Slim wrote:john68 wrote:@ Blue Since 76,
In 6 years time City will be stratospheric mate. Trust me Pal, I'm a cab driver and we know everything and I wouldn't lie to you...(would I?). So go and get yer 6 years season ticket.
We are most certainly a project...a fuclin huge one. Probably the biggest football project in the World and despite your protestations, you can offer no evidence to the contrary.
City is a project like no other and this phase is merely the 1st rung on a temporary ladder. let's put it like this...In the winter, you plant the bulbs in the garden. For a long time, the garden looks barren...and you think nothing is happening. Do you think fuck it and dig them all up again to chuck away, or do you wait until the time is right and the 1st shoots start to sprout?
Our reality is that we have barely just begun. What you see now is not what you saw last season...and it won't be what you will be watching next season. Teams take time...Don't dig the bulbs up before they have had chance to sprout.
If you planted bulbs three years ago and nothing was growing, you wouldn't dig them up to find out why?
Analogies in these situations are stupid, but unfortunately for those preaching the same line you did last year and the year before, it's all you have left. I get the feeling you'd be good standing in the trenches back in 1915 saying things like "hold the line" and "stay the course". Essentially making a shitload of noise while saying absolutely fucking nothing.
Some really good debate in this thread, but I can't help going back to something I came across whilst rowing with a rag a few weeks back - because "changing managers doesn't work" is frankly a myth.
Since the arguments for managerial stability usually revolve around the Baconface situation at Old Trafford, I think it is important to understand that he is a one off.....a single example of a club sticking with a manager and it paying off. What is NEVER documented or argues though are the number of clubs who have suffered because of loyalty and trust to an incompetent fuckwit.
The fact of the matter is though, that other clubs have success, and other clubs change their manager. During baconface's tenure:
AC Milan have won 25 trophies including 5 Champions League/European Cups, and had 15 managers
Real Madrid have won 27 trophies and had 25 manager
So I would say that quite clearly - with the very notable exception of Ferguson who had the unbeatable combination of being arguably the most talented manager in history alongside a "golden generation of players" that were the mainstay of his side for a decade, it is the quality of players that is the major factor in winning tropies - the manager, I personally believe is simply the one who sets the direction for the team.
This leads me to believe that if you have the proven quality in your squad, and you are not successful, it is the manager holding the players back that is the problem. Who, when watching us play over the last 15 months, could say, hand on heart, that they feel Mancini's style of play is the right one for this group of players?
That will lead you to the answer that unfortunately, he has never been, and will never be, the right manager to take this club forward
All his work of the last 15 months have been leading to this point, and it is looking likely, based on league and cup form (Villa aside) that we we will bottle it when it comes to the crunch. If that is the case, then there is little reason to keep him - as that was also his failing at Inter, and inability to cope with pressure in big games