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Dark Days 4 Manchester Clubs

PostPosted: Tue Dec 13, 2011 3:36 pm
by Bluemoon16
With each of the Manchester duo suffering an early elimination from their Champions League campaigns, the media will surely be highlighting these shocking events for the rest of the season.

It is not the end of an era of English dominance over Europe as mourning columnists have written since last Wednesday. An end needs a start and if it’s someone’s era, it’s Barcelona’s. They won the Champions League three times in the last six years.

Despite Manchester City’s fine league form, the team’s early Champions League exit has brought some to a sudden realization that club manager Roberto Mancini’s record in European competitions has never been fruitful.

Actually, his career is marred with major blurs in European football as he struggled to lead a strong Inter Milan – a team which largely depended on stars they signed from then-demoted Juventus – beyond the second round of the Champions League.

Still City’s critics are exaggerating the size of what many see as a catastrophe.

Never since Werder Bremen’s exit in the 2007 Champions League has a club been eliminated despite accumulating double figures in the group stage. The fact that it was a club like Napoli which advanced ahead of City should be a consolation for mourning fans and good news for the neutrals.

While City attained their ‘big club’ status through the generous cash injections of club owner Sheikh Mansour –who has spent a mind-blowing £800m since buying the club in 2008– Napoli’s board has been practicing patience in a time where everyone in Europe has been spending much more than what’s in their wallets.

A cumulative sum of £344 million was invested by the English club to sign players during the transfer windows in the last four years – three of which are during Sheikh Mansour’s era. Last year’s £133 million wage bill eclipsed the club’s relatively poor £125 million income.

Meanwhile Napoli is a self-sufficient company which handles its wage bills carefully and uses the revenue it generates to operate its activities transfer market.

The club reported a £293,458 profit at the end of last season, a respectable sum if compared to the losses most Champions League clubs have been reporting on annual basis recently.

The club has made steady improvement since its promotion to Serie A just four years ago. Since the club struggled in the lower divisions of Italian football, the board spent approximately £141 million to reshape the squad in the last four years. That is more than 2.4 times less than what City has spent in the same period.

The club has depended on its scouting department to make shrew signings and build a team capable of challenging for the Serie A crown.

And most importantly, Napoli managed to match their English opponents in the Manchester club’s own stadium. The Naples side even outclassed their petro-dollar-rich rivals in Italy.

What amplifies the amount of disappointment is City’s superb start to the season. They were seen as an unbreakable team. But hey, the last time something deemed unbreakable sailed from English shores, the outcome was similar.

This time, however, I can’t see how the ship’s captain is the man to blame. While some might be skeptical about Mancini’s performance, I think the manager has done well despite his team’s premature exit from Europe’s elite club competition.

Given the history of heavy-spending owners and their determination to clinch immediate success, Mancini has the right to be worried about any gaffe he might commit while serving as City manager.

Perhaps the only consolation for the Blue side of Manchester was that their city rivals suffered the same horrible fate.

Had there an Early Shame Award presented by a Champions League committee, Manchester United would be uncontested as they scoop the prize.

Ferguson watched his team turn in lackluster displays and get kicked out of the group stages, finishing behind Portuguese Liga runner-up Benfica and Swiss Super League champions Basel in Group C.

To make matters worse for the Scottish manager, his team won only twice, recording both wins against tournament debutants Otelul Galati.

What adds to United fans’ disappointment is the high level of expectations which they had placed on the shoulders of their players.

Despite the obvious weaknesses in the side – like relying on 38-year-old Ryan Giggs – pundits were adamant that United would have a glorious European run as the team cruised to promising results in the opening weeks of the season.

Ferguson must be struggling to cope with two new realities which have smacked the faces of Manchester United fans around the world; first, United gets knocked off the perch in the Premier League by none other than City, and now they cannot overcome inferior sides in Europe.

Of course, Mancini looks in envy at Ferguson whose 25-year-service for the club means that his job is secure. The clubs are set to square off against one another in the Premier League title race this season.

Should United manage to change their fortunes and beat City for the league title, Mancini may then find it very hard to keep his job – and for a relatively decent reason.
By Z. Sahli
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/979487-these-are-dark-days-for-the-manchester-clubs

Re: Dark Days 4 Manchester Clubs

PostPosted: Tue Dec 13, 2011 4:48 pm
by SORTED
Where the fuck have you crawled from you?

I'd suggest you take your copy and pasted drivel elsewhere you cock end.

Re: Dark Days 4 Manchester Clubs

PostPosted: Tue Dec 13, 2011 4:54 pm
by Crossie
Some proper WUMs on here, signing their posts with their names.

Day days? We've never had it better son!

Re: Dark Days 4 Manchester Clubs

PostPosted: Tue Dec 13, 2011 5:00 pm
by SORTED
Crossie wrote:Some proper WUMs on here, signing their posts with their names.

Day days? We've never had it better son!


...and to think some thick cunts on here will take him seriously!!!

Re: Dark Days 4 Manchester Clubs

PostPosted: Tue Dec 13, 2011 5:01 pm
by Superbia in proelia
If these are our dark days what were the seasons out of the premier league or even fighting for survival classed as?!

Re: Dark Days 4 Manchester Clubs

PostPosted: Tue Dec 13, 2011 5:29 pm
by Yffi_88
Fuck these horrible little copy and paste blog posts right off. ONE defeat in 14 games by a few poor decisions.

I dont want to know what a load of people that have no idea of my club or what its like to support them think.

Dark days? is mancini right for the job? - FUCK OFF.

Hes won us an FA cup and we're sat at the top of the league. The 'plan' was a 4 year one and we're only 2 years in.

If it was your opinion then fair enough but you've just gone looking for negative stories and copied and pasted them.

Re: Dark Days 4 Manchester Clubs

PostPosted: Tue Dec 13, 2011 5:51 pm
by Bluemoon16
Yffi_88 wrote:Fuck these horrible little copy and paste blog posts right off. ONE defeat in 14 games by a few poor decisions.

I dont want to know what a load of people that have no idea of my club or what its like to support them think.

Dark days? is mancini right for the job? - FUCK OFF.

Hes won us an FA cup and we're sat at the top of the league. The 'plan' was a 4 year one and we're only 2 years in.

If it was your opinion then fair enough but you've just gone looking for negative stories and copied and pasted them.

I read all kind of City articles everyday and I thought I would share the negative ones with my fellow fans, but thanks for all the insults I got in return.

Re: Dark Days 4 Manchester Clubs

PostPosted: Tue Dec 13, 2011 6:07 pm
by Yffi_88
Bluemoon16 wrote:
Yffi_88 wrote:Fuck these horrible little copy and paste blog posts right off. ONE defeat in 14 games by a few poor decisions.

I dont want to know what a load of people that have no idea of my club or what its like to support them think.

Dark days? is mancini right for the job? - FUCK OFF.

Hes won us an FA cup and we're sat at the top of the league. The 'plan' was a 4 year one and we're only 2 years in.

If it was your opinion then fair enough but you've just gone looking for negative stories and copied and pasted them.

I read all kind of City articles everyday and I thought I would share the negative ones with my fellow fans, but thanks for all the insults I got in return.


Apologies for the insults. Just seems like you're taking the piss with the gloomy posts. Theres enough knee-jerking about at the minute. Id rather hear YOUR opinions than some wind-up doom-mongerer. Again, apologies. Probably a bad time to be posting this.

Re: Dark Days 4 Manchester Clubs

PostPosted: Tue Dec 13, 2011 6:25 pm
by Bluemoon16
[/quote]
Yffi_88 wrote:
Bluemoon16 wrote:
Yffi_88 wrote:Fuck these horrible little copy and paste blog posts right off. ONE defeat in 14 games by a few poor decisions.

I dont want to know what a load of people that have no idea of my club or what its like to support them think.

Dark days? is mancini right for the job? - FUCK OFF.

Hes won us an FA cup and we're sat at the top of the league. The 'plan' was a 4 year one and we're only 2 years in.

If it was your opinion then fair enough but you've just gone looking for negative stories and copied and pasted them.

I read all kind of City articles everyday and I thought I would share the negative ones with my fellow fans, but thanks for all the insults I got in return.


Apologies for the insults. Just seems like you're taking the piss with the gloomy posts. Theres enough knee-jerking about at the minute. Id rather hear YOUR opinions than some wind-up doom-mongerer. Again, apologies. Probably a bad time to be posting this.

No worries mate... My opinion is that we are the best club in the country with most beautiful football ever.. I would have loved to stay unbeaten bit longer, but everyone makes mistakes and every team has a bad day including us. Nevertheless, our team is learing in the process and success is not achieved over night. We as fans have to learn that we are no longer a midtable team and everyone is waiting for us to fail, we need to come to terms with all the negative stuf thrown at us whenever we dont achieve the expected.

Re: Dark Days 4 Manchester Clubs

PostPosted: Tue Dec 13, 2011 6:49 pm
by Beefymcfc
Reading the article it's quite clear that it's written in an effort to deride Man City with a bit of United thrown in to make it palpable. We, as a club, are not in the 'Dark Days' as insinuated but instead, still riding high on the crest of a wave, regardless of our CL exit. Compare that to a club that has massive debt that has to rely on CL and Cup money to service that debt, knowing they have a far inferior squad to those around them and having to rely on their reputation to get them through games?

If it was an accurate article, taking each clubs circumstance and fans opinions into account, then it would have started with the problems over at Old Trafford rather than taking some cheap shots at City.

Usual self-enhancing drivel from some internet wannabe journalist. Look at me, Look at me.

Re: Dark Days 4 Manchester Clubs

PostPosted: Tue Dec 13, 2011 7:10 pm
by Chinners
Oi Bluemoon16 ... stop stepping on my toes, I'm the copy and paste B*ll*x man around here!!






ps: Good work.