Adisa
likes to take afvanadva wothowi doubt
I don't understand what people are asking for, we sack him?
Still a completely different kettle of fish. Man Utd is one of the biggest clubs in the world, not just our league. There fans would have had zero expectations when he arrived either.Except Sporting are one of the big three in the league they play in, and Amorim won his league by 10 points last year.
I don't understand what people are asking for, we sack him?
I think it’s a bigger issue than you’re making it out to be. The problem isn’t the individual players but that the squad, after enough transfer windows, will start to become lopsided. Too many centre-backs, few if any traditional wingers, and some wingbacks who may be useful as wingers but not as useful as actual wingers. It would be expensive to reverse that and would mean that, for some time, transfers would, as they are now, again focus on adapting the squad rather than necessarily improving it.
In the first half we created nothing and our best chances were set pieces, the second half once Bruno came on we looked better going forward but it was still the same with zero width and never forcing the Wolves keeper into a save which at Old Trafford is simply unforgivable yet this has happened on multiple occasions.I didn’t watch the game, only online highlights, so honest question, shouldn’t we have scored a couple today easily before their goal? Looked like we had loads of good chances compared to Wolves from the onlime commentary I saw.
This is exactly my point as the bare minimum would be to improve what we do have as the Wolves manager has and as Moyes has but Amorim hasn’t even done that then everyone puts it down to not having the type of players he wants, nor does Moyes or the Wolves manager yet they’ve at least improved what they have.Wolves manager joined them a month after Amorim joined us, has a similar set-up and has collected more points than Amorim. In fact, Wolves are now on 5 league wins in a row. Amorim is yet to win back-to-back prem games
it's been very bad. If we don't win the EL, then we have to start considering things
Which is exactly what’s needed, to get the best out of the good players we have and to stabilise the club whilst building a strong foundation for us to build upon. I really like Amorim and I’d love for him to succeed BUT he’s not improving the players we have and is continually losing matches even when playing at times a back 7, if he doesn’t win Europa then I think he’s gone by Christmas as this can’t keep continuing.Carlo is known for being able to push good sides to become title winning sides. He gets the best out of good players but he isnt a magician
Yeah, I know, it’s bizarre to see people questioning the worst-performing manager in the history of the club.I don't understand what people are asking for, we sack him?
We've already been beaten to Quenda by Chelsea. If Arsenal come in for Gyokeres do you think Amorim's connection is enough? I don't.I disagree with this. I think we will be in the mix with all the players we're actually interested in buying. The league position won't be more important than the stature and history of the club, or in the case of someone like Gyokeres, the existing relationship he has with the manager.
Still a completely different kettle of fish. Man Utd is one of the biggest clubs in the world, not just our league. There fans would have had zero expectations when he arrived either.
You can't excuse Amorim from your comment just because you don't want him to fail.
He’s doing worse than Hodgson did at Liverpool, worse than Bruce at Newcastle (examples don’t get much worse than that).Wolves manager joined them a month after Amorim joined us, has a similar set-up and has collected more points than Amorim. In fact, Wolves are now on 5 league wins in a row. Amorim is yet to win back-to-back prem games
it's been very bad. If we don't win the EL, then we have to start considering things
Then he has to go. But who has suggested keeping him if we get recruitment right and we're still this bad?And if we buy an Osimhen or Gykores next year and the team still averages 1 point per PL match played then what?
We've already been beaten to Quenda by Chelsea. If Arsenal come in for Gyokeres do you think Amorim's connection is enough? I don't.
True. Though I'd say it is rather unlikely that ETHs and Amorims careers are going to be over sometime soon. No matter how their United times have been.It's not really philosophy but the calibre of managers being hired where the difference is. Many of PSG's managers have gone on to have success at other clubs. Almost none have achieved the same feat at United with the exception of Moyes who won the Europa with West Ham. Erik and Amorim were from a credibility standpoint in the same bracket, one dimensional leagues (respectfully) where it's far harder to assess their competitive transitions to the premier league given the small sample size of their successes.
From what I know, ETH was being looked at by Liverpool and Bayern while Ruben was on the shortlist for Atletico, City and Liverpool. The last one was quite far advanced but ended abruptly due to a feckup by the consultant who scheduled a meeting with another team (Spurs I think) which has been seen as some sort of affront by Liverpool. So I can see your point but hindsight is always 20/20 and remember the reactions on here when we were brought in contact with Tuchel or Emery. They certainly didn't have the greatest standing, in Emerys case that changed a bit with Villa but before...Sometimes calibre is often intangible because two contravening points can exist without being a contradiction. For instance Amorim perceivably at Sporting would be classed as one of the best young managers in football and so would Alonso. However, despite the two sharing this reputation Alonso is a higher calibre manager compared to Amorim. Alonso has been likened to walk into most elite jobs, Amorim was linked with one or two and none ever came to substance. If Alonso was in Amorim's position Liverpool would have bit the bullet in hiring him for instance. This is the point I'm making about the contrast between PSG's managers and United's.
Makes sense but you make it look as if the manager would have been the only moving piece. You can use "bad recruitment" and "having no overarching systematic approach and plan" as a replacement for "calibre of manager" and it would work just fine.I look at that PSG list and the calibre of managers dictates that they should have won the UCL within the last ten years, they have therefore underperformed. I look at the same list of United coaches and it's not surprise that the club has been like a yo-yo with regards to even qualifying for Europe let alone competing within Europe.
Fair point and in conclusion, we'd be not far apart standpoint wise. As said before, I personally don't see myself as an Amorim supporter, I am just against ripping all up once again in the blind hope of finally landing the jackpot. While wasting more and more money on paying off former coaches. I am happy that Amorim seems to agree with some of the issues I consider issues (verticality, athleticism, workrate, organisation, discipline) and therefor, I think he isn't going to do more damage for now than there already is. But apart from that, I guess nobody know whether he the right one for the job. Maybe there is no "right one for the job". Maybe the path has to be throughout a minefield hoping not to lose a leg or an arm.The overwhelming consensus in the forum last summer when Erik served up his boomerang midfield tactics was that there was no outstanding candidate to be his replacement. I would rather be wrong but critically assessing Amorim there's very little going for him. It's true that that the squad is unbalanced and lacks standout quality in certain positions but how much of this season is relative to his calibre of management? Because a line needs to be drawn in how much of this is him and how much the players is. Unfortunately many are requiring a few transfer windows to make that distinction but I think there's enough feasibility to determine some of it now.
Now I'm not advocating for Ruben to sacked but I don't see him being a success at the club and I'd be generally surprised if even after three seasons he finished in the top four.
Did you think Mourinho should've stayed at Porto in 2005 as well ?
Not yet. We don't win the Europa then the question 100% should be asked. He's very lucky we're able to back door are way into the champions league via the 2nd rate competition we're in. Whatever manager doesn't get the result should be shown the door (assuming it's us vs Spurs)I don't understand what people are asking for, we sack him?
Hows that relevant. I didn't think Amorim should have stayed at Sporting all his career. Thats not what we are talking about?
Did you want to compare records of Jose vs Amorim for their first 22 games?
Difference is Jose stepped up when he left Porto. Didn't come up with constant excuses to buy time.
Remember as well when some fans used to call Pep a chequebook manager? And now thats exactly what people are advocating for with AmorimRemember the season when Guardiola won the league without a recognized striker up front before they signed Haaland? And tweaked his system to accommodate Haaland and won the league again? Good managers apparently adapt to the players they have and don't rigidly stick to a single system. Who knew.
Now we have posters absolving the manager of every blame for having us near relegation zone and putting it all on a single striker. Sure the squad isn't good enough to be top 6 or top 8 but its easily good enough to be atleast midtable. Amorim has been horribly underperforming since he's come in yet has every excuse under the sun made for him for some unknown reasons.
I don’t even know what you’re saying here. Just comes off as bad faith. You don’t think a manager’s job is to get results? Fair enough, carry on - I have nothing for you
So why did you bring him up then?If you followed Jose's arrival at Chelsea, it was in the middle of a massive infusion of sugardaddy oligarch cash from Roman at the time, which allowed him to hit the ground running and achieve immediate success. Amorim's arrival at Untied is light years apart from Jose going to Chelsea.
It annoyed me when Dorgu whipped in a lovely cross and nobody got near it. But then a few minutes later he did the same thing and yet again, nobody made a run. It was so obvious what he was going to do, and I'm just a fat guy eating crisps on my sofa.We are creating chances, some games you don't get as many, but Hojlund is never in the right place. He does not anticipate what the likes of Garnacho are going to do. That is why top goalscorers are what they are. Instinct. So in the end he gets ignored, because players think they will do a better job of scoring.
We weren't terrible yeah. But we created an xG of 1.1. People act as if we blew Wolves away. We should've won with what both teams created, but it wasn't this daylight robbery people paint it to be
Learn something new everyday. Fair enough. Still think Gyokeres would choose champions league football over Amorim, especially if we aren't offering the huge wages that have been the draw for the big players we have got over the last few years.That's not really what happened. Amorim had an agreement with Sporting that he wouldn't poach any of his old players this season. Therefore, even if he wanted Quenda, the deal Chelsea made was to allow the player to remain at Sporting for another season before going to England in 2026.
So why did you bring him up then?
Respectfully if you can't keep relevant to what we were talking about then lets just leave it here.
Is it not a possibility that he's also losing because he's not good enough? Or are we back to the binary decision of blaming either the manager or the playersHe's losing for the reasons that have already been discussed ad nauseum earlier in this and other threads. His #9 isn't scoring goals, which is subervting our attacks and preventing us from being effective in the final 3rd. He is stuck with Hojlund this year. If Hojlund isn't up for the job, then the entire team will suffer since Zirkzee isn't a goal scorer either.
Disagree. I learned how important the manager is after we lost Fergie.Not particularly attached to Amorim, and will have no issue if he departs next season if things haven't obviously and quickly improved.
But in general I think people massively overrate the importance of managers, and that's captured in the extremely manager-centred discussions on this forum.
Maybe something like 70% of a team's success is simply down to the players on the pitch alone, and by extension recuitment. And with recruitment having been our primary failing over the last decade, I don't see much point in over-focusing on the manager's performance until the improvements that need to happen there have time to take hold.
Equally, if we do improve after a summer of recruitment there's no reason to assume Amorim is suddenly the messiah. We have such obvious problems with our playing personnel and are currently so bad that it would be weird if we didn't get better.
As is today felt like a pre-season game with nothing to play for, and I guess that'll increasingly be the case for the rest of our league games too.
you acknowledged the team isn't good and should be at least midtable which is 10th, but their 14th currently. So the difference is 4 spots currently, what are you are suggesting he isn't good enough and should be gone?Remember the season when Guardiola won the league without a recognized striker up front before they signed Haaland? And tweaked his system to accommodate Haaland and won the league again? Good managers apparently adapt to the players they have and don't rigidly stick to a single system. Who knew.
Now we have posters absolving the manager of every blame for having us near relegation zone and putting it all on a single striker. Sure the squad isn't good enough to be top 6 or top 8 but its easily good enough to be atleast midtable. Amorim has been horribly underperforming since he's come in yet has every excuse under the sun made for him for some unknown reasons.
Yeah to blame it on a single striker isn't the way. It's a poor squad and a lack of adaptation to the squad from Amorim.Remember the season when Guardiola won the league without a recognized striker up front before they signed Haaland? And tweaked his system to accommodate Haaland and won the league again? Good managers apparently adapt to the players they have and don't rigidly stick to a single system. Who knew.
Now we have posters absolving the manager of every blame for having us near relegation zone and putting it all on a single striker. Sure the squad isn't good enough to be top 6 or top 8 but its easily good enough to be atleast midtable. Amorim has been horribly underperforming since he's come in yet has every excuse under the sun made for him for some unknown reasons.
Is it not a possibility that he's also losing because he's not good enough? Or are we back to the binary decision of blaming either the manager or the players
The manager is very important but the quality of players is still the most important thing. Fergie had some amazing players under him, just like Guardiola, just like Ancelotti.Disagree. I learned how important the manager is after we lost Fergie.
But City just spent more money in January than all of the other teams in the league combined, just so they could crawl up to the CL spots? I'm not sure that wanting the manager to get some decent players, to replace the lackluster ones we have, is the same thing as Pep joining top teams and still splashing the cash every year.Remember as well when some fans used to call Pep a chequebook manager? And now thats exactly what people are advocating for with Amorim![]()
People saying we are not set up to score goals. Even if you are, there has to be a spearhead at the top end to put it in the net. The fact they bought him for that sort of money, but then added to our issues getting Zirkzee, who I actually like, but is not a striker, has made our issues worse. If they sign another project in the summer for up front we will not improve. I actually think, barring the goalie, he has got the defence playing pretty well. That is a difficult job when we cannot keep the same personel in there for a big number of games. Prefer Bruno deeper so he can create from there. Being a striker for United can be very hit and miss, everybody brings up the great strikers of SAF's era, but we also signed so called prolific strikers in the distant pass who wilted under the pressure.It annoyed me when Dorgu whipped in a lovely cross and nobody got near it. But then a few minutes later he did the same thing and yet again, nobody made a run. It was so obvious what he was going to do, and I'm just a fat guy eating crisps on my sofa.
A loss?Its just the usual reaction following a loss.
For obvious reasons. Because he came from the same league with no prior experience coaching a big premier league club. The difference between them is Jose had massive backing of funds and bought Drogba, Ricardo Carvalho, Paulo Ferreira, Robben, Alex (CB), Kezman, Tiago Mendes and others in window #1, and Essien, Diarra, and Crespo in window #2. Amorim has yet to have even his first window to strengthen accordingly.
I have no problem with spending big money rejuvenating a below par, unbalanced squad. Do you?Remember as well when some fans used to call Pep a chequebook manager? And now thats exactly what people are advocating for with Amorim![]()
The excuse was Pep has to sign players to fit his system. Thats exactly what Amorim has to do.But City just spent more money in January than all of the other teams in the league combined, just so they could crawl up to the CL spots? I'm not sure that wanting the manager to get some decent players, to replace the lackluster ones we have, is the same thing as Pep joining top teams and still splashing the cash every year.
Pep inherited a squad that was capable of challenging and won the title the penultimate season before, if I remember correctly.Remember as well when some fans used to call Pep a chequebook manager? And now thats exactly what people are advocating for with Amorim![]()
Plenty are defending the manager.? When the Wolves manager took over they were the worst team in the league with Southampton. He has now built a team who has won 5 in a row while we haven't won two games in a row. I am all for giving managers time but Amorim has shown no adapting skills what so ever. Starting to doubt this project will he be given 250m this summer to buy his players only to be sacked in November and next manager complaining about the lack of balance in the squad. Don't get me wrong I like Amorim and I want him to do well but the results under him are appalling.Nobody has claimed that
But we didn't have exotic managers before and look where squad composition led us until right now! Wingers who aren't facilitating for others, nor score, nor working for the team (Rash, Sancho). With fullbacks that do nothing in attack, one ballwinner who isn't considered immobile, no striker who scores and two weak AMs having to play in midfield. The mess is here right now. It seems like you are worried about the mess it could be at the end of some process that hasnt even started. Once again - lets not act as if Amorims systems requires the most exotic players possible out there. It doesn't. This is just no valid point in my eyes apart from the wingbacks who, as another poster said, can be "recycled" as wingers or fullbacks or/and be sold.I think it’s a bigger issue than you’re making it out to be. The problem isn’t the individual players but that the squad, after enough transfer windows, will start to become lopsided. Too many centre-backs, few if any traditional wingers, and some wingbacks who may be useful as wingers but not as useful as actual wingers. It would be expensive to reverse that and would mean that, for some time, transfers would, as they are now, again focus on adapting the squad rather than necessarily improving it.
It isn't in my eyes. We are years behind most of our rivals when it comes to collective principles. We have to force this evolution as soon as possible to get further away from the pack as it is. There are next to no players in this squad who are irreplacable, nothing in the way we play is worth conserving because it works so well. People are always asking whether we need another rebuild, another batch of new player - the issue is that never really finish one but always leave to much of the old guard around to make it opportune to fall back into old habits. I see your point and of course, if a manager comes in who can improve player we already have, even better but at some point we have to stop acting as if most of them are "very good we only have to unlock them". No. They aren't.Which is exactly what’s needed, to get the best out of the good players we have and to stabilise the club whilst building a strong foundation for us to build upon. I really like Amorim and I’d love for him to succeed BUT he’s not improving the players we have and is continually losing matches even when playing at times a back 7, if he doesn’t win Europa then I think he’s gone by Christmas as this can’t keep continuing.
Yeah had surely nothing to do with the City squad being designed for years and a well oiled machine longe before that. Its all about adaptabilty. You'd have a point with the analogy when United had something to build up on. But there wasn't. We sucked under ETH. We sucked under Ole. We weren't creating good chances, we weren't controlling the ball, we weren't controlling opposition chances.Remember the season when Guardiola won the league without a recognized striker up front before they signed Haaland? And tweaked his system to accommodate Haaland and won the league again? Good managers apparently adapt to the players they have and don't rigidly stick to a single system. Who knew.
So have the players. And now what? Rolling the dice another time? I haven't seen people around who propagate Amorim doing a stellar job. He deserves criticism for some decisions, fair play. But what to do now. If there is no plan in place, there is simply no point in throwing the towel.Now we have posters absolving the manager of every blame for having us near relegation zone and putting it all on a single striker. Sure the squad isn't good enough to be top 6 or top 8 but its easily good enough to be atleast midtable. Amorim has been horribly underperforming since he's come in yet has every excuse under the sun made for him for some unknown reasons.
No. But its the same. Pep has to sign players to fit his system, so does Amorim.I have no problem with spending big money rejuvenating a below par, unbalanced squad. Do you?
Do you think any other manager wouldn't require us to do this in order for us to improve?