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Ole Gunnar Solskjaer walked through the old Trafford camp, looked into the directors’ locker room, clenched his fist and lifted it, does so during the victory, at home or away, and you never know who that particular gesture is aimed at.
On Sunday, it may only be Sir Alex Ferguson or his family, because Solskjaer’s payer wasn’t in the stands. Ed Woodward had escaped the radar and the cockpit was scarce. There was a radio silence from United’s communications branch as a seismic History was brewing and the communications director, providing house games, was without permission.
According to the Glazer family’s contempt for United supporters, Joel Glazer’s quotes for the deaf were issued at 11:10 p. m. UK time, while many followers slept, will have woken up in a nightmare.
“By bringing together the world’s largest clubs and players to compete in the season, the Super League will open up a new bankruptcy for European football, achieving certain world-class festivals and facilities and greater monetary aid for the wider football pyramid,” Glazer brazenly boasted.
United issued the same statement, word for word, on its investor relations website. The Twitter account did not percentage, so Richard Arnold might not be able to detail his engagement at the upcoming convention call.
“We are at the heart of discussions about the long-term european interclub competitions and, as with the Project Big Picture report, context is important,” Woodward told the United Fans Forum in November. “What I can guarantee you is that we will do so firmly to keep party enthusiasts at the center of our thoughts. “They didn’t and those in the forum feel betrayed.
Joel Glazer has not bothered to touch United enthusiasts since his introductory interview with MUTV after his family’s poisonous take in 2005. This expectation continues as the press release issued on behalf of the 12 “founding clubs” of the Super League. The city’s online page published Glazer’s Quotes illustrate the rappacity of the filthy dozen.
Susie Dent’s widespread condemnation of Countdown’s Dictionary Corner piled up, tweeting, “The word of the day is ‘ingordigity’: excessive greed; an insatiable preference for wealth at all costs. “
The wonderful football Brian Glanville has called the Premier League ”Greed is Good”, according to a quote from Gordon Gekko in The Wall Street. La Super League is the Gordon Gekko League, disguised as a rich banquet for fans. A coincidence that Glazer’s last match between United and Barcelona was between United and Barcelona in the Champions League quarter-finals two years ago.
Glazer and his fellow charlatans are absolutely indifferent to the remuneration of enthusiasts. Some of United’s mythical arrears have been at barnsley and Derthrough County league clubs. badge of honor and longing to return to Darwen End in Ewood Park, packed with 7,000 reds. Fulham, heading for the championship, is a respected day and Lancastrian United enthusiasts were extremely happy with Blackpool’s promotion in 2010 and the prospect of a happy winter across the sea.
Exeter, Burton and Cambridge have secured fa Cup replays against United this century and Leeds in League One when their enemy was expelled from the festival in 2010. lives opposed to the Goliaths.
The Glazers have ridden United fans for nearly 16 years and are named after the club. Fenway Sports Group did its best to destroy Bill Shankly’s philosophy in Liverpool.
United is famous around the world for its European heritage, when Matt Busby paved the way without fear in 1956. He almost died watching to win the European Cup and eight of his players did. The Glazers desecrate her statue, which looks at the real United sympathizers who look at her without words.
By breaking ranks to express his opposition to the Super League, Ferguson denounced the Glazers well. Gary Neville also calls them – and the American owners of Liverpool and Arsenal – “impostors. “It is 16 years too late for Ferguson, who abandoned his socialist principles to form an alliance with the Glazers. More than once, he described them as “brilliant owners. “
“Talking about a Super League is a 70-year estrangement from European interclub football. “As a player for a Dunfermline provincial team in the 1960s and as a coach in Aberdeen winning the European Cup Winners’ Cup, for a small provincial club in Scotland, it’s like climbing Mount Everest,” Ferguson told Reuters on Sunday.
“In my time at United we played 4 Champions League finals and it was the top few special nights. I don’t know if Manchester United are worried that I’m not part of the decision-making process. “
Ferguson has a statue, a stand and a road that carries his call on the M16. His call is among the program’s directors, however, he is divorced from the existing regime and has been the doer of kings since anointing David Moyes in 2013.
Solskjaer voiced his opposition to Glazer’s inauguration in February 2005, through the sincerely dissolved United Shareholders. “I think it’s vital that the club stays in good hands. I’m definitely in the fan aspect,” he said.
Solskjaer can hardly be blamed for taking a task with the Glazers in 2018, his selfie with Avram Glazer and Joel, CFO Cliff Baty, will have vibrated the stomachs of some enthusiasts.
United have their first loose week of the season and that’s fine. This will give Solskjaer enough resources to digest the news and communications branch the opportunity to shape a war plan for the appeal of Friday’s Zoom media.
Solskjaer has followed the line since his interim appointment, but denouncing the Super League would make him more popular than that night in Paris, or when Scott McTominay closed the ball on the afternoon of the Stretford End opposite city. He finished in Cardiff after his first coaching game and serenaded Tranmere amid anti-Glazer chants.
“I grew up a United fan and the last thing I did when I was young was see who in the directors box,” Gary Neville wrote in his 2011 autobiography. “Inside the club, we weren’t affected by property adjustments: you wouldn’t have the idea that nothing is different under the Glazer family. “As co-owner of League Two Salford City, Neville can now wince at those comments.
“It’s denying the things of your own club,” Neville exclaimed on the porch of Old Trafford on Sunday, “it’s a natural greed, they’re impostors. “
What is particularly disgruntled is that United behaved commendably on last year’s first blockade, assisting frontline staff and organizing courtesy calls for older season ticket holders.
Now they have shown their true colors, at a time when enthusiasts can still click through tourniquets: it has no soul.