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He manages games better then anybody in the world imo. Pep is a great manager of great sides, but they only ever play one way. If it doesn't work they're £#%&!ed. Klopps the same. Get's everyone to run about like nutcases and gimpypress, and if they're out-ran or run out of steam, they get £#%&!ed over 5-2.
With de baas it doesn't matter what is happening on the pitch, I've got full confidence he's watching what is happening and already knows exactly what he needs to do with the team and the gameplan to change things up, and give us the best chance of winning any game we're in. Might not always work, but he'll give us the best chance of making it work. Same goes for building the team. Casemiro, Erikson, Martinez, Weghorst, Antony. At the time each of them were signed there'll always be some question marks about how right they are for the team. Be it size, position, age or the amount we pay. Each of them has had a big part to play in the team. Maybe Antony not so much, but I still think he's brought something extra to the side. But three of those players have been essential to turning the side round this season. Slotted in with no issues and made us a fundamentally better side on the pitch. Very bright future for the club under his management. |
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did any actually read what I posted. theres only one manager since SAF that has failed to win us a trophy. yep you guessed it. mr cultural reboot the smiling clown. |
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I think what I like about him the most is how he is doing such a great job with absolutely minimum fuss. He's not an attention seeker on the sidelines or when talking to the media before and after games. He's not trying to make himself the story. With him the best performances don't come in press conferences. Instead he's been able to actually make a huge amount of change in a short period of time on the pitch. He's united what was clearly a broken and toxic dressing room. He identified what positions needed to be improved immediately and those signings have been excellent. The players he inherited are improving their own individual games and becoming more confident in the shirt. This is not something that has often been the case post-SAF but it was a main point of the SAF era. Players raised their standards for themselves upon arrivals of new signings to continually raise the standard of the whole club when he was manager. If they didn't rise to the challenge they would be found out and out of the door. For too long afterwards we've had players some of whom were very talented that just would not improve with time and if anything went backwards. Getting those standards back was potentially the hardest thing he could have done since more experienced and bigger name managers struggled yet he's done it quickly and quietly.
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