Voted 2, and still maintain the opinion that we should let Van Gaal go at the end of the season.
The attack has been sputtering since he took charge. We weren't playing breathtaking football when Louis was appointed, there are some persisting personnel issues; but you'd hope there's be some remedy to that after 18 months at the club, or atleast some scheme would be devised to address that concern. We scored at a rate of 1.6 goals per league game last season. This season we have scored a tepid 1.5 goals per league game, that's as much as a bumbling Chelsea team, and 7th on the overall league table. Same story in the Champions League with 1.33 goals per game in the Group stages. The term United Way is thrown about a lot, but in this case, there is genuine cause for concern, especially after 3 transfer windows, and a year and a half incharge. These aren't teething issues, but symptoms of under-performing players in addition to systemic failure, both of which can ultimately be traced back to the manager.
Some of his decision-making leaves a lot to be desired. Like yesterday for instance, where underwhelming performances of some of our players aside, I thought Van Gaal's substitutions of Young and Rooney were rather poor to be honest. Rojo is a decent crosser and there was no major reason to sub him off. We needed to add some verve to the center of the attack. The duo of Mata and Ander would've helped on that front. But we missed the opportunity, and apart from that game, a lot of the manager's in-game decisions are quite bizzare at times. Then you come to the exodus in the summer, which has unfortunately left us in the red zone. The schedule of footballers is so packed these days, that coupled with a relatively harsh training regimen and the Christmas period, we were going to struggle with form and fitness issues. Ideally you'd want some sort of insurance in key areas, and we're starving up front, which could've been predicted even back then.
Could go on, but a lot of it is much harsher criticism. This summer, we'll be well placed to replace him, and get an upgrade. A manager who won the Champions League just 18 months ago is still unemployed, and the one at Bayern is hinting at leaving when his contract is up. Guardiola might take a sabbatical, but Ancelotti is an upgrade over Louis IMO. I'm afraid that when Van Gaal's contract is up, Ancelotti is employed elsewhere, Pep might decide to join someplace else, and we'll be left with nothing. Get someone like an Ancelotti in if Pep has to take a sabbatical, and let him shape the team. There's an erroneous narrative that suggests Carlo can't truly deal with a club in transition. But he took over an AC Milan team that was suffering, embedded 6 starters, and won the Champions League within 2 seasons. The cupboard was bare at PSG, yes he had money to spend there, but so can United, and again, he placed 9 starters on the team. If that's not rebuilding a team, then nothing is to be fair.
He plays a healthy mixture of possession/ counter-attacking football, with a stable defense to build upon, allows certain freedoms to attacking players without compromising on team ethic or work-rate, extracts the best out of inconsistent or under-performing players, is super experienced with to notch man management skills, and is well respected by everyone. We have a solid foundation to build upon, and Ancelotti could really take us further (especially in Europe). That's something I genuinely believe Luis can't offer. Too pragmatic, too labored with the system, too much back and forth decision-making. Anyway, back to Carlo, PSG were in the Europa League when he took charge. Reached the Champions League last 16 in his first season, reached the quarterfinals in just his second season (drew 3-3 with Barcelona and were knocked out on away goals), and the quarterfinals again in his third where they drew 3-3 with Chelsea, and performed really well. That's a great unpward trajectory for a team that wasn't even in the Champions League. The Ligue 1 might've been a cakewalk, but the Premier League is weak too (relative to where it was in the past), and that PSG team could have potentially won the Premier League as well.
Compare that team to United of today. De Gea is better than Sirigu. Darmian is better than Jallet, and Carlo would get the best out of his fellow Italian, Smalling is comfortably better than Alex, Shaw is better than Maxwell when fit, Schneiderlin is comparable to or better than Motta, Herrera is comparable to where Matuidi was back then, Martial is much inferior to Zlatan, but he's yong-n-lernin. Which leaves holes in the shape of a quality CM like Verratti, 2 wide options, and a quality CB. Give him the kind of money Van Gaal got in his first season to address the squad, and he'll have us contending on both the domestic and European front.
PS: Bah, that reads like a sales pitch now... Sorry.