No.
I think he just realises he has enough money to not need all the stress.
If anything I think the main problem would be that as a player the very least he gave his manager was 100 per cent effort.
Quite often brilliant players have problems as a manager dealing with players who are not as good. I think with Keane the fact players were a) not as good and b) not putting the effort in, frustrated him.
Quite often brilliant players have problems as a manager dealing with players who are not as good. I think with Keane the fact players were a) not as good and b) not putting the effort in, frustrated him.
Poppycock. It is the manager's job to instil that effort. Clough was a good player, but it didn't stop him managing lesser players, it just made him determined to get the best out of them (which he generally did). Loads of very good players have ended up managing poorer players, and, in this day and age, presumably lots of players without the work ethic of their own generation. Have you seen what O'Neill has done with the underachievers he inherited at Villa, or, better still, what he did with a bunch of champagne Charlie not-that-great players at Celtic?
But what has really pissed me off about this saga is the Ince/Keane line that "everybody's out to get us cuz we were at United" garbage. Look, you two, Fergie's "the whole world is out to get us at United" rhetoric was just that - rhetoric. It was intended to create a siege mentality at the club, with the hope it would set United apart from the other clubs. You would have hoped that Ince & Keane were intelligent enough to realise it's not true, but apparently not - it's so ingrained, they think they still face such prejudice as former United players. Tossers. Do you ever hear Mark Hughes making that claim? Of course not. Moreover, he's under considerably more pressure to get results than Ince and Keane were/are. He just gets on with his job without moaning, and without bailing.
I think he just realises he has enough money to not need all the stress.
Sounds like a dictionary definition of bottling it to me. Conspicuous attention-clamouring flouncing like at the very heights of Dessiegate itself.Quite often brilliant players have problems as a manager dealing with players who are not as good. I think with Keane the fact players were a) not as good and b) not putting the effort in, frustrated him.
No.
I think he just realises he has enough money to not need all the stress.
If anything I think the main problem would be that as a player the very least he gave his manager was 100 per cent effort.
Quite often brilliant players have problems as a manager dealing with players who are not as good. I think with Keane the fact players were a) not as good and b) not putting the effort in, frustrated him.
No.
If anything I think the main problem would be that as a player the very least he gave his manager was 100 per cent effort.
alan shearer showed him up for what he is a few years ago in a newcastle v man utd game, they threw the ball at one another fairly aggressively, keane started growling, shearer stood there arms spread and clearly said "what are you going to do then ?"keane stood there stock still and didnt do a thing until 3 or 4 united players ran over and grabbed him, suddenly he was the berserk snarling let me at him "hard man" that he likes to portray himself as, he's a plastic hardman, end of.