Note: I have, whilst writing this blog, always tried to keep my views fairly neutral. This article however is an exception. This is written strictly from the point of view of a Manchester United fan which is what I am so apologies for any bias I may display. If it's any consolation my next piece is a tribute to the fantastic work Brendan Rodgers has done at Liverpool which will no doubt put me right back in my place! Thanks for reading - Mitch
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There’s a hint of a civil war among Manchester United fans
at the moment. The fans are certainly divided into two camps. There are those
that find themselves still behind under-fire boss David Moyes and those that
would favour a change in management ASAP.
It’s an issue that has really come to ahead this week with
the first signs of open revolt among the supporters. Fans at the stadium were
visibly upset following the home defeat by City last week and the manner in
which the side went down so feebly.
One thing I think both sets of fans can agree on is that the
plane stunt on Saturday for the game against Aston Villa was an altogether
pointless exercise and generally did the club more harm than good. Fans are
100% free to express their opinion but that stunt was just foolish. I’m a
passionate member of ‘Team Moyes Out’ and even I think there was no need for
that. Thankfully it received mostly negative attention in the stadium and in
the media.
David Moyes however received an overwhelmingly positive
reaction when he emerged on the pitch on Saturday. I must say I was a bit surprised
by this, I thought the majority of fans, like myself, would have taken issue
with both the performance on Tuesday and his remarks after that we should
aspire to be like City. Following the reception he got, I’m of the opinion that
he could have been waving his middle fingers at them as he walked out and it
wouldn’t matter, they’d still stand and applaud for any Manchester United manager,
an admirable quality in many regards.
However there is a difference between supporting your team
and supporting your manager. Every single die-hard United fan calling for Moyes’s
head is doing so because they believe it will benefit the team. They are
refusing to stand for the mediocrity he’s brought and have grown sick of the
embarrassment this proud football club has had to endure over the past months.
It wouldn’t happen at Barcelona, Madrid or Bayern Munich. Those are the clubs
we should be comparing ourselves with, the very best in the world, not Spurs or
Everton, no disrespect intended to those two fine English clubs but they are
not at the same level.
The ‘Moyes In’ side of the debate lean heavily on the fact
that Manchester United are ‘not a sacking club’ and never have been. This, it
must be said, is not true and a quick glance at any Manchester United history
book will reveal as much. The club have just not had an under-performing
manager in a very long time.
Look back to the years after the great Sir Matt Busby
retired. His place was taken by Wilf McGuinness who lasted a little over a year
before being dumped. Frank O’Farrell was next to try and fill the great man’s
shoes and lasted a similar amount of time despite being given a hefty contract.
Bear in mind that we are talking about the late 60s early 70s now, when the
average tenure of a top-flight manger was over three times what it is today. Sacking
a manager after just one season then seems hasty, it’s not so much these days.
These fans seem to think that because Ferguson was given
time to build a team at Old Trafford that Moyes should be given a similar
length of time but the differences between the two regimes are enormous.
Ferguson arrived at Old Trafford with a mission (knock Liverpool off their
f***ing perch) and a means by which to do so (focus on youth development but
invest in experienced players when needed). He accomplished this and more
during his fruitful 27 year spell at the helm.
Moyes on the other hand lacks even a shred of Ferguson’s
ambition. I don’t know how many times he’s reeled out his trusty ‘We’ll try our
best’ rallying call this year but it does nothing to inspire confidence among
the fans. His biggest singular offences include saying that United were going
to “make life difficult” for Newcastle at Old Trafford, heralding
Liverpool as favourites when they came
to visit and openly saying that “we need to aspire to be like City” after their
turn to run riot at Old Trafford nine days later. There’s absolutely nothing
about Moyes, his attitude, personality or anything he’s done since taking over
that offers any hope whatsoever he’s going to be a success at Manchester
United.
For me, as a United fan, hearing his comments following the
City defeat was like a dagger through the heart. The strong, winning mentality
instilled by Ferguson in the 1990s, carried out by club legends such as Keane,
Scholes, Giggs, Ronaldo over the years has become utterly non-existent now less
than a year later. I had sympathy for Moyes up until that point but to me his
comments were basically spitting in the face of the club I’ve grown up loving.
‘Team Moyes In’ stand for the belief that Manchester United
are not a sacking club (not wholly true) and that David Moyes, like Ferguson
before him, should be given time to make his mark. They seem willing to settle
for a couple of seasons in the doldrums in the belief that given time, David
Moyes can somehow turn the club back into the winners they were under Ferguson.
I would love nothing better than to be proved wrong but I just don’t see that happening.
‘Team Moyes Out’ have lost all faith that David Moyes is the
right man for this job and see no point in settling for what they believe would
be another season of embarrassing mediocrity under the current regime. Better
to stop the rot now before Moyes is allowed another season to sully the club’s
good name any further. He inherited the team that won the league at a canter
last season and made turned them into Europa League hopefuls. The only player
missing this season is Paul Scholes. Next year both Evra and Vidic will be gone,
Ferdinand too and a few others presumably.
This summer is huge for United. Considerable investment is
required to replace the final remnants of Ferguson’s 2008 Champions League
winning side (Evra, Vidic, Ferdinand, Carrick, Giggs) and replace them with
new, younger talent with the ultimate aim of reaching that goal once again. It
seems a long way off now but this is Manchester United and that simply has to
be the goal. The board must now decide whether or not the current manager who’s
fumbled his way through the last two transfer windows, ended up paying over the
odds for the uninspiring Fellaini from his old and buying a superstar he doesn’t
know how to use, is really the right man to trust with such a huge amount of
money.
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