PS: Taylor is the one Mancini chose to give an in-depth interview to: <a class="postlink" href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2013/feb/22/roberto-mancini-interview-angry-every-day" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;">http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2013 ... -every-day</a>
I remember that interview, liked it a lot at the time, so thanks for the context. Liked it so much so I am going to repost it for those that missed it. Dan Taylor though, still doesn't categorically know why Txili met an agent (of whoever) in Spain. Mancini laughed it off. Not worried. Whatever will be will be.

Roberto Mancini: 'I like being a manager. I like being angry every day'

The Manchester City manager reveals his future plans – working as a football director and managing England – and talks about transfer targets and his long bike rides around Cheshire

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Daniel Taylor
The Guardian, Friday 22 February 2013 14.59 GMT
Jump to comments (330)

Roberto Mancini
The Manchester City manager, Roberto Mancini, says 'it is always more difficult to retain the league than win it.' Photographs: Christopher Thomond for the Guardian

Roberto Mancini is thinking back to his childhood and trying to remember if there was ever a time when he was not quite so obsessed with winning. Eventually, he concludes there was not. His cousin learned the hard way when the nine-year-old Mancini lost a game of table tennis one day. "He'd beaten me," Manchester City's manager recollects. "So I threw my bat at him and it hit him on the head."

Il Bimbo, they used to call him at Casteldebole, the Bologna youth academy. The photographs of the time show Mancini with bobbed brown hair and the first hint of a moustache. "The Boy" was 13, the youngest in the academy. "It's 35 years ago but I still remember it well," he says. "When you leave your family that young, it makes you strong very quickly. I had big problems in the first year. I missed my family, I wasn't happy. It was difficult. I remember my first day at my new school. I had a look, decided I didn't like it and walked out. They made me go back the next day and I realised I could not keep running away. For a year it was very difficult. Just imagine, at 13, leaving home. But I kept at it."

It is the kind of story that might help to explain why Mancini is so hard on his players when he suspects they are not taking their careers seriously enough. He has, after all, made the sacrifices himself. He is also, by his own admission, an inconsolable loser. "I've always been the same. I've had the same mentality ever since I was playing with my friends at school. I want to win. I only want to win. I don't like to participate at anything and not finish first."

We are talking in the Etihad lounge at Manchester airport as Mancini contemplates City going into Sunday's game against Chelsea 15 points behind Manchester United and rapidly disappearing in their wing-mirrors. There is frustration, defiance, a little bit of anger, too. Mancini, it quickly becomes apparent, is becoming increasingly aggrieved by the permanent debate about his position. He talks of players who "think it's enough to play 50%". There is also fresh criticism of Samir Nasri and, to a lesser extent, Joe Hart.

Yet some of his harshest words are reserved indirectly for an old target, Brian Marwood, until October the man in charge of City's transfer business. "It's important to realise we have made some mistakes. I have made some mistakes and the players have made some mistakes. But the first reason is because we didn't do what we should have done in the summer transfer market – we worked really badly in the market."

Next summer, with Ferran Soriano and Txiki Beguiristain now in control of recruitment, he hopes and expects it will be different, but there is also a revealing insight into Mancini the politician, the man who finishes this interview by saying that one day he plans to become a football club director. The one flicker of indignation during two hours in his company comes when I ask how he gets on with the two people above him. "Txiki and Ferran? They are not above me," he points out. "Above me there is only Khaldoon [Al Mubarak] and Sheikh Mansour."

What really stands out is that he speaks of City's new chief executive and director of football in a very different light to their predecessors. "Ferran came from Barcelona and understands what it needs to be a top club. Txiki played football and knows football. They are good men. For this reason, I am optimistic about our future. We now have people who know their football. We need some players and they are working on it. At this moment it's better our focus is on the last three months but the club knows this and I know this."

Edinson Cavani is his first choice. "I like him, but all the world wants him. There are big players. I don't know what can happen. [Luis] Suárez plays for a top team like Liverpool. Cavani plays for Napoli. There's [Radamel] Falcao but, again, all the managers like him. Neymar is a good player, he's young, but I don't know if he's ready to play in England because the football is totally different. I think he will go to Barcelona or Madrid where the football is more technical. But Cavani and Falcao would work in England. They have experience. Both players are 26, 27. They are good enough to play in England."

His suspicion is that some of the players who won the league last season have been guilty of complacency. Nasri is the case in point. "I think Samir has fantastic qualities. With his quality, he should always play well. Every game he could be the difference. A player of this quality could be one of the best players in Europe. But it's not happening.

"Sometimes a player thinks it's enough what they did the year before and doesn't understand that every day they should improve. If you are a top player you know you can improve until the last day of your career but sometimes you get players who think it is not important to work and this is their worst mistake. Samir can do better than this year. He is a top player but he has not been playing at his level."

He regards Pablo Zabaleta as probably City's best performer, "playing very, very well", but accepts that the list of contenders is short. As for Hart, he wants to put the record straight. "Listen, I believed in Joe when nobody else did. I put him in the goal when everybody thought it was impossible that he could play ahead of Shay Given, who at that time was one of the best goalkeepers in Europe. I love Joe. If not, I wouldn't have put him in the team two years ago.

"But it's simple. If Joe continues to make mistakes, he goes on the bench. I've done it with Samir, [David] Silva and [Carlos]Tevez this season and it can happen with Joe. The problem is the goalkeeper makes a mistake, we have lost the game. Joe has the quality to be the best goalkeeper anywhere. He is the best goalkeeper in England but in the situation Manchester City are in, if you want to stay at the top, you need to work hard and think only about football. He needs to think only of his job and that is being a goalkeeper."

It is unusual to hear a manager who is willing to question his players so publicly and it is different, I point out, to someone such as Arsène Wenger, who will always try to protect his own in difficult times. "But I'm not Arsène Wenger. We're different. I want to win. I think every player should be strong enough to take his responsibility and, like this, you can improve. You don't improve if you have a manager saying 'aah, don't worry, you made a mistake but it doesn't matter.'"

The subject turns to his own position. Does it annoy him it is always in the news? "I don't understand it. Seriously, for what reason? Since we started to win, in May 2011, Manchester City are the best team in England, are they not? We won three trophies, Manchester United two, Chelsea two, Liverpool one. No other team has won more than us.

"Now we are in second position and still in the FA Cup. We hope we can win the league and never say never but if we finish second, OK, we made some mistakes but we have still done a good job surely if, in three years, we have finished second, first, second. So I don't understand it. I could if we had won nothing for three years. It would be difficult for me to stay then. I couldn't stay in a team where I wasn't doing a good job. But I have done a good job here."

At his press conference on Friday Mancini was asked about reports linking City to the Málaga manager, Manuel Pellegrini. "Fucking hell," he replied. "I can't continue to answer questions about this."

Chelsea, he says, show it does not always work to change the manager. "For me, Carlo [Ancelotti] was the strange one. Carlo is one of the best managers in the world for me. He won the league and the FA Cup and then they sacked him. It's difficult for a club that change every year, every two years. [Sir Alex] Ferguson's a totally different situation because he started to work for United in a different time. Now he's like a seat in the stadium, the grass on the pitch. He's part of United.

"I want to continue my work. I always wanted to work in England. OK, I don't think Manchester is Rome where there is always the sun and it's a different type of city. The rain is a problem but do I like Manchester? Yes. I have a good feeling here. There might not be 100 restaurants but I have no problem with it. I like to go out on my bike. That's when I do my thinking. Two or three hours on the roads. That's when you get time and you can think without problems. I know Alderley Edge, Wilmslow, Hale. It's nice. My wife likes it too. Sometimes we go down to London to have a look around. I like the people here because they let you walk. Sometimes they might ask for a signature but they have respect for you.

"In Italy, the press is different because all the journalists think they are all managers. Not only the journalists, in fact. We have 55 million football managers in Italy. In England it's different. Maybe the British press like to know more about private lives but it's not a problem for me. England is the place where every manager wants to be, in front of 40 or 50,000 people every week. It's beautiful."

Talking of the press brings us to the Mario Balotelli issue. "Mario not being here, that must be a big problem for the paparazzi and The Sun," Mancini says, smiling. "I'm happy for him that he's scoring goals for Milan now. I was sure he would score a lot because in Italy the championship is not difficult like it is in England. For the last 10 years, Italian football is only so-so. For him, it's easier. He was born there, he knows Italian football.

"I just think that Mario didn't understand that, for him, Manchester City was a big, big chance. City in the next five to 10 years can be the top club in the world. He didn't think about this, he didn't think about his future. He's a good guy. He's not 16, true, but 22 is still young and when you're young you make mistakes.

"Mario had a difficult life when he was a child. That is a big reason why he is like he is. He was lucky because he found a good family but at 22 you don't have life experience like someone of 35. I tried to give him everything I could. He was like my son. I'm just sorry because I think Mario could have done more for Manchester City. But we still won the league and FA Cup with him and that's important."

Replacing Balotelli will be the priority in the summer. "We are fighting against a team like United who are used to winning every year. We don't have their experience. We need to work hard, every day, every week, because we need to improve. But it's the same in the transfer market. We worked badly [last summer] and I don't know why because when you win the league that is the moment to bring in another two or three top players to improve the mentality.

"New players want to show they are better than the old players and it means the old players have to play better than the previous year. Instead, we didn't do it. Football is full of this history. You win the title, then you think it's enough to play 50% and you don't arrive the next year. It's always more difficult to retain the league than win it. We arrived at the top. The problem is to stay there a long time. You do that only if your mentality is strong."

Missing out on Robin van Persie is still the one that hurts. "This is the difference. Only this. We are missing 10 to 15 goals. We score those goals and it's worth another eight or nine points. And Van Persie is a United player."

At Southampton recently Mancini was so disgusted by his team's performance he did not even go into the dressing room afterwards. How does he live with a bad defeat? "English people and Italian people are totally different. For some English managers, whether they have won or lost, once the game is over it's finished. For me, it's not finished. For 24 hours if we lose the only thing in my head is: 'Did I make mistakes? What could I have done differently? Why did we lose?' For 24 hours my mind is working like this. I'll get a few hours of sleep but not much. I live for football. It's impossible for me to accept a defeat. For that 24 hours I need to understand what's happened."

He is 48, the first worry lines appearing on those tanned features. How long will he stay in management? "It depends on my mind. There are other positions at football clubs and I could do another job. For now, I like being a manager. I like being angry every day. I'd like to do this job until I'm 60 possibly then maybe work with a chairman somewhere."

Before then, he is intrigued by the possibility of managing England one day. "It can happen if they want to win. It does appeal. And if I am managing England and win the World Cup or the European Championship I want to be knighted. No statue, but a knighthood is enough."
Roberto Mancini was talking in the Etihad lounge at Manchester airport Roberto Mancini was talking in the Etihad lounge at Manchester airport Photograph: Manchester City

Etihad Airways flies triple daily from London Heathrow and double daily from Manchester to Abu Dhabi and onwards to over 80 destinations. Visit <a class="postlink" href="http://www.etihad.com" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;">www.etihad.com</a> to book. It was awarded the world's leading airline for the fourth year running at the 2012 World Travel Awards. Fly Etihad Airways to win an exclusive training session for you and a friend with Man City. Visit <a class="postlink" href="http://www.etihadmcfc.com" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;">www.etihadmcfc.com</a> for more info
 
Yaya_Tony of course he's going to laugh it off he isn't going to categorically come out and say hes being replaced. I'll trust Dan Taylor over almost any other journo out there he knows his stuff and does his research. Don't disrespect the man he's one of the few in england who does a proper job and its one of the reasons he's no longer on the Manchester beat
 
Yaya_Tony said:
LoveCity said:
Yaya_Tony said:
You assume he is honest, first mistake. No honour among thieves, PrestwichBlue's thread confirms that.

You can't paint them all with one brush. Dan Taylor has written some outstanding pieces on City in the last couple of years, he is one of the few good ones.

But let's pretend they're all wrong when it suits us.

PS: Taylor is the one Mancini chose to give an in-depth interview to: <a class="postlink" href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2013/feb/22/roberto-mancini-interview-angry-every-day" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;">http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2013 ... -every-day</a>
I remember that interview, liked it a lot at the time, so thanks for the context. Liked it so much so I am going to repost it for those that missed it. Dan Taylor though, still doesn't categorically know why Txili met an agent (of whoever) in Spain. Mancini laughed it off. Not worried. Whatever will be will be.

Roberto Mancini: 'I like being a manager. I like being angry every day'

The Manchester City manager reveals his future plans – working as a football director and managing England – and talks about transfer targets and his long bike rides around Cheshire

Share 279
inShare2
Email

Daniel Taylor
The Guardian, Friday 22 February 2013 14.59 GMT
Jump to comments (330)

Roberto Mancini
The Manchester City manager, Roberto Mancini, says 'it is always more difficult to retain the league than win it.' Photographs: Christopher Thomond for the Guardian

Roberto Mancini is thinking back to his childhood and trying to remember if there was ever a time when he was not quite so obsessed with winning. Eventually, he concludes there was not. His cousin learned the hard way when the nine-year-old Mancini lost a game of table tennis one day. "He'd beaten me," Manchester City's manager recollects. "So I threw my bat at him and it hit him on the head."

Il Bimbo, they used to call him at Casteldebole, the Bologna youth academy. The photographs of the time show Mancini with bobbed brown hair and the first hint of a moustache. "The Boy" was 13, the youngest in the academy. "It's 35 years ago but I still remember it well," he says. "When you leave your family that young, it makes you strong very quickly. I had big problems in the first year. I missed my family, I wasn't happy. It was difficult. I remember my first day at my new school. I had a look, decided I didn't like it and walked out. They made me go back the next day and I realised I could not keep running away. For a year it was very difficult. Just imagine, at 13, leaving home. But I kept at it."

It is the kind of story that might help to explain why Mancini is so hard on his players when he suspects they are not taking their careers seriously enough. He has, after all, made the sacrifices himself. He is also, by his own admission, an inconsolable loser. "I've always been the same. I've had the same mentality ever since I was playing with my friends at school. I want to win. I only want to win. I don't like to participate at anything and not finish first."

We are talking in the Etihad lounge at Manchester airport as Mancini contemplates City going into Sunday's game against Chelsea 15 points behind Manchester United and rapidly disappearing in their wing-mirrors. There is frustration, defiance, a little bit of anger, too. Mancini, it quickly becomes apparent, is becoming increasingly aggrieved by the permanent debate about his position. He talks of players who "think it's enough to play 50%". There is also fresh criticism of Samir Nasri and, to a lesser extent, Joe Hart.

Yet some of his harshest words are reserved indirectly for an old target, Brian Marwood, until October the man in charge of City's transfer business. "It's important to realise we have made some mistakes. I have made some mistakes and the players have made some mistakes. But the first reason is because we didn't do what we should have done in the summer transfer market – we worked really badly in the market."

Next summer, with Ferran Soriano and Txiki Beguiristain now in control of recruitment, he hopes and expects it will be different, but there is also a revealing insight into Mancini the politician, the man who finishes this interview by saying that one day he plans to become a football club director. The one flicker of indignation during two hours in his company comes when I ask how he gets on with the two people above him. "Txiki and Ferran? They are not above me," he points out. "Above me there is only Khaldoon [Al Mubarak] and Sheikh Mansour."

What really stands out is that he speaks of City's new chief executive and director of football in a very different light to their predecessors. "Ferran came from Barcelona and understands what it needs to be a top club. Txiki played football and knows football. They are good men. For this reason, I am optimistic about our future. We now have people who know their football. We need some players and they are working on it. At this moment it's better our focus is on the last three months but the club knows this and I know this."

Edinson Cavani is his first choice. "I like him, but all the world wants him. There are big players. I don't know what can happen. [Luis] Suárez plays for a top team like Liverpool. Cavani plays for Napoli. There's [Radamel] Falcao but, again, all the managers like him. Neymar is a good player, he's young, but I don't know if he's ready to play in England because the football is totally different. I think he will go to Barcelona or Madrid where the football is more technical. But Cavani and Falcao would work in England. They have experience. Both players are 26, 27. They are good enough to play in England."

His suspicion is that some of the players who won the league last season have been guilty of complacency. Nasri is the case in point. "I think Samir has fantastic qualities. With his quality, he should always play well. Every game he could be the difference. A player of this quality could be one of the best players in Europe. But it's not happening.

"Sometimes a player thinks it's enough what they did the year before and doesn't understand that every day they should improve. If you are a top player you know you can improve until the last day of your career but sometimes you get players who think it is not important to work and this is their worst mistake. Samir can do better than this year. He is a top player but he has not been playing at his level."

He regards Pablo Zabaleta as probably City's best performer, "playing very, very well", but accepts that the list of contenders is short. As for Hart, he wants to put the record straight. "Listen, I believed in Joe when nobody else did. I put him in the goal when everybody thought it was impossible that he could play ahead of Shay Given, who at that time was one of the best goalkeepers in Europe. I love Joe. If not, I wouldn't have put him in the team two years ago.

"But it's simple. If Joe continues to make mistakes, he goes on the bench. I've done it with Samir, [David] Silva and [Carlos]Tevez this season and it can happen with Joe. The problem is the goalkeeper makes a mistake, we have lost the game. Joe has the quality to be the best goalkeeper anywhere. He is the best goalkeeper in England but in the situation Manchester City are in, if you want to stay at the top, you need to work hard and think only about football. He needs to think only of his job and that is being a goalkeeper."

It is unusual to hear a manager who is willing to question his players so publicly and it is different, I point out, to someone such as Arsène Wenger, who will always try to protect his own in difficult times. "But I'm not Arsène Wenger. We're different. I want to win. I think every player should be strong enough to take his responsibility and, like this, you can improve. You don't improve if you have a manager saying 'aah, don't worry, you made a mistake but it doesn't matter.'"

The subject turns to his own position. Does it annoy him it is always in the news? "I don't understand it. Seriously, for what reason? Since we started to win, in May 2011, Manchester City are the best team in England, are they not? We won three trophies, Manchester United two, Chelsea two, Liverpool one. No other team has won more than us.

"Now we are in second position and still in the FA Cup. We hope we can win the league and never say never but if we finish second, OK, we made some mistakes but we have still done a good job surely if, in three years, we have finished second, first, second. So I don't understand it. I could if we had won nothing for three years. It would be difficult for me to stay then. I couldn't stay in a team where I wasn't doing a good job. But I have done a good job here."

At his press conference on Friday Mancini was asked about reports linking City to the Málaga manager, Manuel Pellegrini. "Fucking hell," he replied. "I can't continue to answer questions about this."

Chelsea, he says, show it does not always work to change the manager. "For me, Carlo [Ancelotti] was the strange one. Carlo is one of the best managers in the world for me. He won the league and the FA Cup and then they sacked him. It's difficult for a club that change every year, every two years. [Sir Alex] Ferguson's a totally different situation because he started to work for United in a different time. Now he's like a seat in the stadium, the grass on the pitch. He's part of United.

"I want to continue my work. I always wanted to work in England. OK, I don't think Manchester is Rome where there is always the sun and it's a different type of city. The rain is a problem but do I like Manchester? Yes. I have a good feeling here. There might not be 100 restaurants but I have no problem with it. I like to go out on my bike. That's when I do my thinking. Two or three hours on the roads. That's when you get time and you can think without problems. I know Alderley Edge, Wilmslow, Hale. It's nice. My wife likes it too. Sometimes we go down to London to have a look around. I like the people here because they let you walk. Sometimes they might ask for a signature but they have respect for you.

"In Italy, the press is different because all the journalists think they are all managers. Not only the journalists, in fact. We have 55 million football managers in Italy. In England it's different. Maybe the British press like to know more about private lives but it's not a problem for me. England is the place where every manager wants to be, in front of 40 or 50,000 people every week. It's beautiful."

Talking of the press brings us to the Mario Balotelli issue. "Mario not being here, that must be a big problem for the paparazzi and The Sun," Mancini says, smiling. "I'm happy for him that he's scoring goals for Milan now. I was sure he would score a lot because in Italy the championship is not difficult like it is in England. For the last 10 years, Italian football is only so-so. For him, it's easier. He was born there, he knows Italian football.

"I just think that Mario didn't understand that, for him, Manchester City was a big, big chance. City in the next five to 10 years can be the top club in the world. He didn't think about this, he didn't think about his future. He's a good guy. He's not 16, true, but 22 is still young and when you're young you make mistakes.

"Mario had a difficult life when he was a child. That is a big reason why he is like he is. He was lucky because he found a good family but at 22 you don't have life experience like someone of 35. I tried to give him everything I could. He was like my son. I'm just sorry because I think Mario could have done more for Manchester City. But we still won the league and FA Cup with him and that's important."

Replacing Balotelli will be the priority in the summer. "We are fighting against a team like United who are used to winning every year. We don't have their experience. We need to work hard, every day, every week, because we need to improve. But it's the same in the transfer market. We worked badly [last summer] and I don't know why because when you win the league that is the moment to bring in another two or three top players to improve the mentality.

"New players want to show they are better than the old players and it means the old players have to play better than the previous year. Instead, we didn't do it. Football is full of this history. You win the title, then you think it's enough to play 50% and you don't arrive the next year. It's always more difficult to retain the league than win it. We arrived at the top. The problem is to stay there a long time. You do that only if your mentality is strong."

Missing out on Robin van Persie is still the one that hurts. "This is the difference. Only this. We are missing 10 to 15 goals. We score those goals and it's worth another eight or nine points. And Van Persie is a United player."

At Southampton recently Mancini was so disgusted by his team's performance he did not even go into the dressing room afterwards. How does he live with a bad defeat? "English people and Italian people are totally different. For some English managers, whether they have won or lost, once the game is over it's finished. For me, it's not finished. For 24 hours if we lose the only thing in my head is: 'Did I make mistakes? What could I have done differently? Why did we lose?' For 24 hours my mind is working like this. I'll get a few hours of sleep but not much. I live for football. It's impossible for me to accept a defeat. For that 24 hours I need to understand what's happened."

He is 48, the first worry lines appearing on those tanned features. How long will he stay in management? "It depends on my mind. There are other positions at football clubs and I could do another job. For now, I like being a manager. I like being angry every day. I'd like to do this job until I'm 60 possibly then maybe work with a chairman somewhere."

Before then, he is intrigued by the possibility of managing England one day. "It can happen if they want to win. It does appeal. And if I am managing England and win the World Cup or the European Championship I want to be knighted. No statue, but a knighthood is enough."
Roberto Mancini was talking in the Etihad lounge at Manchester airport Roberto Mancini was talking in the Etihad lounge at Manchester airport Photograph: Manchester City

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Love this interview, "im not wenger i want to win" brilliant
 
Sorry Dan, I mean cmdub, but even if you've done your research about who is whos agent there is still the outlying possibility that Mancini will be boss in August. I'd say it is more like odds on favourite, but I kfa, ofc.

Let's look at the quote again shall we;

He might have noticed, say, the very different set of working practices that brought one of Manchester City's top executives, Txiki Begiristain, to Madrid to dine with the agent of the Malaga coach Manuel Pellegrini, and the explanation that was swiftly cobbled together, when the two were caught in the act, that nothing too much should be read into it because it might simply have been to negotiate a player.

The agent does not actually represent any players but any form of embarrassment will quickly pass. City are doing only what just about every other club does in their position: assessing, planning and applying their own set of rules.
He said fuck all, and speculated loads. Bear in mind this piece was supposed to be about Moyes. He could at least name the agent so we could check for ourselves. It's another shitbag article in a long line of shitbag journos, maybe he just wants to fit in... fuck nose why he'd write that.

Still, appreciate the other article above, it's class.
 
Mancini is a winner. Our new technical directors are winners. Our owners are winners and will provide the tools (players) to assist his quest in becoming top of the tree again. Europe will also be different next season, lessons have been learned and the same mistakes wont be made again. The games might not be as free-flowing as those this season but we will get what we need to get through the group stages, i'm absolutely convinced in that. Bobby will be in charge in August, no question.
 
Isn't it a fairly important part of Bergiristan's remit to know which players, managers, coaches might be available and willing to join City if we want them? How does he do that without having regular contacts with agents?
 
cibaman said:
Isn't it a fairly important part of Bergiristan's remit to know which players, managers, coaches might be available and willing to join City if we want them? How does he do that without having regular contacts with agents?

Would imagine its one of the major parts of his job, whether the manager is in trouble or not.
 

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