Nickyboy wrote:I feel like we are playing within ourselves as part of a plan to conserve energy for the business end of the season.
I've got a feeling we will take the handbrake off in the new year and go on one of the long winning runs like we did in Peps two title winning seasons, and part of that this time will be built on the solid defence.
carl_feedthegoat wrote:Playing Stones and Dias is obviously the reason we have the best defense - all the more reason to slate Baldie for changing it in the last game when there was ZERO need to do so.
Our dross upfront has cost us but so too has PeP.....you do not change a winning side if it can be helped and you certainly do not fuck around with 2 key central defenders side by side that do not leak goals.
PrezIke wrote:The analysis after the derby was so shallow and I think is why Pep can’t be bothered with the UK media or media in general.
No one thinks like a manager they think like one who has nothing to lose if they make a mistake, as is the life of a pundit or even journalists who make a living not on tempered reasoning but reactionary analysis that evokes reaction from fans.
This isn’t just the Talk Sport world of analysis. We’re talking the “respected” football media who tbf don’t follow City as much, are shocked that we aren’t scoring/performing well, and we know like to see the bigger clubs fail.
I would say they don’t like to just see us fail, as I listen to enough pods and read enough articles to know they want to see more parity and less dominance, which I get. However, what it does is it skews their perspective to have so much desire to see clubs like us fail that means some views are less likely to appear.
So that means it’s good when they see United losing/suffering, or PSG. They love it and want more.
I would say Liverpool, even being successful, get more sympathy and enjoy more of a bromance from “respected” journalists. Why?
Klopp’s background/media approach, their path to success this time in the face of the evil empires: Utd, City, Chelsea and the decline of the past darling Arsenal.
Liverpool, and at times Spurs, even if they dislike Mourhino, are the closest such journalists get to being an underdog they can root for and also being those who have nostalgia, holding HIGH levels of romance for football’s big club past glories. They love Ajax. They want Forrest and Leeds to be back, and Newcastle with the right owner. We don’t fit the bill, because we weren’t in this category then, and United are now seen as a carpetbagging, Yank cash cow, who cares nothing about these values. Emphasizing this plays to covert xenophobic foreigner stereotypes that City experience in a different way, but adds to its generation of “a story” to generate excitement, even if Liverpool also owned by an American who owns multiple sport clubs.
The point is their biases make it difficult to see things in a way that can recognise that Pep is trying something for the long game.
No it’s much more of “a good story” which isn’t always about selling papers as much as just wanting the attention of a pseudo-intelligent hot take, than to ponder alternative and nuanced views. Some journalists are good with words but that doesn’t mean their analysis is as good as the words themselves. Barnay Ronan is a bit of this to me, for example.
It’s like a quality action film director like Christopher Nolan (who I love btw) versus a documentary film maker interested in humanity and social conditions impacting behavior. They have different talents, but just because your good at the visuals and some good story telling with a bit of depth that creates drama and action, doesn’t mean you have the depth and insight as the latter.
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