Phil Jones

SAF's amazing, nobody rave over Jones and Cleverly and suddenly voila, they're running the United's engine.

Same can be said with Evra, Ronaldo, Vidic, Nani.

He's really underrated in the transfer department SAF
 
SAF's amazing, nobody rave over Jones and Cleverly and suddenly voila, they're running the United's engine.

Same can be said with Evra, Ronaldo, Vidic, Nani.

He's really underrated in the transfer department SAF

So much wrong with this post.

SAF is not underrated in the transfer market imo, 99% of sane people realise he's brilliant at it.

Everyone was raving about Jones last year.

Ronaldo was one of most highly rated 17yr olds in football. Nani was also very highly rated. Evra had been brilliant in Monaco's run to the CL final.

Vidic though was a sensational buy that came from nowhere.
 
SAF is not underrated in the transfer market imo, 99% of sane people realise he's brilliant at it.

I'm in the 1%. I think he's good in the transfer market, but not brilliant.

His best buys have generally been either no-brainers that anyone would have bought if they could (Keane, Rio, Rooney), or players who were highly rated without being superstars (Shmikes, Ruud, probably Phil Jones) - excellent buys but very much the kind of player you'd expect a top professional outfit like United to identify and bring in. There have been a few stunning coups along, the way, like Cantona and Ronaldo, and some awful buys too.
 
I'd consider Vidic and VDS stunning coups. Nobody even thought about VDS at the time, and VDS for £2M was a steal.
 
I'd consider Vidic and VDS stunning coups. Nobody even thought about VDS at the time, and VDS for £2M was a steal.

Fulham bought him for about 7mil in 2001. Now that would have been a steal, and saved us floundering around for a goalie for half a decade.

You're forgetting Chicharito.

Fantastic buy.
 
Fulham bought him for about 7mil in 2001. Now that would have been a steal, and saved us floundering around for a goalie for half a decade.

It would have been but I'm sure we had Barthez who was doing pretty well at the time and VDS had just come from being a flop at Juve. Not sure how Ferguson could have bargained on Barthez losing it as he did.
 
I'm in the 1%. I think he's good in the transfer market, but not brilliant.

His best buys have generally been either no-brainers that anyone would have bought if they could (Keane, Rio, Rooney), or players who were highly rated without being superstars (Shmikes, Ruud, probably Phil Jones) - excellent buys but very much the kind of player you'd expect a top professional outfit like United to identify and bring in. There have been a few stunning coups along, the way, like Cantona and Ronaldo, and some awful buys too.

He's a very good judge of character, less so of skill. Some of his awful buys have been where he discounted character in favour of skill (or some other reason), e.g. Veron, Kleberson.

Mind you, that doesn't exactly explain Djemba Djemba, or even Liam Miller.
 
If you're in a job 25 years though you're bound to pick up a few duck eggs on the way. On the whole, I have faith in Sir Alex in the transfer market. He's best when picking up young players though, I'd say.
 
It would have been but I'm sure we had Barthez who was doing pretty well at the time and VDS had just come from being a flop at Juve. Not sure how Ferguson could have bargained on Barthez losing it as he did.

He couldn't be expected to, that would have been inspired. I'm just saying his signing of VDS hardly was inspired. Our goalkeepers had been largely crap for about 5 years, then he got a chance to bring in VDS who'd proven himself, and it worked. That's fine, but bringing him in earlier, younger, and not having another five years of crap keepers is what would have been brilliant work in the market.

He's a very good judge of character, less so of skill. Some of his awful buys have been where he discounted character in favour of skill (or some other reason), e.g. Veron, Kleberson.

Mind you, that doesn't exactly explain Djemba Djemba, or even Liam Miller.

I agree. Hello Spin!

Not sure anything can really explain Djemba Djemba.
 
If you're in a job 25 years though you're bound to pick up a few duck eggs on the way. On the whole, I have faith in Sir Alex in the transfer market. He's best when picking up young players though, I'd say.

Agreed. And you're also likely to unearth a few gems.

Ferguson: an absolute genius at developing players, creating great teams and balanced squads, building an institution that embodies his fantastic set of values; perfectly competent in the market and at tactics; terrible at PR. Overall, probably the best manager of all time.
 
Generally I think Fergie's very good in the Transfer Market, though we seem to do some fantastic scouting so it's not just Fergie who deserves credit.

Fergie must have the final say though, and mostly he seems to get the players we DO sign spot on, apart from when he went mad in 2003 and started trying to replace Roy Keane with everyone.

He's not flawless though. For a start, there's still the odd gaff. Hargreaves, Tosic, Bebe, Obertan. That must be close to £60m of fees.

Then there's the players he doesn't sign. For example, we've been short of midfielders for three years running now. It also took us until we signed Chicharito to replace Saha with another striker who actually runs in behind defenders. Plus, the 2003 thing. His signings basically made us quite shit for a couple of years.

That's from a critical point of view though. I can't think of a manager who doesn't get these things wrong from time to time. Apart from Wenger and Moyes, and that's only because they never sign anyone people have actually heard of.

Valencia's his best buy in the last few years for me, along with Hernandez. Wasn't just a case of finding a player who was good enough, he had to think up a way of compensating for the loss of Ronaldo and signed two players who've made us more expansive as a team whilst still being lethal as individuals.

I'd consider Vidic and VDS stunning coups. Nobody even thought about VDS at the time, and VDS for £2M was a steal.

I thought about VDS. In fact I used to wonder every year why we hadn't gone in for him.
 
I'm in the 1%. I think he's good in the transfer market, but not brilliant.

His best buys have generally been either no-brainers that anyone would have bought if they could (Keane, Rio, Rooney), or players who were highly rated without being superstars (Shmikes, Ruud, probably Phil Jones) - excellent buys but very much the kind of player you'd expect a top professional outfit like United to identify and bring in. There have been a few stunning coups along, the way, like Cantona and Ronaldo, and some awful buys too.

Who do you think has a better record? There'd have to be a fair few if Fergie's record is merely "good". Every manager has "awful buys" on their cv but Fergie more than makes up for this with his overall record.

You could make a case for Wenger, based purely on value for money but he's fallen well short when it comes to signing players with the right mentality to win the domestic league. Well, that and signing central defenders. Plus his record with keepers is no better than Fergie's.

In other words, I can't think of any manager with a better eye in the transfer market than Fergie.
 
Hargreaves was decent. Wouldn't have won the double without him. I think we signed him fully knowing he was a sicknote, and we'd get two seasons out of him. Turned out we got just one (very good one), but sometimes you lose gambles.
 
Who do you think has a better record? There'd have to be a fair few if Fergie's record is merely "good". Every manager has "awful buys" on their cv but Fergie more than makes up for this with his overall record.

You could make a case for Wenger, based purely on value for money but he's fallen well short when it comes to signing players with the right mentality to win the domestic league. Well, that and signing central defenders. Plus his record with keepers is no better than Fergie's.

In other words, I can't think of any manager with a better eye in the transfer market than Fergie.

I'm not biting, because I've been down this road on here before... it's a road that ends with vast lists of players being rated out of ten, and protracted arguments about whether Jordi Cruyff really was shit, and liberal use of the word spastic.

Suffice to say I think Fergie's above average in the market. If there's any manager you think is great in the market apart from Fergie, chances are I rate him higher.

Hargreaves was decent. Wouldn't have won the double without him. I think we signed him fully knowing he was a sicknote, and we'd get two seasons out of him. Turned out we got just one (very good one), but sometimes you lose gambles.

This is the sort of thing the arguments end up being about. We won the double with him, but we might have also won the double if that money had been spent on someone better who wasn't a known crock. He might have helped us win even more titles than we ended up winning.

Hargreaves was a very poor buy.
 
I'm not biting, because I've been down this road on here before... it's a road that ends with vast lists of players being rated out of ten, and protracted arguments about whether Jordi Cruyff really was shit, and liberal use of the word spastic.

Suffice to say I think Fergie's above average in the market. If there's any manager you think is great in the market apart from Fergie, chances are I rate him higher.

I'm actually genuinely curious about who you think is better.

The only person whose record I would always have considered "great" is Arsene Wenger but the ongoing inability of his team to reach the next level (or even scrape together a competent back four) has given me second thoughts.

After him? Nope. Nobody springs to mind. Other than Fergie, anyway.
 
I see his point here, but don't agree exactly. I think some of Fergie's signings have turned out brilliantly, but it doesn't mean it was an excellent signing. In the sense that it might not have taken as much to identify talents like Rooney, Smalling and Jones as future stars. Obviously it's still great to be able to pick out talents like above, but they were known and talked about with great futures before we signed them. Even players like Nani and Anderson were stars in the making before us, we seem very good at determining the prospects of young talents. We've identified a lot of strong, known or fairly unknown talents in the years who have turned out to be excellent buys, compare these to the ones where we didn't know as much about the player, and there is a difference. I know that's a bit obvious, as it's clearly more of a risk, but I feel there are other managers who may identify the more unknown talents, better then Fergie. Wenger has a better ability in identifying unknown talents, or turning those unknown players into capable players. Our development of players is second to none though I feel, and the mentality and attitude we instill at them.
 
This is the sort of thing the arguments end up being about. We won the double with him, but we might have also won the double if that money had been spent on someone better who wasn't a known crock. He might have helped us win even more titles than we ended up winning.

Hargreaves was a very poor buy.

Fair points. I suppose I'm thinking from the perspective of the money we spent, the return we had was alright. It could well have been better.
 
He's not flawless though. For a start, there's still the odd gaff. Hargreaves, Tosic, Bebe, Obertan. That must be close to £60m of fees.

Hargreaves wasn't a bad signing. He couldn't predict that he would be out for three of his four years here. Yes, his injury record was poor but it was more of a case of playing 70% of games at Bayern than not playing at all.

Tosic was signed for £7m and sold for £10m so we made a profit there. We got our money back on Obertan as well. We will lose money on Bebe, there's no doubt about that and I have no idea how we even ended up buying him in the first place.
 
Evra was a great buy. Park was a great pick-up. Nani was unheard of around here [as I recall] but looks terrific and a bargain now. Anderson took his time but looks killer now.

Smalling, De Gea, Carrick, Fabio and Rafael were all inspired choices as well.
 
I'm actually genuinely curious about who you think is better.

The only person whose record I would always have considered "great" is Arsene Wenger but the ongoing inability of his team to reach the next level (or even scrape together a competent back four) has given me second thoughts.

After him? Nope. Nobody springs to mind. Other than Fergie, anyway.

Yep, there was a case for Wenger being better in the transfer market a while ago but not anymore. In the last 5 years we've bought a number of players who were signed without big reputations that have gone on to become some of the best players in the league - Vidic, Evra, Hernandez, Park, Valencia, Smalling, Raphael & Fabio. No other manager has come close to that.
 
I'm actually genuinely curious about who you think is better.

The only person whose record I would always have considered "great" is Arsene Wenger but the ongoing inability of his team to reach the next level (or even scrape together a competent back four) has given me second thoughts.

After him? Nope. Nobody springs to mind. Other than Fergie, anyway.

Wenger is much better in the market in my book, at least as far as he is actually in the market.

Moyes, Bruce, Allardyce, Redknapp all seem to be able to pick a player, in the first three cases often someone I've never heard of.

Mourinho's generally bought well, but he spazzed out a bit in his last season at Chelsea. I think he's about the same as Fergie in the market.
 
I'm in the 1%. I think he's good in the transfer market, but not brilliant.

His best buys have generally been either no-brainers that anyone would have bought if they could (Keane, Rio, Rooney), or players who were highly rated without being superstars (Shmikes, Ruud, probably Phil Jones) - excellent buys but very much the kind of player you'd expect a top professional outfit like United to identify and bring in. There have been a few stunning coups along, the way, like Cantona and Ronaldo, and some awful buys too.

No-brainers are often buys which seem obvious but have enormous potential to backfire. Many people felt he hugely overpaid for Rio and that he was nowhere near as good as the fee implied. Rooney could have gone off the rails and come nowhere near realising his potential (see Reyes at Arsenal).

Shmikes was not that highly regarded as it happens and you are forgetting people like Irwin, Evra, Vidic.

The number of awful buys is actually very small considering the success he has had and the years he has been here.
 
Wenger was far better in the transfer market in my book about 5 years ago. But the continual amount of players he has brought that have lacked the mentality to win the league puts him down I reckon. Take into account the fact that Wenger hasn't won the title (or even a trophy?) without a player from the George Graham era and that puts it into a bit of perspective.

He is better at spotting the odd gem no one has heard of for cheap though but I'd take spending extra on players like Smalling and Jones and developing them.

Be interesting to see how his latest splurge on players goes. I've often thought when Wenger has brought slightly well known "experienced players" they've often been more of a miss than a hit.
 
Hargreaves wasn't a bad signing. He couldn't predict that he would be out for three of his four years here. Yes, his injury record was poor but it was more of a case of playing 70% of games at Bayern than not playing at all.

At Bayern...Games Stared (Sub Appearences)

01/02 - 20 +5
02/03 - 19+6
03/04 - 26
04/05 - 20+6
05/06 - 14+3
06/07 - 9
 
Loads of posters said at the time that Hargreaves wouldn't get to double figured in games for us, or play a seasons worth of football. There was loads of criticism about his fitness at the time and the doubt that he would be able to perform at our level and maintain that.
 
Wenger is much better in the market in my book, at least as far as he is actually in the market.

Moyes, Bruce, Allardyce, Redknapp all seem to be able to pick a player, in the first three cases often someone I've never heard of.

Mourinho's generally bought well, but he spazzed out a bit in his last season at Chelsea. I think he's about the same as Fergie in the market.

What signings have Moyes, Bruce or Allardyce made that are comparable to signing Vidic or Evra for 6 or 7 million?
 
At Bayern...Games Stared (Sub Appearences)

01/02 - 20 +5
02/03 - 19+6
03/04 - 26
04/05 - 20+6
05/06 - 14+3
06/07 - 9

It's league only, right? So adding starts to appearances as a substitution he played around 25 games a season until 2006 which isn't bad in a league where there are 34 games each year.
 
I'm in the 1%. I think he's good in the transfer market, but not brilliant.

His best buys have generally been either no-brainers that anyone would have bought if they could (Keane, Rio, Rooney), or players who were highly rated without being superstars (Shmikes, Ruud, probably Phil Jones) - excellent buys but very much the kind of player you'd expect a top professional outfit like United to identify and bring in. There have been a few stunning coups along, the way, like Cantona and Ronaldo, and some awful buys too.

He's generally been excellent since 06 though, learned from his Djembax2 and Kleberson mistakes, I can't think of many genuinely poor purchases since then. Bebe obviously, Hargreaves, Berb was overpriced but necessary, then mini pops like Obertan.

I mean acquisitions like Carrick, Valencia, Smalling, Hernandez (well, less so), even Young this Summer, people were very underwhelmed by them all and couldn't see how well they'd improve the team until they all played and put everyone in their place.

Wenger used to be a league ahead of everyone in the transfer market but SAF has been much better than him in the last 4 or 5 years, but that's largely due to Wenger becoming a spastic too.
 
Bruce is actually pretty crap in the market, at least at Sunderland.
 
No-brainers are often buys which seem obvious but have enormous potential to backfire. Many people felt he hugely overpaid for Rio and that he was nowhere near as good as the fee implied. Rooney could have gone off the rails and come nowhere near realising his potential (see Reyes at Arsenal).

Of course, and sometimes it's a good buy that for some reason just doesn't work. I'd put Seba in that category.

Nevertheless, the no-brainers are no-brainers, even though they can still go wrong. I was absolutely desperate for us to sign Roy Keane, I was glued to teletext all summer, and I was 16.

Shmikes was not that highly regarded as it happens and you are forgetting people like Irwin, Evra, Vidic.

Well they were just examples, it wasn't meant to be exhaustive.

The number of awful buys is actually very small considering the success he has had and the years he has been here.

I would say the number of truly awful buys is small, and the number of absolute gems is also small. There have been more good than bad, that's why I think he's good in the market not bad. I just don't think he's a genius in the market, whereas I do think he's a genius as an all-round manager.
 
What signings have Moyes, Bruce or Allardyce made that are comparable to signing Vidic or Evra for 6 or 7 million?

Bruce brought in Valencia for around 5 million didn't he? Saying that I think the mastermind behind that transfer was the Jewell himself, maybe?
 
People are being very selective in analysing Wenger's transfer prowess.

Some of his 'best' buys were simply the result of exploiting legal loopholes to secure widely-recognised talent: Anelka, Fabregas.

I would only put RVP, Vieira, Henry, Pires, Ljunberg, Petit, Overmars in the inspired ranking.
 
Of course, and sometimes it's a good buy that for some reason just doesn't work. I'd put Seba in that category.

Nevertheless, the no-brainers are no-brainers, even though they can still go wrong. I was absolutely desperate for us to sign Roy Keane, I was glued to teletext all summer, and I was 16.



Well they were just examples, it wasn't meant to be exhaustive.



I would say the number of truly awful buys is small, and the number of absolute gems is also small. There have been more good than bad, that's why I think he's good in the market not bad. I just don't think he's a genius in the market, whereas I do think he's a genius as an all-round manager.

If you look at transfers like investments then I would say Wenger overtrades and whilst he often seems to find gems, you'll find more futile transfers etc under Wenger and much of the good that he does is outweighed by the high turnover. For example, he has sold several players that could have still a very good job for him (Silva for example).

Ferguson actually makes relatively few transfers in comparison and also rarely moves players on unsuccessfully (let's hope Hargreaves doesn't prove to be an exception). Keane was a no-brainer in many ways but I think that is the exception rather than the norm. Evra, Vidic, Smalling, Carrick, Valencia, Hernandez are all important to this squad and none are what I would call no-brainers.
 
Bruce brought in Valencia for around 5 million didn't he? Saying that I think the mastermind behind that transfer was the Jewell himself, maybe?

They didn't sign him until after 2 years of a loan deal, and yeah that was under Jewell
 
What signings have Moyes, Bruce or Allardyce made that are comparable to signing Vidic or Evra for 6 or 7 million?

They're working at a different scale. Cahill for 1.5 mil, Valencia for 5 mil, Kevin Davies for nothing.

You also have to bear in mind that United have a massive infrastructure for finding players. Fergie still has to sign off on them, but more importantly Fergie built the infrastructure - that's the sort of thing that sets him apart.

I don't really know if those guys are better in the market than Fergie, they're just off the top of my head. I just think they're good, and I think Fergie's good, but not amazing.

It's league only, right? So adding starts to appearances as a substitution he played around 25 games a season until 2006 which isn't bad in a league where there are 34 games each year.

Dunno, they were the only stats I found. Looks a pretty terrible record to me.
 
If you look at transfers like investments then I would say Wenger overtrades and whilst he often seems to find gems, you'll find more futile transfers etc under Wenger and much of the good that he does is outweighed by the high turnover. For example, he has sold several players that could have still a very good job for him (Silva for example).

Ferguson actually makes relatively few transfers in comparison and also rarely moves players on unsuccessfully (let's hope Hargreaves doesn't prove to be an exception). Keane was a no-brainer in many ways but I think that is the exception rather than the norm. Evra, Vidic, Smalling, Carrick, Valencia, Hernandez are all important to this squad and none are what I would call no-brainers.

Apart from Carrick they were all cracking signings. I'd call Carrick a good solid signing. Prior to Carrick's arrival we spent several years with midfields composed of the likes of Djemba, Kleberson, Miller (I'm rubbish in the market), Fortune, Smith...
 
It's a decent record if it's league only.