• You may have to login or register before you can post and view our exclusive members only forums.
    To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Moyes sacked.

To be fair, he also lost by 3 goals to City TWICE, lost to WBA, Newcastle, Stoke and Tottenham, cross a billion times just to draw with Fulham, get dumped out of the CL, lose to Sunderland in the cup, got ripped apart by Chelsea and then got beat 2-0 at Everton. Also signed Fellaini for 27m, pissed off Giggs, Welbeck, Ferdinand, Vidic, Evra, Hernandez, Kagawa, Neville...and brought the team down to 7th place from 1st.

I think it was a matter of time before Bobbins Man came after him, to be honest.
The season of Moyes was always going to be a brief but golden moment and I'm glad we didn't waste it with some shit draw /1-0 win.

reakcja_moyes_na_gola.gif
 
Excellent work, Agent Neville.

http://espnfc.com/news/story/_/id/1...g-name-manchester-united-manager-idea?cc=4716

Neville rejects 'big name' manager idea
April 24, 2014
By Richard Jolly

Former Manchester United captain Gary Neville insists his old club do not need to hire a high-profile manager.

Neville, who made 602 appearances for United and is now a member of England’s coaching staff, believes world-class players can be lured to Old Trafford whether or not there is a big name in the dugout.

The 39-year-old’s former teammate Ryan Giggs is in interim charge after David Moyes’ sacking and the Welshman, who is being assisted by past United players Nicky Butt and Paul Scholes, has no track record in management.

But Neville told Sky Sports: “The suggestion that they need a big manager to attract players to the club, I find that a bit sad to be fair.

"The idea that Manchester United Football Club need to have a sort-of figurehead to be able to attract players is a nonsense as far as I'm concerned.

"Manchester United, as a football club, is big enough in its own right to be able to attract players, and they should be.

"It seems to be pointing in that direction and I suppose at the start of next season, if they can spend the money that they have wisely and there's a new big-name manager then times will be exciting again.

"The reality of it is that it doesn't really matter who the manager is. What matters most to Manchester United fans is that they actually win football matches and get back to where they belong."
 
"The reality of it is that it doesn't really matter who the manager is. What matters most to Manchester United fans is that they actually win football matches and get back to where they belong."


You see what you said there Gary?

They've just got rid of a manager who wasnt winning matches. They need a manager who will win matches.

So it DOES really matter who the manager is.
 
They don't need a big name manager, they need a manager that instils belief in the players, and can gain their trust.

That's the mistake they made with Moyes, nobody believed in him.
 
He won't be unemployed for long. The managers who just avoid the drop with their teams this season are all likely candidates for the sack next season; he should be in the pole position or near the top of the managerial shortlists for those positions, based on his work with Everton.
 
Didn't Moyes claim he was aiming to manage in Germany? Maybe he'll do a McLaren and go abroad for a bit. In England he's surely stuck - the big clubs won't just doubt his ability, they'll also doubt his style of playing. Loads of lower clubs, like Sunderland, might fancy getting him, but I can't see him take on a club that seems to confirm he belongs to that level. So I suspect he'll sit it out for a while and then try his luck in Germany.
 
Didn't Moyes claim he was aiming to manage in Germany? Maybe he'll do a McLaren and go abroad for a bit. In England he's surely stuck - the big clubs won't just doubt his ability, they'll also doubt his style of playing. Loads of lower clubs, like Sunderland, might fancy getting him, but I can't see him take on a club that seems to confirm he belongs to that level. So I suspect he'll sit it out for a while and then try his luck in Germany.

Apparently his reputation has taken a nose-dive in Germany.
Not many know of his work with Everton, but everyone knows about Man Utd.
 
Back
Top Bottom