lraC Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago 10 minutes ago, davulsukur said: I highly doubt this is true, he will have gone to win every game, he was just a poor manager who couldn't get wins in the PL. If it is actually true, he deserves to be sacked for that alone. Why would Spurs fans pay extortionate amounts of money for a season ticket, knowing the manager is "giving up" on the league? There is the prize money element too. Perhaps not trying in the league has cost them a few million then. Quote
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chaddyrovers Posted 8 hours ago Author Posted 8 hours ago 50 minutes ago, speeeeeeedie said: Allegedly Liverpool were looking at Amorim when Klopp decided to leave but decided against it after he said he'd be playing 3-4-3. They told him that Liverpool's players aren't set up for that system. West Ham interviewed aswell and said no for similar reasons. https://www.skysports.com/football/news/11685/13123981/ruben-amorim-on-west-ham-reports-sporting-boss-apologises-to-clubs-fans-after-confirming-hammers-talks#:~:text=Ruben Amorim has admitted to,not comment at the time. West Ham source reveals the reason why they rejected Ruben Amorim as they searched for a manager in the summer - despite him flying in for an interview - as Man United deal looms | Daily Mail Online https://share.google/9vP2BTqVYUILiExNV 1 Quote
chaddyrovers Posted 8 hours ago Author Posted 8 hours ago 17 minutes ago, davulsukur said: I highly doubt this is true, he will have gone to win every game, he was just a poor manager who couldn't get wins in the PL. If it is actually true, he deserves to be sacked for that alone. Why would Spurs fans pay extortionate amounts of money for a season ticket, knowing the manager is "giving up" on the league? https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/articles/c5yqqy55xjjo.app#:~:text=It was intriguing then that,certain people at the club. Quote
davulsukur Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago 4 minutes ago, chaddyrovers said: https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/articles/c5yqqy55xjjo.app#:~:text=It was intriguing then that,certain people at the club. I know what he said, and we've had this discussion before, I'm not going through it again. Quote
Hasta Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago (edited) To be fair to Ange, he had taken Tottenham to a hugely credible 15th in the Premier League by the end of January window, when he then decided to give up on the league. Edited 7 hours ago by Hasta Quote
Backroom DE. Posted 7 hours ago Backroom Posted 7 hours ago (edited) 1 hour ago, speeeeeeedie said: Allegedly Liverpool were looking at Amorim when Klopp decided to leave but decided against it after he said he'd be playing 3-4-3. They told him that Liverpool's players aren't set up for that system. 58 minutes ago, chaddyrovers said: West Ham interviewed aswell and said no for similar reasons. https://www.skysports.com/football/news/11685/13123981/ruben-amorim-on-west-ham-reports-sporting-boss-apologises-to-clubs-fans-after-confirming-hammers-talks#:~:text=Ruben Amorim has admitted to,not comment at the time. West Ham source reveals the reason why they rejected Ruben Amorim as they searched for a manager in the summer - despite him flying in for an interview - as Man United deal looms | Daily Mail Online https://share.google/9vP2BTqVYUILiExNV Reflects really badly on Man Utd's recruitment team, because it would have been obvious their squad didn't suit that formation either - not just that, but the players they've brought in look no more comfortable playing Amorim's way than the players he inherited. The only positive for them is that when a new manager is finally appointed there, he won't have to worry about disrupting the team by changing the system. Almost anything would suit United's players better than this. I still think it's pitiful when a manager boasts about stubbornly sticking to a system regardless of results, as if that's something to be proud of. It just means you have zero flexibility and a limited understanding of the game as a whole. Edited 7 hours ago by DE. 1 Quote
chaddyrovers Posted 3 hours ago Author Posted 3 hours ago 3 hours ago, DE. said: Reflects really badly on Man Utd's recruitment team, because it would have been obvious their squad didn't suit that formation either - not just that, but the players they've brought in look no more comfortable playing Amorim's way than the players he inherited. The only positive for them is that when a new manager is finally appointed there, he won't have to worry about disrupting the team by changing the system. Almost anything would suit United's players better than this. I still think it's pitiful when a manager boasts about stubbornly sticking to a system regardless of results, as if that's something to be proud of. It just means you have zero flexibility and a limited understanding of the game as a whole. deffo the recruitment at United over the years has been a problem. United's summer recruitment still didn't address the midfield problem or the centre back problem or goalkeeper problem. They need a number 1 keeper and didn't get one, similar with centre back and centre midfielder areas. Why didn't they sign a back up striker like Brighton's Danny Welbeck who would have fitted that role perfectly Why didn't they look at City's keeper Ortega or centre back like Forest's Murillo or midfielder Elliott Anderson? Surely any new Man United head coach will surely move to 4-2-3-1 formation and put Fernandes were he should be playing as a number 10 with Cunha left and Mbeumo on the right with Sesko up front. Amorim won't admit his system didn't work here. The players can't play it and still don't understand how to play it either Quote
speeeeeeedie Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago 4 hours ago, DE. said: Reflects really badly on Man Utd's recruitment team, because it would have been obvious their squad didn't suit that formation either - not just that, but the players they've brought in look no more comfortable playing Amorim's way than the players he inherited. The only positive for them is that when a new manager is finally appointed there, he won't have to worry about disrupting the team by changing the system. Almost anything would suit United's players better than this. I still think it's pitiful when a manager boasts about stubbornly sticking to a system regardless of results, as if that's something to be proud of. It just means you have zero flexibility and a limited understanding of the game as a whole. The upper echelons at Man U are the ultimate culprits. Everything they do is reactive. Last summer was particularly bad. They gave ten Hag a new contract on the back of a cup win, spent millions bringing in "his" players, plus a new director of football yet within 6 months they were both gone. It's negligent business practice. I could bring an upturn in Man U's fortunes. It's that simple. As Chaddy has posted I'd add numbers in midfield to stop them being overrun. Prime N'Golo Kante would struggle in Amorim's system. 1 Quote
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