Release date: Tuesday, July 28, 2020 9:57 a.m.

So many emails. Send them to [email protected]

If we need to attribute to OGS the acquisition of Bruno Fernandes, it should also be noted that it was also he who did not buy Bruno Fernandes. Maybe if he had moved for him last summer, United could have finished with 68 points, but can you believe the United enthusiast song if that had happened?

Just to be a scapegoat for equivalent opportunities, this Liverpool won’t be one of the greatest of all time. No trouble registration, no invincible and no double/triple. I mean congratulations and I’m sure they don’t care, but they did one thing and they did it very well. The most productive groups got away with more than a season and we didn’t lose them.

Why do others stay referring to where these problems in general would have led United in other years, as accounted? Should we dilute Leicester’s winning season because there are other seasons where the return of problems would not have earned them the name? When the groups descend, we don’t say that it doesn’t matter, because the previous year their problems would have relegated them. If Liverpool earned the name next season with 80 numbers, would it be vital for 80 numbers to place them in third place this year, or is it vital that they win back-to-back names?

Every year is another and only the really ridiculous achievements remain in memory because time shows how difficult they are to achieve them (triple winners, Invincibles, Mourinho’s defensive record in Chelsea, Centuriones), but the achievements among all vary. Whoever wins the name wins the name because it is the best productive that year; the one that arrives 3rd is there because it is the 3rd best productive that year. I can’t tell why it’s a stick to hit someone. I think Liverpool is extraordinary and the City brilliant, despite its defensive failures; both groups are considered the norm in England, and probably in Europe at most. I think finishing third for them is smart right now.

… I felt compelled to write for the first time since 2013, when you published my letter about the retirement of Phil Neville (strange to Phil). In short, I’m going down the wrong track..

So I’m pretty upset because everyone talks and laughs at Lampard and Ole for having the same problems or less than last year. It’s a little absurd.

First, they did whatever it took to get into the Champions League. Second, since the 2016/17 season, the problems needed to enter the four most sensitive have decreased year after year (from 76 in 16/17 to 66 this year).

Meanwhile, last year, clubs like Aston Villa spent 140 million pounds, wolves 88 million pounds and Brighton millions of pounds.

Don’t you think that in the face of the team’s stagnation, the quality of the league is improving and that more groups in the back are taking on issues from the historic “big groups”?

There will be some very smart groups in the league that will not take place: last year they were The City and Liverpool, but this year even City lost several games opposed to the so-called declining groups.

Anyway, a position in the most sensible four values more cash for those clubs, and if big clubs can continue to enter the four most sensible and earn all the money, perhaps the gaps between the four most sensitive and the rest will be greater. And everyone will be happy. Still…

1) I will not take the ABU365 direction because I do not think it is true, but I think the other people who reported the lack of compliments for Ole were right. Here’s what you said about Ole in Winners and Losers:

“Ole Gunnar Solskjaer deserves to have accepted upheavals that required help outdoors” and “The coach also trusted the ability of elite members of this team to perfectly time a vanquished sprint, worthy of a Champions League standings.”

I’m sorry, “Checked for a long time, Ed?” I think two sentences are length A, but we know that’s not what you meant. It’s a smart job. Ole doesn’t need praise, because if that’s all it deserves, it’s weak to say the least. The rest of United’s only segment about Bruno (who deserves praise) and the fact that Ole was a little lame for a while. I’m not saying he’s the manager of the year or anything, but I think he deserves a little more than two lukewarm, disposable comments in one segment basically about another person. The way Klopp has made his way through this segment is another total problem.

2) I was looking for old emails that I had sent for the mailbox and that’s not a great read. Recently, on January 22, I extrapolated our effects at the time and calculated that we had to finish by 54 points, which would have been smart enough for the ninth wife (who also predicted). I’m happy to say I was wrong, but I think that’s why Ole deserves a little more credit and an apology from me. He has controlled our season significantly and, yes, much of that has been to bring Bruno, however, he remains a component of his task and has done well. So I’m sorry, Ole, I was you too at the time and you proved me wrong.

3) … up to a point. There are still more vital and longer-term problems at stake. Whether you’re joining the five new players Gary Neville feels like we want or not, he still wants to start trusting and employing the whole team, next season more than ever. As he said in his post-fit press, we can’t rotate the team in Europe next season, so we’ll have to use the total equipment. The exhaustion that occurred in the last games was unacceptable, and I do not blame our calendar, our list of apts was probably the best of all, I blame the lack of rotation of Ole. I’m not saying that total sales adjustments in both one and both games; only one or two rested in a game, to keep it strong and competitive without depleting the overall team at once.

4) This summer obviously gives us the opportunity for the workforce, but it is surely mandatory to take full advantage of it. We urgently want to bring 2/3 players to the line in the next 3 weeks, if only so that plans are noticed and new players can start adapting. Surely I do not wish to see the same rumours circulating in early September, with only a signature actually completed. We just have to stop it from happening again last year and just do that damn job.

5) As for the Europa League, I can’t really hold my breath there. Obviously, I’d like us to win it, but it’s going to take a lot of players who are already fighting. Hopefully, the good end of the season will help them a little and cheer them up, but we’ll see. That said, if we can’t win, I sincerely hope the wolves do. In fact, I like Nuno as a coach, and they have amazing players; they are a great team and a Europa League victory would be huge for them. Again, only if we don’t win!

6) And finally, in the championship. If I had to stick my colors on the mast, I’d love to see Brentford win the playoffs. They didn’t have a very productive start, but it would be great to have a new promotion of the premier league. Otherwise, I’d prefer Fulham, but let’s see what happens.

… First of all, I’d like some of my United fans to avoid being so defensive. The points of bias that oppose United and all this ABU365 nonsense make us look with despair and bitterness. Calm down for love and accept that this is someone else’s opinion. You’ll find it very difficult to find a set of unbiased, insightful, and well-written articles that are more balanced than those of the F365 team.

Anyway, about more vital problems at your fingertips. United finished thrd. Mint! Really excellent. I didn’t expect United to achieve this at the start of the season, in mid-January after our full defeat at home to Burnley.

What many opposing enthusiasts want to perceive about our excitement of completing third place is that each and every aspect is relative. Compared to where we’ve been in the last few seasons. Compared to the direction our trajectory seemed to be headed. Is it the 3rd place we want to be or that we try to be in each and every season? No, of course not. But that’s not the problem. This season has been a springboard for us. A step in the right direction. That’s all we can ask for right now.

Obviously, there is no way we are in a position to compete with players like Liverpool and Citeh in our current state. I can’t think of a United fan who’s not married and thinks that. But this season we’ve taken a big step forward to allow us to grow back in stature and take the first mandatory steps to start the last breach. To expand in a way that feels literally sustainable. If we hadn’t reached Champions League football, the chance of a significant monetary investment in our team and the attraction to attract some of the most productive skills you can have (I’m seeing you, Jadon!) It wouldn’t have been close to what we have now. Hopefully, with the right investment, we can take another step forward. We will have to continue to form a larger and more balanced team, with the right people and the right collective attitude. For me, at least, I feel like the first blocks have been set this season. And that’s why Ole deserves a lot of credit.

… This time of year again, huh? Tribalism is surely endemic in those pages and on all other football pages, and will no doubt be endemic for a few more days. Amateur united here. Solskjaer would have emerged if the winners and losers lists had been drawn two weeks ago (the average age has dropped, the taste for the game has improved, several players seem to have a particularly better shape, emerging morale, particularly higher recruitment). The way things stand, he’s very, very lucky he didn’t fuck up in the end. Losing to Chelsea the way Utd made a bitter disappointment. A position in the last place is available and all Solskjaer can place the simplistic idea that ”3 in the back with two quick forwards dividing the center defenders worked in opposition to the previous strong offensive groups in the season, so I will give it. some other chance.

He overburded the team by not turning and barely trusted Fred, Ighalo and Mata to watch the games already won. United may have lost smoothly to Southampton, West Ham or Leicester, even if all of their past smart cadre and the inconsistency of Leicester and Chelsea had combined to create a scenario in which United would not qualify for the Champions League would have been a colossal failure. If the penalty had been against Pogba, we would be sitting here discussing a coach who had controlled losing two very successful semi-finals and had missed an inescapable chance of returning to CL, completing with a total of problems that do not do so. have been enough to qualify in nine of the last 10 seasons. If this is a ‘winner’ … ‘sigh’

About Steve Bruce, I actually like him. I always have. He’s wrong about the PR aspect (ask Sheffield Wednesday fans), but I don’t think many other people disagree that he happens to be a decent guy who does everything he can. But we have already taken this direction with the excuse of the ‘injury crisis’. I’m sure F365 published an article in which he compiled all quotes from him in other papers about how incredibly unlucky it was to be constantly harassed through a complete treatment room. Wenger (and others) have always hit (bong? Bung?) The drum that muscle injuries are regularly due to preparation errors. If Bruce needs it in the elite (obviously he can wield a defense and knows how to foster team spirit), that’s a weakness he and his team want to address.

Well done. At least willing to admit it. At last.

Can we now expect an item to look to fix the pathetic program you’ve been clinging to all season? No, on the other hand, we get an absolute article on how clubs have behaved against their altive expectations … with Ole Gunnar Solskjaer photographed for the link.

United ranks 10th … Ffs…

“You can say without problems that United deserves to be way up this list; they finished third and no one can expect them to do better… blah, blah, blah … returned with a lower performance.

Using the Solskjaer symbol for the article and then taking more undeserved photographs (even according to your own reasoning) at United is already embarrassing. But a quick investigation of your site’s homepage at the time of writing shows that there are thirteen articles about United or that use a photo of someone from the club (or both).

Clearly, he senses that he wants to put United in a smart position in his place to continue to exist. You have to do it, in a different way, why bother every day to report a club with which you obviously have a problem? You want United. You want United fans. And you don’t bring anything positive. You’re just feeding.

That makes them parasites.

 

What a reasonable shot, surely rude and useless.

The guy who just won the Italian League with years of delight and who made Eden Hazard entirely in the swan song mode only guilty of 68% of Chelsea’s goals and assists last season capitalized on some other Spurs to finish third before Hazard won the Europa League Trophy : Array and Lampard haven’t reduced the numbers to their liking with a team of young people and without danger of six issues and one place?

The purpose at the start of the season for Emery would have been to return to the Champions League, especially with spending on Pepe. When Arteta took over, I realized that the expectation was Europa League football. In this, Arteta failed. To be clear, I think Arteta has done a very clever task given the stage and look forward to see what she can do next season. However, he failed to secure Europa League football through our position in the league.

This means that Arsenal’s season is fully explained through this final. A win, a trophy and the Europa League is a wonderful comeback for its first season. When you look at the season as a whole, it’s amazing that we can get something out of it. Injuries, problems with the captain, poor recruitment, attacked gamblers, a 350k water boy, a decapitated manager, a rookie manager and a global virus. However, with the team we have, there is no European football and the finances it brings are fundamental.

Of course, we know United won’t be satisfied with third place, but given our scenario 6/12/18 months ago, it’s a bloody miracle. I’ve written in the afterlife about how it restored the soul of the club and how much it means to all United fans.

But Ole is the type of manager every fan should want to see succeed. We talk about how the game’s gone, with the money involved, mercenary players, constant managerial changes, and clubs prioritising commercial success over what’s really important. Now here comes a young manager, steeped in the history of the club, who despite having his credentials doubted every step of the way (even I didn’t see any way back after Burnley), has taken the club back to the Champions League and undoubtedly is going in the right direction.

The same goes for Lampard, who is in a less difficult position. Chelsea finished third last season and won Europe. They lost their most productive player, but Lampard discovered a way to mix the youngsters and revel and play sensational football. Is it a failure because Chelsea didn’t win the championship? Of course not.

Let’s give all these young managers the credits they deserve (also Arteta). It’s tempting to laugh at Ole for the lousyness of United before Bruno, however, he had to collect the coins after Joseph, integrate the youth, launch a different game flavor and face most of the season without Pogba, and a few. Months. without Rashford and Martial. I mean, the lack of features meant that Andreas Pereira started 18 games this season. Eighteen.

Is he tactically naive? Absolutely. But like this team, the article hasn’t been finished yet. Success is a matter of perspective, however, it’s ridiculous to recommend a team that passed a 15-point hole (February!) To finish third in 12 games, he has not lost since January 15 and can still win Europe for having a lower overall performance. It’s even crazier to think that the coach deserves the most of the credits (with or without Bruno).

It’s hard not to shrink when you read Rodgers’ reviews, written stating that many of the works he was joking about had not been published this season, which were written about the claim that F365 had not made him a clown in years. And I’m an Arsenal fan, I don’t have an express love for this man.

 

Baba Rahman – N/A – I think it would be incredibly difficult to rate Baba Rahman after he only gave the impression twice for Real Mallorca before suffering a serious injury, meaning he has lost each and every game since, he will probably be repaid on loan this summer unless a client comes to update the defender.

Davide Zappacosta – 4/10 – controlled only 7 matches on loan in Roma for a cruciate ligament injury, has given a hand in those 7 but opposed a very poor SPAL team, probably sold or relented.

Marc Guehi – 7/10 – Definitely a future player of Chelsea’s first team in the coming years if he maintains his current form, has forged himself in the back of Swansea who took the last Play Off Spot, joined in January and Swans enthusiasts speak highly of him, he will probably return to loan next season, but on the Premier League side.

Ethan Ampadu – 4/10 – Barely played for RB Leipzig this season, it was a loan that didn’t work for anywhere involved, maybe it’s just a team player next season or some other loan, probably the last.

Tiemoue Bakayoko – 6/10 – A moderate season in Monaco, has done enough for Bayern to look at, does not have a long career at Chelsea that is clear, sold this summer.

Danny Drinkwater – 0/10 – Signed on loan from Burnley in August, in September, injured his ankle ligament after being affected in an outdoor match at a nightclub, signed on loan from Aston Villa where he allegedly hit teammate Jota in the head, his Premier League career is probably over, the championship is on the way.

Conor Gallagher – 7/10 – Another player Swansea has loaned us this season, after a first half of the season on loan to Charlton, who has done very well in the Championship, 6 assists in 20 games is not bad at all. Be a smart team player next season.

Victor Moses – 10/6 – Antonio Conte likes it, will leave this summer, but has completed his task as a side of Inter this season.

 

It is almost as if the other two members of the 4 most sensitive are in fact much less supported and supported in a totally artificial way through monetary doping.

Anyway!

At the end of each national season, I like to take a look at the performances of the players in the European leagues. This season is no different, however I looked very strong because A: I’m still on leave, and B: my girlfriend and I, or we move our parents to our respective homes at the beginning of the lockdown and we can’t see each other.

Players under the age of 30 in the ranking of the 20 most sensitive European players were:

That’s five of the 20 most sensitive players in the Premier League, six if Sancho moves to United.

Three Bundesliga players, Sancho

Two in Serie A

One in League One

And 0 in League.

I believe that in this list and with the end of an era in Barca and Madrid, whether in terms of players and finance, there is a good chance that the next five years will see some other era of English domination in European competition.

Pulisic, Werner, Foden, Greenwood, Rashford, Traoré, Saint-Maxim, Alexander-Arnold, Ndidi, Mount.

Everyone would have been eligible for an Under-21 World Cup this summer, all are and all play in the EPL.

 

Unfortunately, this is not usually the case. Everton and Aston Villa spent enough cash last summer to close the national deficit, but received nothing in return. Woodward kept making Man Utd look very silly. Although the credits are due, it has taken a step forward since fellaini’s time. And Newcastle refused to activate Rondon’s 16.5 million pound release clause to spend 40 million pounds for Joelinton, thus wasting his Champions League winning coach. Meanwhile, Liverpool spent nothing and stepped forward through two points. While Chelsea lost her most sensible scorer, Pulisic sneaked out the back door and recoiled slightly.

Obviously, big transfers have their place. Allison and Van Dijk have obviously taken Liverpool from almost a man to a global hitter, while Fábregas and Diego Costa provided a spark for Chelsea in 2014. However, spending a lot of money on this is obviously crazy.

Here’s my attempt:

Arsenal: Coutinho in 49m for Guendouzi makes sense for all parties.

Aston Villa: Grealish to put. Axel Tuanzebe will be on loan.

Brighton: Ryan Sessegnon on a season-long loan deal after suffering to sniff Mourinho’s Spurs.

Leeds: Josh King will provide Leeds with some ability to complete. Bournemouth will be decimated by the merchant. At least they’ll have a lot of money to spend!

Leicester: The Tigers borrow a march on David Brooks as the 4 most sensible fights Sancho and Havertz.

Man City: Nathan Ake is the maximum apparent signing of the motion window.

Newcastle: Phil Jones arrives for a new cash firm absurdly too expensive. See also: Jesse Lingard.

Sheff Utd: Callum Wilson will make your line of attack in time for 10 more sensitive ones.

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