Tyrion Lannister
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I think the Swansea FA cup game around then stands out.
Every week?
You do know he was dropped for the very next game?
I think the Swansea FA cup game around then stands out.
That was a game, not a period when he was 'awful every week'. After that game he didn't played on the next 6 weeks.I think the Swansea FA cup game around then stands out.
That was a game, not a period when he was 'awful every week'. After that game he didn't played on the next 6 weeks.
This fecking thread. What a car crash.
Delighted to see Kagawa showing his class over these last few weeks. Really hope this is the start of a long and succesful career at United. He's a terrific wee player when he's on his game.
Couple of points I find amusing though.
Wasn't Kagawa supposed to play at number 10 in order to be influential? Lo and behold, he suddenly starts looking the business playing the exact same role he's been asked to play since day one. Well I never.
Also, wasn't poor wee Kagawa supposed to be struggling because he was surrounded by utter cart-horses who wouldn't know how to make a run in the final third if someone marked it out on the pitch with a fecking paintbrush? Now we finally see Kagawa looking incisive and effective should we be giving all the credit to the intelligent runs being made by Welbeck, Valencia and a half-fit Rooney? Runs they've presumably only just learned how to make (credit to Steve Round's great coaching maybe?) Or perhaps he's thriving because we're no longer playing with Van Persie? I mean what the feck does RvP know about movement in the final third?
I personally thought the most important thing for Kagawa was a run in the side and confidence from his manager, lo and behold he starts looking the business as soon as that happens.
Every week?
You do know he was dropped for the very next game?
Well that's not true he played 60 minutes 5 days later.
And he played in the two prem games before that and wasn't very good either.
Like I said in the Nani thread yesterday. It's almost as though there's some sort of correlation between playing well and getting picked more often. Crazy, eh?
Wasn't Kagawa supposed to play at number 10 in order to be influential? Lo and behold, he suddenly starts looking the business playing the exact same role he's been asked to play since day one. Well I never.
Also, wasn't poor wee Kagawa supposed to be struggling because he was surrounded by utter cart-horses who wouldn't know how to make a run in the final third if someone marked it out on the pitch with a fecking paintbrush? Now we finally see Kagawa looking incisive and effective should we be giving all the credit to the intelligent runs being made by Welbeck, Valencia and a half-fit Rooney? Runs they've presumably only just learned how to make (credit to Steve Round's great coaching maybe?) Or perhaps he's thriving because we're no longer playing with Van Persie? I mean what the feck does RvP know about movement in the final third?
You said every week but in that time it went like this:
- Tottenham - dropped
- Swansea - played
- Sunderland - dropped
- Swansea - played
- Chelsea - dropped
- Sunderland - played
- Cardiff- dropped
- Stoke- dropped
- Fulham - dropped
if that's "awful every week" in your book then we read different books you and I.
To be fair Pogue, maybe the reason he's playing better now is that our "system" has clearly changed in the last month. Have we seen a game where we've resorted to the style of play we had against Fulham for example? Maybe, playing with like minded players like Mata might make a difference. You mentioned Welbeck as well. During the time when Welbz led the line for us in Rooney/RVP's absence, did Kagawa get a game? or a regular run? Nope. You mentioned our strikers making runs. The fact that we don't have two strikers stepping on each other's toes might actually be of benefit. And having one striker is clearly liberating more space than when we have 2 up top. There was that period where we didn't score a goal from open play for a ridiculously long period of time, with Valencia/Young being our wingers. Is that a sign of our attackers making great runs? Or were the wingers shit then too?
And you know, playing a player repeatedly and showing some confidence in him might actually make a positive difference to the player. Rather than you know, hooking him after a good game and sitting him on the bench for 3-4 weeks at a time. Even Rooney's form clearly suffers whenever he's back from a spell out of the team and it takes him a few games to get back to top level.
You can't say "Sunderland - Dropped" when it was literally two days after the Swansea game. You missed off the games before that.
Shaktar, Tottenham, Everton, Leverkusen - played, played, played, played.
So since he come back from international break he played 10 weeks of football and played 7 games and came on once for half an hour. This was also around internationals.
It is by far and away the most unprofessional thing I've seen at United in years. Add that to his underwhelming performances and he was certainly one of my least favoured players.
Now though he's showing his obvious talent. Good on him.
It hasn't, though.
Every single time Kagawa has played for United it's been in some variant of a 4231 formation, where he has license to tuck in as well as rotate among the three positions behind the striker.
We've seen the formation we played last night dozens of times this season. The only real difference was Kagawa playing well in it.
Kagawa played well enough on the left under Fergie. POTM August 2012, and one of our top performers in from the beginning of March till the end of the season.
If you play Kagawa consistently, he will play well. That's the point here. Granted, he'll play better as a no.10, but if you put someone like Mata in the same position, then it hardly matters, as we've seen in the Prem.
If play Kagawa inconsistently and in a two-striker system, then he will only affect the games every once in a while. Up until recently, Moyes did both of these "mistakes". To top it off, he allowed Welbeck and Januzaj be ahead of Kagawa in the pecking order for the AM position at one point. This obviously must have shattered whatever confidence Kagawa had left.
Either way, Moyes seems to be learning. Kagawa is featuring often, and Mata is playing in the no.10 position. This greatly benefits Kagawa and ultimately: United. I'd still prefer Kagawa in the no.10 position, but I'm not sure if Mata is good enough on the wing. Time will tell though. We're extremely lucky to have both.
It is by far and away the most unprofessional thing I've seen at United in years.
When's RVP expected to be fit again? I'm pretty sure Kagawa will be back on the bench again if we have both RVP and Rooney fit.
Jesus Christ you need your skull thumping sometimes
It is a problem isn't it. We can't play Rooney and RVP without sacrificing pace, and we can't play with pace without sacrificing either Kagawa and Mata and seeing as how Mata is the 38m man, we can't not play him.
You make him sound like he was planning to take over from this guy :
http://www.justjared.com/images/2006/07/kobayashi-stomach-abs.jpg
He ate so much he was sick, had his stomach pumped and missed two weeks! What is worse than that?!?!?!
It's bizarre but we don't know enough about what happened to start crucifying him for lacking professionalism. He always comes across as a very dedicated player with an excellent mentality.
You dont need pace all over the pitch. A pacy outlet on the right is enough. The problem is that Moyes is more likely to take the easier option and pick the big names even when he cant get it to work just because he can say "the best players can always play together". No, either find a system in which they do or grow a pair and drop them for a lesser name that fits better.
Exactly, Valencia on the right would be ideal but then you can't play Mata because Rooney will be behind RVP and he's not defensively sufficient enough to help Evra on the left. It is a predicament because we absolutely need someone to stretch the game for us or we seem very flat but Kagawa and Mata have already proved they have a better understanding than Rooney and RVP have shown all season.
What more do we need to know? I'm a fat prick but I've never needed my stomach pumped!
I know very little about this kind of thing but instinctively - this. Id love to know the truth of the matter, an allergy perhaps? A dodgy prawn, the wrong kind of mushroom, who knows. Its hard to think of a theory that makes less sense than Kagawa sitting down and gorging on food until he collapsed and had to be rushed to hospital.I've worked in the field of medicine for almost 20 years and have never once heard of someone having their stomach pumped because they ate too much. I'm convinced something got lost in translation somewhere along the way. It's all too bizarre to be as straightforward as you make it sound.
Exactly, Valencia on the right would be ideal but then you can't play Mata because Rooney will be behind RVP and he's not defensively sufficient enough to help Evra on the left. It is a predicament because we absolutely need someone to stretch the game for us or we seem very flat but Kagawa and Mata have already proved they have a better understanding than Rooney and RVP have shown all season.
I've worked in the field of medicine for almost 20 years and have never once heard of someone having their stomach pumped because they ate too much. I'm convinced something got lost in translation somewhere along the way. It's all too bizarre to be as straightforward as you make it sound.
If Moyes cant find a system to make it work, he simply has to have the balls to bench one of Rooney/RVP. Even if it means selling them. Play Mata behind the striker, Kagawa left and a pacy winger on the right.
I know very little about this kind of thing but instinctively - this. Id love to know the truth of the matter, an allergy perhaps? A dodgy prawn, the wrong kind of mushroom, who knows. Its hard to think of a theory that makes less sense than Kagawa sitting down and gorging on food until he collapsed and had to be rushed to hospital.
Manchester United boss David Moyes has revealed that Shinji Kagawa missed the 1-0 defeat to Newcastle after eating too much and having his stomach pumped.
The Japan star has failed to assert himself under Moyes, while the champions struggle in mid-table after a run that has seen them claim only 22 points from their first 14 games. A second successive home defeat on Saturday to Newcastle made the situation a full blown crisis according to some, but eyebrows will now be raised over Kagawa's bizarre absence.
"Shinji was very sick after the [Everton] game and he did a bit of training on Friday but he was low," Moyes told the official United website. "All of the stats that we look at were low so we felt we had better not take a risk in case we got an injury by playing him...
"It was a bad sickness. He thinks he ate too much, and he had to get his stomach pumped, but I think he is okay."
Meanwhile, Moyes rejected claims by BBC pundit Mark Lawrenson that striker Robin van Persie has asked to leave Old Trafford.
"That is absolute nonsense," said the United boss. "I don't know what harder or tougher word I could say but that's as good as I've got."
This fecking thread. What a car crash.
Delighted to see Kagawa showing his class over these last few weeks. Really hope this is the start of a long and succesful career at United. He's a terrific wee player when he's on his game.
Couple of points I find amusing though.
Wasn't Kagawa supposed to play at number 10 in order to be influential? Lo and behold, he suddenly starts looking the business playing the exact same role he's been asked to play since day one. Well I never.
Also, wasn't poor wee Kagawa supposed to be struggling because he was surrounded by utter cart-horses who wouldn't know how to make a run in the final third if someone marked it out on the pitch with a fecking paintbrush? Now we finally see Kagawa looking incisive and effective should we be giving all the credit to the intelligent runs being made by Welbeck, Valencia and a half-fit Rooney? Runs they've presumably only just learned how to make (credit to Steve Round's great coaching maybe?) Or perhaps he's thriving because we're no longer playing with Van Persie? I mean what the feck does RvP know about movement in the final third?