Grob wrote:
I dont think Guardiola is the immediate answer, i think he would take time to adapt if he did come which could be a 3 season thing and not ideal.
I think if Mourinho came we would win the league next season. Thats my opinion and I think the mans record backs that up.
brite blu sky wrote:I'm not arguing, just stating the obvious really. The majority of comments on the board right now are all going overboard, so maybe it is a reaction to that to try and balance the perspective.
Bottom line is Mancini has to stay tbh. There are two main threads to judge him on, one how the players he inherited shape up, two how the players he brought in shape up.
Assuming that all managers make some mistakes on players which they only find out over the course of time, particularly at times of high pressure.
I think Mancini has been prepared to gamble on players which is probably a good trait overall. I rekon the main thing is more about how players shake out.. which basically takes at least a season. They all started well and looked great, the majority have lost the plot as it has got tough.
Mancini or any manager has to find that out.
After yesterdays game it is no small wonder why he always plays Yaya and relied on Silva for nearly every game. No-one else is stepping up.. or more probably can't. The players on the pitch yesterday knew that and it sapped them. The faces of the coaches showed it too, they knew damn well that no-one on the pitch was going to lift the team's confidence.
My conclusion is that a team can never allow itself to be reliant on any one player. I said it about Tevez last season and now about Yaya and Silva. However getting a team to be able to have more than one linchpin/playmaker is a pure art, partly because you need two outstanding players playing very similar roles within the squad.. two egos possibly.. and all that goes with it.
Personally i think that Mancini knows this and quite possibly knows what it takes. I think he also has experience of that.. if maybe not enough yet. Unlike, i think Grob, I dont think he is a second tier manager like Benitez, I think he is first tier and will prove it.
The doubts I have are the levels of performance Mancini is getting from the English players, apart from Micah they really have been mediocre.
Ted Hughes wrote:brite blu sky wrote:I'm not arguing, just stating the obvious really. The majority of comments on the board right now are all going overboard, so maybe it is a reaction to that to try and balance the perspective.
Bottom line is Mancini has to stay tbh. There are two main threads to judge him on, one how the players he inherited shape up, two how the players he brought in shape up.
Assuming that all managers make some mistakes on players which they only find out over the course of time, particularly at times of high pressure.
I think Mancini has been prepared to gamble on players which is probably a good trait overall. I rekon the main thing is more about how players shake out.. which basically takes at least a season. They all started well and looked great, the majority have lost the plot as it has got tough.
Mancini or any manager has to find that out.
After yesterdays game it is no small wonder why he always plays Yaya and relied on Silva for nearly every game. No-one else is stepping up.. or more probably can't. The players on the pitch yesterday knew that and it sapped them. The faces of the coaches showed it too, they knew damn well that no-one on the pitch was going to lift the team's confidence.
My conclusion is that a team can never allow itself to be reliant on any one player. I said it about Tevez last season and now about Yaya and Silva. However getting a team to be able to have more than one linchpin/playmaker is a pure art, partly because you need two outstanding players playing very similar roles within the squad.. two egos possibly.. and all that goes with it.
Personally i think that Mancini knows this and quite possibly knows what it takes. I think he also has experience of that.. if maybe not enough yet. Unlike, i think Grob, I dont think he is a second tier manager like Benitez, I think he is first tier and will prove it.
The doubts I have are the levels of performance Mancini is getting from the English players, apart from Micah they really have been mediocre.
Lescott & Hart have not been mediocre & Barry has performed at his best probably more times than Silva & five times more than Nasri, Dzeko, Balotelli or Kolarov & I've contributed more to the team than Savic .
Milner & Johnson have both produced some absolute quality & some real mediocrity. The question is; would another manager of handled them better or is it their level ? We may not find out until both are gone.
Personally I think Bob is a top manager but I think he's absolutely crap at man management, whatever the nationality of the player & would be a dismal failure at Blackburn or Stoke in the same way Pulis or Keane would fail at City. Horses for courses. Bob needs quality players for his methods to work & he's in the position to get them. I do actually believe Moyes could do both but will never get the chance to prove it anywhere.
As I've said before though, if we're keeping Bob, that's fine by me but I don't trust him 100% after the last game & if the players don't play for him in the remaining games, he is dead in the water. If that happens now, there's no chance that will change, he will have to go or the shit will hit the fan & we'll be in big trouble next season, with transfer request all over the shop etc etc.
These games are crucial.
Dameerto wrote:Some of his comments after the game were pretty close to unacceptable from a manager. (In my unqualified opinion).
Renato_CTID wrote:Dameerto wrote:Some of his comments after the game were pretty close to unacceptable from a manager. (In my unqualified opinion).
The same for me, mate! How could he seriously tell he never watched the 1st terrible foul of Mario? Why didn't he replace Mario as soon as possible with Tevez, AJ or Dzeko? Did Mancio understand he's working in Premier League, not in our stupid overrated Serie A?
Dameerto wrote:Renato_CTID wrote:Dameerto wrote:Some of his comments after the game were pretty close to unacceptable from a manager. (In my unqualified opinion).
The same for me, mate! How could he seriously tell he never watched the 1st terrible foul of Mario? Why didn't he replace Mario as soon as possible with Tevez, AJ or Dzeko? Did Mancio understand he's working in Premier League, not in our stupid overrated Serie A?
He also ensured we would receive low bids from Italy for Mario in the summer rather than market rate.
Dunnylad wrote:Does Mourinho give the kids a chance or does he buy quality players? Because if it's the latter he doesn't fit into our long term plan & is not the right choice. Guardiola has inherited that investment in youth, but once Xavi et al get too old is the production line still there or is it the end of the cycle? As much as I hate to admit Whiskey Nose has managed to reinvent successful rag bastard teams quite a few times now. All in all I'd prefer us to hang onto Mancini, but I'm disappointed enough to be swayed as I can't stand the rag fuckers with their condescending twatish attitude
Dameerto wrote:
He gave Balotelli a chance, and probably the greatest motivator/man manager in the modern game came to the conclusion that he was unmanageable.
EEE wrote:Grob wrote:
I dont think Guardiola is the immediate answer, i think he would take time to adapt if he did come which could be a 3 season thing and not ideal.
I think if Mourinho came we would win the league next season. Thats my opinion and I think the mans record backs that up.
I agree it's hard to argue about Mourinhos track record. However, judging by the same track record he's not staying very long at the clubs he's managing. He wouldn't stay more than 2-3 seasons at City and my humble opinion is that the manager we believe is right for the next season; the same man we must believe, is not only the right one in five years - but also wanting to be here in fiver years. That "long term aspect" must be a hygiene factor when making our decision on who's to place our trust upon.
Mourinho is the Zlatan Ibrahimovic of manager´s. He's wins the titles wherever he goes but then get bored and wants new challenges so he moves on to another club. Ibrahimovic has won the domestic league every year for the last 8 years - for 5 different clubs. Mourinho has won the domestic league 6 times within the last 8 years - for 4 different clubs. Successful yes, loyal and a long term option; no.
Dunnylad wrote:Dameerto wrote:
He gave Balotelli a chance, and probably the greatest motivator/man manager in the modern game came to the conclusion that he was unmanageable.
Mancini gave Balotelli his chance surely?
Mancio4ever wrote:If he has lost the dressing room, he has to go.
City comes first and above everything, including a good and wise project.
time will tell soon in the last 6.
Ted Hughes wrote:Personally I think Bob is a top manager but I think he's absolutely crap at man management, whatever the nationality of the player & would be a dismal failure at Blackburn or Stoke in the same way Pulis or Keane would fail at City. Horses for courses. Bob needs quality players for his methods to work & he's in the position to get them. I do actually believe Moyes could do both but will never get the chance to prove it anywhere.
As I've said before though, if we're keeping Bob, that's fine by me but I don't trust him 100% after the last game & if the players don't play for him in the remaining games, he is dead in the water. If that happens now, there's no chance that will change, he will have to go or the shit will hit the fan & we'll be in big trouble next season, with transfer request all over the shop etc etc.
These games are crucial.
DoomMerchant wrote:
he's saying that Mourinho gave Balotelli a chance to play and show his worth and he fucked it off and Mourinho labeled him as impossible and unwanted.
get it?
Grob wrote:Ted Hughes wrote:Personally I think Bob is a top manager but I think he's absolutely crap at man management, whatever the nationality of the player & would be a dismal failure at Blackburn or Stoke in the same way Pulis or Keane would fail at City. Horses for courses. Bob needs quality players for his methods to work & he's in the position to get them. I do actually believe Moyes could do both but will never get the chance to prove it anywhere.
As I've said before though, if we're keeping Bob, that's fine by me but I don't trust him 100% after the last game & if the players don't play for him in the remaining games, he is dead in the water. If that happens now, there's no chance that will change, he will have to go or the shit will hit the fan & we'll be in big trouble next season, with transfer request all over the shop etc etc.
These games are crucial.
You cant say he's a top manager then say he's a crap man manager! Clearly he isnt a top manager if he cant man manage!
I agree though that these next 6 are crucial for Mancini. He needs to start winning again, and in style to get another shot at it.
The thing is, marooned in second place as we are, these arent particulally crucial games to some of the players with the Euro's looming, there isnt really anything to play for.
A continuation of the last 4 months will probably seal his fate, and most likely should. We've suddenly gone from being a dominating force to being some kind of comeback kings, which hasnt got us anywhere. We have gone backwards since the start of the season and I havent seen any signs of the rot stopping for a while.
brite blu sky wrote:I'm not arguing, just stating the obvious really. The majority of comments on the board right now are all going overboard, so maybe it is a reaction to that to try and balance the perspective.
Bottom line is Mancini has to stay tbh. There are two main threads to judge him on, one how the players he inherited shape up, two how the players he brought in shape up.
Assuming that all managers make some mistakes on players which they only find out over the course of time, particularly at times of high pressure.
I think Mancini has been prepared to gamble on players which is probably a good trait overall. I rekon the main thing is more about how players shake out.. which basically takes at least a season. They all started well and looked great, the majority have lost the plot as it has got tough.
Mancini or any manager has to find that out.
After yesterdays game it is no small wonder why he always plays Yaya and relied on Silva for nearly every game. No-one else is stepping up.. or more probably can't. The players on the pitch yesterday knew that and it sapped them. The faces of the coaches showed it too, they knew damn well that no-one on the pitch was going to lift the team's confidence.
My conclusion is that a team can never allow itself to be reliant on any one player. I said it about Tevez last season and now about Yaya and Silva. However getting a team to be able to have more than one linchpin/playmaker is a pure art, partly because you need two outstanding players playing very similar roles within the squad.. two egos possibly.. and all that goes with it.
Personally i think that Mancini knows this and quite possibly knows what it takes. I think he also has experience of that.. if maybe not enough yet. Unlike, i think Grob, I dont think he is a second tier manager like Benitez, I think he is first tier and will prove it.
The doubts I have are the levels of performance Mancini is getting from the English players, apart from Micah they really have been mediocre.
poh wrote:
Got to agree with this,there are players in the team who have failed to step up time and time again.
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