Pretty much guarantees however bad united do for the rest of the season, he'll be given his chance to build his own team. I for one welcome this decision!
No offence Sir Bob but on this occassion you are talking out of your backside. Not a case of doing whats best for United but doing whats best for Bobs pride and ego.
This is more like to stop the ******ed press from giving Moyes any grief between now and the end of the season, so they will sack him then
Moyes is the right man only cos right now he's the only man. No one of note will be willing to talk till the summer. A late rally in the league and a decent showing in the CL might just save his job though. Fingers crossed
Who the fu@* is selling rose-tinted spectacles at OT. Wake up and see it as everyone else sees it - a bloody disgrace. Which ever way you look at it, Moyes is out of his depth - there are top international players in the squad and his man-management skills are zero. All we're going to do is waste £100 million on top players and he's going to teach them how Everton (used to) play. We're going to end up an even bigger laughing-stock by the end of the season, believe me.
Charlton is only echoing Fergies opinion so why doesn't he face the same dogs abuse? They either both are to stubborn to admit it was a dreadful mistake to appoint Moyes or they both genuinely believe Moyes will come good given time. It looks like Moyes is there for the long haul whichever of the two it is.
To be honest he's not going to say "no, he's definitely the wrong man - he's absolutely pony" is he? Its like when Gerrard talks a lot of the time - its the club talking, not him.
Charlton and Fergie had a say in Moyes getting appointed, if Charlton wasn't sure of whether Moyes was the wrong man for the job he'd have given "no comment" when asked, but he's constantly said(like Fergie)that this season was all about transition and about the new manager being given time to rebuild the squad and to put his own mark on the club. Its blatantly obvious he was the wrong choice and Charlton and Ferguson would sooner protect their pride than the club that made both very wealthy and famous.