the_georgian_genius wrote:Buffalo Soldier wrote:And with 2 games in a new league with new teammates.
So a policy for new signings is to play them against the lesser sides but when the big boys come into town we replace them with infeiror players because they are used to the place?the_georgian_genius wrote:Yes it was. Particularly against United where he played ok but we ultaimtely lost so the gamble didn't pay off. Against Chelsea he was used at right back where he won't be tested as much as at centre back and he was playing alongside 3 experienced defenders who have played together on a regular basis..
Wasn't tested as much against Chelsea? He had Ashley Cole and Malouda to contend with and kept them both quiet aswell as having to deal with Anelka and Drogba. The hardest test in world football at this moment.Buffalo Soldier wrote:As Ted says, to play him at centre half against a team like Arsenal and alongside a player who is getting used to a new league and team was an unnecessary risk given that we had Lescott on the bench. Hopefully both Boyata and Mancini will learn from it.
Mancini has nothing (spell-checked) to learn from. He played the better player, no matter if he is 8 years younger than the one on the bench. He is a manager who plays players if they are good enough, not if they are experienced enough. If that was the case then Bridge would of been torn 7 new arse holes on Sunday and the scoreline would of been alot more than 0-3.
I've got to ask, again, is it the thought that the player is being questioned, or the manager?