Archive for the ‘Manchester United’ Category

> at Old Trafford on May 24, 2011 in Manchester, England.

I had a host of neatly set out appointment posts for the week that were supposed to carry me through to the end of the season. Today was to be on football tactics. That’s all done now, because English football is doing one of those emotional, Doctor Who-esque regenerations in which Tom Baker’s face starts glowing until he wakes up as Peter Davison.

Ten days ago, Sir Alex Ferguson was going to be around for another season at Old Trafford, David Moyes was set to add another year to his impressive and unlikely pile of time at Everton, Rooney was getting ready let to his career arc wane just a little bit more by remaining at Manchester United, Paul Scholes would be there to laugh behind his back in the United dressing room, David Beckham would be lollygagging around Paris with PSG, and Rio Ferdinand might still consider throwing on an England shirt if he felt like answering the increasingly desperate calls.

Even Frank Lampard’s one-year contract at Chelsea is more a goodwill gesture than a serious investment, a sign the player is basking in the warm, lovely twilight of a decent slowdown. All that is left is for Steven Gerrard to get a season-ending injury against Fulham or something and for the Daily Mail to get the scoop that he’s calling it quits.

We don’t necessarily have to mash meaning into a series of coincidental retirements, but there is a sense that the mainstream edifice of the English game is passing away. And I don’t mean the risible, stale joke of the Golden Generation that was supposed to win things for England in the aughts and instead delighted in missing penalty kicks every two years.

Football is saying goodbye to the generation that transformed the Premier League to an interesting, post-Taylor Report stadium improvement project to a massive, multi-billion pound/euro/dollar corporate orgy in which two of the nation’s biggest clubs are owned by Americans and the rest by Russian or Middle East oil investment money. The lines of cause and correlation in this two decade development can be traced directly to Beckham’s face, sitting under an exotic, historical Zoetrope of perfectly audience-tested haircuts. TV needed Beckham for the Premier League to work, and after a short wait, there was David lobbing a ball from the half-way line against Wimbledon.

It’s for this reason that in some ways Beckham’s retirement from football is even more significant than Ferguson’s. Football fans knew about Ferguson. The world knew about Beckham. It didn’t matter that he wasn’t as good as Messi or Ronaldo, that he was a utility player of the highest order, or that his single, most definable skills—free kicks and crosses—were a vital sideshow to the main event, but a sideshow nonetheless. He was like a mini-England. Wealthy, popular on TV, the subject of a lot of off the pitch hysteria. Respected by some big names, equally derided elsewhere. Very, very good, but maybe a bit limited. In his day, demanded the world round.

In any case, that’s all over now. The battle for TV has been won, the chips have fallen where . Despite hints of a European decline, the Eee Pee El still puts asses in the seats across most of the English-speaking world, and much of East Asia (again, take a bow David Beckham). Now it will have to figure out a way to maintain that stranglehold with no Ferguson, no nineties era United, no Golden Generation led by Golden Balls. They’ll be hoping the present mish-mash of money and ever-changing managers will do the trick in its stead.

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This, thrown in our collective Twittering faces by CA contributor Andi Thomas, is unlike anything I’ve ever seen before. It’s a website that asks you to pledge money to bring Cristiano Ronaldo back to Manchester United. The details:

Aimed at Manchester United football fans around the world, built on the crowd-funding concept, we are asking fans to make a pledge, conditional on Manchester United signing Ronaldo. Each fan is to pledge £10 deposit to reserve an authentic Manchester United Ronaldo 7 shirt.

Should Manchester United succeed – then each fan will be sent an email to request the remaining amount for the shirt which will be no higher than £55 for Men and Womens shirts and £50 for Kids Shirts. Should Manchester United fail – pledge funds will be returned to the fans based on our Terms and Conditions.

The company is Equius Ltd. UK, which doesn’t have an obvious web presence in any way shape or form, which is always a good thing. I contacted the Man United press office, and they stated the site has “…no affiliation with the club at all.” Despite this, the FAQ states that “All pledge details will be passed onto Manchester United as well as all funds raised. Man U club shop with the assistance of Nike will ensure that all pledges are fulfilled” (I’m awaiting a follow-up from United on whether they’d accept the funds).

Oh, and those terms and conditions on the refund should Ronaldo not make it to United?

If the movement is not Successful by 31 August 2013 we will refund your deposit in British Pounds (£) less any Administrative Fee.

And how is that administrative fee calculated?

In the event the movement is Successful, 5% of the Total Price; or

In the event that the movement is not Successful, £3.00 on the £10 pledge.

So 30% of your 10 pound pledge, and 5% of the shirt price. Anyway, this is great if you think that the Glazer family needs your direct financial assistance in getting Ronaldo to come back to United.

UPDATE: the club states the website would be “better off sending the money to UNICEF.” Agreed.

Manchester United v Swansea City - Premier League

A few things before we close a historic chapter at Old Trafford.

1) This Gary Neville-Paul Scholes interview is fantastic.

Read the rest of this entry »

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There, sorted:

And some words from Moyes himself:

So there it is. There will be some introspection from the club and several media accounts including the AP and the Guardian, who jumped the gun on the announcement. Man United too will examine their social media policy after the Moyes announcement was published and then retracted.

Again, what’s the rush? Relax guy! Anyway, Moyes will be a very interesting addition and unfortunately in many ways will face far, far more pressure in the role than his predecessor. No one wants to be the manager who failed to live up to another manager.

And the full statement from United is here. Alex Ferguson’s take:

“When we discussed the candidates that we felt had the right attributes we unanimously agreed on David Moyes. David is a man of great integrity with a strong work ethic. I’ve admired his work for a long time and approached him as far back as 1998 to discuss the position of Assistant Manager here. He was a young man then at the start of his career and has since gone on to do a magnificent job at Everton. There is no question he has all the qualities we expect of a manager at this Club.”

As Paul Kelso said:

Ryan Giggs Signs New One Year Deal With Manchester United
Manchester United have confirmed the news. Sir Alex Ferguson will retire at the end of the season.


Richard will have more on this in the coming hours. The end of an era to say the least. Avie Glazer indicates Ferguson will stay on with the club as a director and ambassador.

FBL-ENG-PR-MAN UTD-CHELSEAManchester United continue their domination of the news cycle. First reports surfaced regarding Alex Ferguson’s impending retirement. Now the Mirror reports Wayne Rooney wants to join German giants Bayern Munich and the interest is mutual.

Wayne Rooney has told team-mates he wants to sign for Bayern Munich this summer. The Manchester United striker has grown increasingly frustrated with his role at Old Trafford. And now the German Champions League finalists are believed to be close to sealing a £30million deal to add the England striker to their ­star-studded line-up.

Like the Ferguson rumors this is all speculation at this point, but it’s intriguing nonetheless. The Mirror’s John Cross states Rooney is intrigued by the prospect of working with Pep Guardiola. Rooney joined Manchester United from Everton in 2004 for a fee of £25.6 million.

This is going to be a fun summer.

Image via Azartwin.com

Image via Azartwin.com

What a day of English football! In all seriousness today’s games were lackluster and that’s being charitable. The Merseyside Derby ended with no goals and a number of articles like this. Chelsea bagged three points at Old Trafford thanks to a Phil Jones own goal. Rafael was sent off in the 89th minute for lashing out at David Luiz. The punishment was more for the intent than the actual pain inflicted and the ensuing melee didn’t help the Brazilian’s cause. In any case, that’s some good acting. Ben Kingsley’s Gandhi good.

Chelsea’s victory sets up a huge fixture on Wednesday, when Spurs visit Stamford Bridge.

Gif via Tomas Roncero