Louis van Gaal "does not rate" Luke Shaw: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...Manchester-United-coach-Rene-Meulensteen.html



Louis van Gaal "does not rate" Luke Shaw: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...Manchester-United-coach-Rene-Meulensteen.html
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Louis van Gaal "does not rate" Luke Shaw: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...Manchester-United-coach-Rene-Meulensteen.html
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Louis van Gaal "does not rate" Luke Shaw: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...Manchester-United-coach-Rene-Meulensteen.html
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The table tells many truths, & a few lies, but one thing it does suggest is that no one is rolling over. From bottom to top there is a even spread on defeats that strikes me as unusual for this stage. Those multiple draws down there make for a very changeable few weekends. So as beautiful as the top, precarious is the bottom, really hope we can start well against Qpr & keep the balance.
Louis van Gaal "does not rate" Luke Shaw: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...Manchester-United-coach-Rene-Meulensteen.html
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I had a thought yesterday on this subject. I meant to post about it, but forgot to, and spent some of yesterday evening with the nagging feeling that I'd missed something. It's this: The table shows that the normally underdog teams are fighting back. Not just one or two, but a raft of them. Only Chelsea seem that head and shoulders clear. I wondered about this and I think it's the new TV money which has helped create this situation. There is a law of diminishing returns. Once you get to a certain level of quality, the next level is extraordinarily expensive. Even a slight rise on that next level is almost too expensive for anyone bar the richest. But the TV money has meant that most PL football clubs can tap into a level of player who is, bar one consistent quality level, almost as good as it gets. They are certainly good enough to be consistent match winners and creators. When those players arrive they pull the whole squad up. Yes, they need to be well chosen - you can't just throw money away indiscriminantly, like Liverpool and ManU have to a certain extent, but if teams like West Ham and Saints are bringing in very high quality players, then the Man City's, Utd's, etc... of the world have to practically break their own banks just to stay that little bit ahead. In ManU's case, they've undoubtedly panicked. The same could be said of Liverpool.
I think normal service will eventually resume, but in the shuffle one or two smaller teams may make a permanent jump across the quality gap.
As I said, just a thought. Probably badly explained as well.![]()
I must say, after seeing his little face I didn't feel to clever reading that. Hope he knuckles down.....after all, we get paid if he does.
Nor apparently do the United fans on many of the forums (sorry, my guilty pleasure) despite not having played for them yet!
They claim he's too young to come in yet. £31 million? Other defenders playing like statues?
Best (or saddest) comments are that refs have always had a grudge against them and decisions always go against them, since they entered Europe against FA wishes in 1956 !!!!
In what bloody world?
That first picture of him beneath the headlines, the one of him in training, shows a pair of troubled eyes. Poor lad.
Perhaps he could come back for 5m and 30k a week.
Dealing with ifs and buts, but I believe that if Shaw had been playing instead of Rojas (or Rojas was playing CB) then Utd would not have thrown away a 2 goal lead. Shaw would not have been by pace kike the Utd defence were, and unless he has changed his style of defending (like Chambers seems to have done) he would not have thrown himself into a tackle and commited a penalty.
He is basically a cert this weekend to start his Utd career, with Rojas playing CB.
Then the midfield would really be shyte. But if he plays Blind at LB then it will be obvious the manager really does not rate himUnless he puts Blind in at LB.