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[Football] DES LYNAM: The only man who can steer Manchester United back to former glories is Gary Neville



WSU Dilettante

Active member
Mar 12, 2014
196
Lancing
Not sure about that one, Des.

I would argue that United could use someone like Gary Neville being in a position of influence within the club as they have lost their ties to their recent(ish) success, but he seems to be going in hard for Neville to be United manager here, which would be a car crash (but lovely to watch, especially when we play against them!)


Also this is the only place I've seen someone attribute our win to our brilliance rather than United's terrible form.
 






Bodian

Well-known member
May 3, 2012
15,093
Cumbria
I read the thread title as
1737720533497.png
 


BadFish

Huge Member
Oct 19, 2003
18,825
This would be glorious.

Nice idea agent lynam.
 






happypig

Staring at the rude boys
May 23, 2009
8,304
Eastbourne
Why do they always think an ex-player is the answer ? They are often mediocre at best (with a few exceptions like Kenny Dalgleish).
Man United's best option is to admit they have deep-rooted problems, accept a few seasons of mediocrity, hope not to get relegated, ship out the dross and rebuild.
Their Stock Market driven owners and success-fixated fanbase won't allow that though.

1737721757808.png
 


Greg Bobkin

Silver Seagull
May 22, 2012
16,556
An ex-MUFS player as a manager to 'save' them? Yeah, what could possibly go wrong?

I guess his managerial record stands up?

'At the time of his sacking, Valencia were 14th in the league, six points clear of the relegation zone, and had won only three of their 16 league games under Neville, also failing to keep a single clean sheet.'

Oh...
 










Commander

Arrogant Prat
NSC Patron
Apr 28, 2004
13,747
London
Not decades but he was mentioned on a podcast the other day and I was certain he had died
I bumped into him at the Princess Royal Hospital in Haywards Heath last year. He was still alive. Just.
 




Sarisbury Seagull

Solly March Fan Club
NSC Patron
Nov 22, 2007
15,281
Sarisbury Green, Southampton
Why do they always think an ex-player is the answer ? They are often mediocre at best (with a few exceptions like Kenny Dalgleish).
Man United's best option is to admit they have deep-rooted problems, accept a few seasons of mediocrity, hope not to get relegated, ship out the dross and rebuild.
Their Stock Market driven owners and success-fixated fanbase won't allow that though.

View attachment 195619
"They know the club"

One of the biggest load of bollocks cliches ever uttered in football.
 




Coldeanseagull

Opinionated
Mar 13, 2013
8,521
Coldean
An ex-MUFS player as a manager to 'save' them? Yeah, what could possibly go wrong?

I guess his managerial record stands up?

'At the time of his sacking, Valencia were 14th in the league, six points clear of the relegation zone, and had won only three of their 16 league games under Neville, also failing to keep a single clean sheet.'

Oh...

Ruud van Nistelroy is putting his cv in. Lost seven on the bounce with leicestershire.....should be a shoe in :thumbsup:
 




Greg Bobkin

Silver Seagull
May 22, 2012
16,556
Ruud van Nistelroy is putting his cv in. Lost seven on the bounce with leicestershire.....should be a shoe in :thumbsup:
I seem to recall some people saying RVN should've got the job after Ten Hag was booted out.
 




beorhthelm

A. Virgo, Football Genius
Jul 21, 2003
36,131
Why do they always think an ex-player is the answer ? They are often mediocre at best (with a few exceptions like Kenny Dalgleish).
Man United's best option is to admit they have deep-rooted problems, accept a few seasons of mediocrity, hope not to get relegated, ship out the dross and rebuild.
Their Stock Market driven owners and success-fixated fanbase won't allow that though.

View attachment 195619
tbf Solskjaer was the answer for a bit, then it went south. agree there's somthing fundemental rotten in the dressing room, two or three that need binning, and some strong characters to re-establish a new culture.

Neville is comically not the solution though.
 


scoobiewhite

Well-known member
Jan 29, 2012
439
Albourne / Brighton
Whilst I have serious doubts about Gary Neville the football manager, I was really impressed by him when I attended a talk he gave about the university he set up in Manchester.

He was really engaging and got the right blend of anecdotes and serious content. What really got me though was the attention to detail. He knew so much detail about all of his businesses and really went the extra mile to think about how to make it better for the people who worked for him or the students.

He didnt claim to have all the bright ideas but you could see he had a really strong grasp on all the important aspects of running a university, which is no small feat as they can be horribly complex.

And he walks the walk on being a local lad made good in Manchester. His university is focussed on disadvantaged students and also leans strongly into personal development as well as academia.

Not like the other PetroChem billionnaire 'local working class lad' who's cut the £50 voucher for Steward of the match at Old Trafford so he can afford to pay Anthony for 1 second!
 


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