phips wrote:JonnyAsh wrote:This will be all about a power struggle if anything...remember when Mancini joined, there was only Cook and Khaldoon, both non football men, Cook was mainly an administrator, and facilitator for Mancini. So Mancini was given carte blanche regarding training, transfers, team policy etc.
Now, the two Spaniards have been brought to oversea the structure and implement a template for how the whole club runs, including training, style of play and transfers. Mancini, who has been successful at doing things his way, suddenly feels he is strangled by club policies. He quite rightly, still wants control over certain aspects.
The two upstairs, have been brought to do a job, and they need their ideas to be implemented, but in Mancini, they have a manager who sees things a different way. It could be said that so far Txiki Begiristain and Soriano, so far haven't had their programmes tested because of Mancini.. this is not about results and success, but about power, and the club structure.
Pellegrini is seen as a facilitator for the two upstairs, someone who can put through, their ideas and implement their template..Why bring these two in, if they were going to be another Cook? Rightly or wrongly, this is my take...it's not about results and achievements so far, as Mancini has more or less delivered, but Mancini is not a man to compromise over his ways, and he will see his position greatly stifled.
smart. nicely put. mancini's stubbornness is one of the big issues that i have with him.
With all due respect, this is some fantasy you're having here. Mancini wanted Marwood replaced and he got it. I can't imagine he was complaining to see Begiristain come in. You don't know Mancini and the Spaniards don't see things the same way or that Mancini 'feels strangled'. There's a lot of creative writing going on since we had a meeting with Isco's agent.