Bit like us telling you about Cesc really
No, not really. We still love him.
Bit like us telling you about Cesc really
No, not really. We still love him.
Pointless to choose sides in this spat.
Its clear Keane isn't going to be a successful manager, which would put him in good company with virtually every other preceding United player who tried their hand at managing.
Its clear Keane isn't going to be a successful manager, which would put him in good company with virtually every other preceding United player who tried their hand at managing.
But those guys aren't successful because they're poor at the job. Keane's problem would always be he cannot see past Roy Keane. He doesn't understand how a manager can decide to side with his assistant and players over an ageing, angry, captain plagued by injuries unlikely to ever recapture the form he had once shown. As far as Keane was concerned the definition of loyalty would have been for Fergie to say "feck you, you, you and you" to everyone in the dressing room upset at Keane's comments/presence, in order show loyalty to Keane. To not understand why the manager did what he did and why he had to do that, I think is a sign of how little Roy Keane is able to function beyond thinking about Roy Keane.
Irony being of course as a player he was all for the team, the collective effort. Something's certainly changed.
There may be other options in such a scenario than siding fully with one or the other. Mediation, reprimands and reparation are tools that could be used rather than "alright, someone's got to go here."
Simple discussion really: How has United done post-Keane and how's United doing post-Fergie?
Who ought to have a bigger ego and who really has an ego problem?
There may be other options in such a scenario than siding fully with one or the other. Mediation, reprimands and reparation are tools that could be used rather than "alright, someone's got to go here."
I wish someone would change the thread title to involve the word cock
It would be quite funny for a little bit