Monday 12 August 2013

11 points of a pre-season 13/14

1) Excited, nervous, bullish, bearish, waiting, waiting, waiting, going slowly mad, over-thinking, over-reacting, sweating profusely, checking twitter 10 times a minute – summer is here. While most other blokes were playing upskirt and drinking cider I spent July pacing around a meeting room on the phone to Gabs close to tears about the Thiago/ Cesc deal. When others are relaxing by the pool with their families I’m at Nandos with Segal and DC in earnest conversation about the relative merits of Bale or Ronaldo. I am not good at summer. Nor, I imagine, are any of you. It got to the point where I had to shut down completely before I went mad. And this is no normal summer. This is a post-Ferguson summer. The summer of our discontent. The lack of activity in the transfer market has been well documented but surely not surprising. A new manager, new chief exec, new coaches, new scouts, new targets, new agents, new everything - this was never going to be the big summer of spending. (That summer may never come.) The pre-season form has been more worrying. We don’t usually go to Japan and lose. We certainly don’t lose at home to Sevilla. It’s all very nervy. But then Sunday came and I felt a lot better. Not because we beat Wigan, or won the Mcdonalds trophy. Nor was it because I thought the football was particularly good. I was just happy that the talking could stop and the football had finally begun. We’ve spent the summer feeding off scraps. We’re making it up as we go along. We have a new manager and new coaches, we are right to be nervous. But we also have the same players and a manager chosen by Fergie. He’s learning as he goes and it will take him time to find his feet but surely that’s reasonable. I am not one for big bold pre-season predictions but here’s one: we’ll be ok. 


2) Let’s start with the elephant currently training with the reserves. I could write a book about Wayne Rooney. Or I could write a sentence. I care a great deal – I couldn’t care less. It was the best of times, it was the worst of times. Has there ever been a more contrary figure in the history of this football club? Two hundred goals, every medal under the sun, goals against city, arsenal, Liverpool and Chelsea a-plenty, sublime touches, chips, raking passes and intelligent link play – on paper this is a true great. But the game is not played on paper. It’s just about played on grass but mostly it’s played in the head, and there’s something seriously wrong with that boy’s head. Now make no mistake the ‘Rooney out’ initiative was started by Ferguson. But how did it become thus? The answer to that question lies with Wayne Rooney. At times over the past two years he’s been hard hard to watch. Anecdotes of his gym work are few and far between – because his gym work is few and far between. This is tragic. This guy is a natural athlete. Don’t laugh. Wayne Rooney has the most unbelievable natural engine. Consider his performance at Porto in 2009 tracking the powerful Sissohko at full back. He was disciplined, sacrificing himself for the team, fit as a butcher’s dog to quote you know who. This guy had it naturally. But there comes a point when that isn’t enough. Coaches are taught to focus on players’ strengths and they pass that onto the players. If you’re fast, get faster. If you’re good in the air, get better. Work on your strengths to make them infallible. This is where Rooney has fallen down. When he arrived at the club he was wonderful. A bull-dog. I remember him smashing into Sol Campbell, leaving the Arsenal defender in a heap on the floor. He was 18 years old, an English player with vision and fearlessness he had the world at his feet. Over time he smoothed the rougher nature of his personality and learnt to finish. After the low of 2006/07 he hit new heights. But he couldn’t sustain it. And this was odd. When beckham, Ronaldo, Scholes came of age – they stayed at the top for the rest of their careers. They had some off games but their lowest level was always very high. Rooney by contrast looks schizophrenic at times. Performances in the bernabeu, Swansea, West Ham, Chelsea, City (h) were not just bad – they were excruciating. I used to compare Rooney to Hughes in his ability to have truly awful games. But Hughes never had those games when we needed him most. Cup finals, European final, knockout games, at anfield, maine road, highbury – hughes was a big team bully. Rooney’s record is decent but at times he looks out-classed. I’ll never forget his display in Kompany’s pocket April 2012. He looked weak, like a small boy playing men’s football for the first time. Compare that with the man-child that left sol Campbell in a heap those years before. Something went wrong. Rooney is described as thick. He isn’t thick. He’s no intellect but he isn’t thick. He knows that he is trading on his name right now. Talk early in the summer linking him with barca and Madrid was laughable. Rooney knows this. He has enough awareness to know that – put simply – Robin Van Persie is a better footballer than him. Cast your mind back to the 2005 cup final (united lost – travesty) and watch the performance of Rooney compared with Van Persie. One terrorised the arsenal back four with his powerful running, intelligence and determination – the other was anonymous bar a decent free kick. Yet Wenger talked longingly about van persies’ dedication to his craft, his desire to become the perfect footballer. Ferguson talked of Giggs in the same way. Wayne Rooney is not in that bracket. And therein lies the single reason United decided to get rid – and why Rooney wants to go. He’s not the player we’d hoped he become. He’s not the player he could have become. Whether he stays for another year or not is largely irrelevant. His chance of being a united great has passed. The lad who on paper achieved everything, will leave United with something missing. It’s what Eric would call that ‘je ne sais quoi’.

3) Compare and contrast Wayne Rooney with the recently departed Paul Scholes. Typical Scholes, escaping under the radar. One thing I know about Scholes is that I massively under-appreciated him throughout his entire career. I knew he was a genius but only now will we realise why.  We’ll never replace that range of passing, that football brain and simple, but devastating, two touch play. Only now will he start to be appreciated for the player he truly was. Stats do not do him justice. He controlled games against the world’s best. He was a genius. In the truest sense of the word he was a genius. As Neil Young is the Godfather of grunge, so Scholes is the Godfather of the nouveau footballer. Small with incredible balance he never gave the ball away and he was a winner. Scholes’ abiding memory from his career? The 95 cup final defeat to Everton. I regret not appreciating him more. I don’t think I got it at the time. Though I do have one bug-bear. People say with a wry smile that Paul Scholes couldn’t tackle. They’re wrong. He could tackle. He absolutely could tackle. He could do everything. He was just dirty. Very, very dirty. He had the world (and all its referees) fooled. The referee’s kept their cards in their pockets because Scholes had them in his. With every passing game his passing will be missed and you, me and every United fan will realise what we had. The best.

4) Quality has to be replaced with quality. United have scrimped and saved, invested in youth and polished rough gems for years now. But there is no substitute for quality. It’s right that we went after Fabregas – and we shouldn’t be too down-hearted that we didn’t get him. The manner of the bid was odd but the idea was right. That is the level of player we should be after. I was gutted we didn’t sign him. Quite simply I think we could have won the European cup with a player of his quality. But I don’t blame Moyes or woodward. It is extremely difficult to sign top players. Not even City spent more than £25million (roughly) on a player this summer. Nor Chelsea. We don’t need £20million players – we have enough. We need £30million+ players. We need another Van Persie. But signing a player like that is complicated and, often impossible. How many players could you name that would top your list or realistic targets? Even Modric wouldn’t make my list. Lovely player he may be but would he bring us the European Cup? Would he score 10-15 goals from midfield? Would he be a talisman that would lead us when the going got tough? I don’t think so. We are in the market for the top players. But in the meantime, as fans, we have to be patient. Remember when ferguson signed Djemba and Kleberson? Those signings set us back years. They were poor signings. Moyes cannot afford to make that mistake. I’d rather him be cautious than sign the wrong players. The press are falling over themselves to claim he’s struggling to sign players. He isn’t. He’s struggling to sign world class players. But then so did Ferguson and Gill. United have always struggled to persuade 26 year old Spaniards/ Brazilians/ Argentineans to leave their coastal paradise to uproot to in Manchester. This is not a new phenomenon. Of course the increased competition makes winning trophies harder than ever. And, yes, the oligarchs and sheikhs will always have first dibs. But sooner or later every club will realise they have to develop their own talent and invest in youth to create a sustainable model. And not every club will be able to do it. This isn’t a Glazer-apologist piece but the truth is United created this model and, as a result, are miles ahead of the rest. The squad is a world class player away from challenging in Europe. It could happen tomorrow or in two years time but in the meantime we’re in good shape. There is no cause for alarm.

5) Which leads me to the biggest issue. The fans. The fans are an issue. We live in an age of over-expectancy and over-reaction. Everyone is an expert, everyone has an opinion but no one takes responsibility. We are short-term, impatient and petulant. John Stuart Mill called it an over-assertion of our personal liberty. He’s right. We are bipolar. Shouting black from the rooftop one day, bellowing white from another vantage point the next. The massive u-turn in between is simply written off. We don’t have to justify ourselves to anyone. We are the people and we know best. Therein lies the issue. We do not know best. The people are relevant – but they are not all knowing. They hide behind chants in the stands or demonstrations on the streets. They are angry. But they do not know best. Several years ago, having claimed our record equalling 18th title Ferguson addressed the crowd. The crowd responded by drowning him out with instructions to ‘sign Tevez up’. It was embarrassing. Trust and patience – these are virtues. And we’re going to need them. David Moyes is the new manager and he deserves our patience. This is a club in transition. We have had one man run the club for 26.5 years. That man is gone. You could replace him with Jesus and this would still be a club in transition. If we were to win the league this season it would be the biggest miracle since the resurrection. It would be astonishing. This is not a one year project. This is minimum 3-4 years. We are in it for the long run. It’s not trendy and it’s flies in the face of current society, but patience, trust and support from the fans are going to be as important as the performances of the players over the next 18 months. In Moyes we trust.


6) Due to a chronic lack of signings the focus, not unfairly, falls on the current squad. Who will make the step up? Because someone will have to. Ferguson and now Moyes has been tasked with putting together another young side that can win in Europe. I’ve said it before but the outstanding performers in the Madrid tie were Welbeck, Jones, Cleverly and DDG (and Carrick) - all young players with the capacity to improve beyond recognition. Forget the Ronaldo example. Think of Beckham, think of Keane, Gary Neville and poor old Darren Fletcher. This is just the beginning for these guys. And the same is true of one Shinji Kagawa. I’ll tell you what I like about Kagawa. I like that he was unhappy with his performances last season. He’s not here to make up the numbers. He doesn’t want to be a squad player. He wants to be one of the best players in the world and he’s not afraid to admit it. I like that. But, for now, he’s a way off. Firstly, he needs to stay fit and establish himself in the side. There’s a lot of talk about what his correct position is but this is a red herring. Top players drift all over, comfortable with the ball at their feet in any situation. ORVP drops deep, pulls wide and doesn’t give the ball away. Ronnie was the same – Eric too. The ball is a magnet to these players. Tactics are largely irrelevant when it comes to the world’s best. High standards yes, but if Kagawa is to join the elite he needs to hit those same heights. And he needs to do it every minute of every game, anywhere on the pitch. Fergie bought Kagawa for a reason. Let’s hope we’re about to find out why.

7) There is not a scenario I can envisage in which it is ok to give back a shirt number allocated to you by the club. Perhaps you were given the number 44, and the number 9 (you are a striker) becomes available. You knock on the manager’s door and ask if you can swap. You’re ready for the step up. He says yes and we all live happily ever after. Fine. But to actively give up a shirt number because it weighs heavily on your back is wrong. Deary me. At United players step up to challenges, they break records, they throw monkeys off their backs, they come back stronger from adversity, recover from setbacks better and more spectacularly than any other side. That is what sets the best apart. Talent is a subplot to the story. Desire and character always steal the show. For a player to hand back the shirt because it carries too much history is unheard of. Firstly, I have to say that shirt numbers and their relative merits are childish at best. The top players make the number their own. Did anyone care who was number 20 before ORVP? Or did arsenal fans care about the number 14 before henry? The number is irrelevant; the player is the issue. Valencia is indicative of the true weakness of our squad – our wide players. We have always boasted world-class wide players. All the way back to the Billy Meredith this is a club that allows wide players to flourish. Beat your man, put in a cross, shoot, put him on his backside – the crowd will love you and the manager will pick you. Name me another big club with that pedigree. None. Our wingers are privileged. They should welcome the challenge and step to it. If they can’t they won’t see out the season. And it won’t be Bale or Ronaldo taking their place. It’ll be Zaha and Januzaj. (Or maybe Baines sitting in front of Evra. Hold me sons.)

8) Here’s why I love Rio Ferdinand. When asked which player he’d have on his side from the current United team he didn’t hesitate. Danny Welbeck. Firstly I agreed with his analysis (and found it insightful to hear it from a guy who plays with welbeck every single day). Secondly, I think it’s pure class of a guy to pick a youngster ahead of the obvious, more established stars. It was the sign of an old pro looking out for the youngsters. If that’s a sign of how the dressing room works then we really will be ok. Maybe I’m reading too much into this but when the entire world would have said Giggs or ORVP, Rio picks Danny. And that sums him up. You think you know these guys. He’s a 23 year old lad who’s just become a millionaire. He likes having a night out with his mates. He’s from London and you don’t trust him. You think you know him. Ten years later and he’s giving an interview to United We Stand on a pre-season tour extolling the virtues of a young player who’s taken a fair amount of stick over the past 12 months. Rio might not be the brightest but he’s a leader. He’s been an unbelievable servant for this club and to my mind the best centre half the Premiership has seen. The way he handled himself over the England saga was pure class. It matched the Rio off the pitch with the Rio on it. Eleven years he’s given us. We should cherish every day more because, ala Giggs and Scholes, when he’s gone he’ll be missed on and off the pitch. Rio, only the best get 10 years plus at MUFC. Charlton, Keane, Robson, Giggs, Scholes, Neville to name a few (post-war). Thanks for the past, here’s to the future. One love.

9) Nostalgia will play funny tricks on you. Your memory will always take you on a journey through time to when life was better, the birds were fitter and United played perfect football. It’s easy to convince yourself that the treble team never played out a dull 1-0 win. But don’t be fooled. Now is not the time to look back misty-eyed lamenting the loss of the good times. This is a good squad. Is it the greatest squad in the history of football? Of course not. But so what? We are not Liverpool. We don’t long for yester-year. We don’t pretend that Ferguson never made a mistake or that Eric never missed a penalty. We look forward, always focused on the next game. We are about winning and being the best. That’s the challenge. The rest will take care of itself.

10) A word of caution. Adnan Januzaj. Some lively cameos in the first team are well and good. But he’s miles off first team action. He needs to fill out physically, possibly go on loan – he needs to go through the process that Welbeck, Cleverly and Evans went on. Only then will he be ready for the first team. Mind you, with only a year on his deal remaining, he might be at Barca by then. Putting your faith in youth is right – but putting too much pressure on them is wrong. Getting the balance right is something Moyes did well at Everton. Doing it successfully at united could be the difference between success and failure at the highest level.

11) Is Ryan Giggs. It’s getting silly now isn’t it? I think he’s improving. So with that in mind here’s other big bold prediction: I don’t think this will be his last season.