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Why not Chris Smalling?
Trying to be funny?
Its football kid, there's no place for joking in football.
^Yes there is. Football in and of itself is a joke (diving, refereeing, offside, fights, reactions, interviews, etc.) most of the times.
^Yes there is. Football in of itself is a joke (diving, refereeing, offsides, fights, reactions, interviews, etc.) most of the times.
^ And then there's Zlatan. Zlatan is so good, he makes everyone else on the pitch look like a joke.
^Zlat's so true. +1.
Lol Ven +1
Ive heard that Scholes will come to help Giggs out
Will Giggs play and manage at the same time?
Giggs will probably let himself play more time.
The talk around Carrington is that the Welshman could be in charge before the end of the season if under-pressure Moyes fails to inspire an improvement in his side's poor form
When it comes to David Moyes' future, nowhere is the speculation more intense than inside Manchester United’s own training centre. At Carrington, the whispers have become louder and louder, to the extent that there is a fear - or rather belief - that Moyes may not even see out the season.
Sources close to Ryan Giggs have furiously denied suggestions that the United legend has fallen out with the manager, but there are some within the club who expect the 40-year-old club legend to be in charge before the end of the campaign.
Whether Giggs is to inherit the manager's job or not, the fact is that the Welshman has become an increasingly peripheral figure under Moyes, often left out of the matchday squad entirely as a player and rarely seen offering advice to the Scot in his capacity as a coach.
Moyes was in relatively defiant mood in his pre-match press conference, insisting that his job is safe and promising supporters that the most successful club in the country will “rise again” despite their disastrous campaign.
Sources have told Goal that some of those senior players have even been openly questioning Moyes to staff at the training ground and almost boasting that his departure is a matter of ‘when’ rather than ‘if’.
Your thoughts ?
The talk around Carrington is that the Welshman could be in charge before the end of the season if under-pressure Moyes fails to inspire an improvement in his side's poor form
When it comes to David Moyes' future, nowhere is the speculation more intense than inside Manchester United’s own training centre. At Carrington, the whispers have become louder and louder, to the extent that there is a fear - or rather belief - that Moyes may not even see out the season.
Sources close to Ryan Giggs have furiously denied suggestions that the United legend has fallen out with the manager, but there are some within the club who expect the 40-year-old club legend to be in charge before the end of the campaign.
Whether Giggs is to inherit the manager's job or not, the fact is that the Welshman has become an increasingly peripheral figure under Moyes, often left out of the matchday squad entirely as a player and rarely seen offering advice to the Scot in his capacity as a coach.
Moyes was in relatively defiant mood in his pre-match press conference, insisting that his job is safe and promising supporters that the most successful club in the country will “rise again” despite their disastrous campaign.
Sources have told Goal that some of those senior players have even been openly questioning Moyes to staff at the training ground and almost boasting that his departure is a matter of ‘when’ rather than ‘if’.