Schneckerl
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Reminds me of Di Maria vs France
"I only stayed one year, it was not the best time of my career, or rather I was not allowed to spend my best time.
"There were complications with the coach of the time. But thank God, I was able to come to PSG and demonstrate again who I was."
He was shocking regardless of what went on with the manager. Just like how Sanchez takes the blame despite Mourinho doing a poor a job. I understand a player under performing, like Pogba or Martial and especially the younger lot. But to be as bad as Di Maria became and Sanchez has been, for established players, is inexcusable.
I despise him. He used the club, and cost us an awful lot of money, he's a rat.
He was embarrassing at the end but to me there's no comparison between him and Sanchez. For the first half season he was one of our best players and people were excited. Sanchez hasn't even gotten to that stage.
He was embarrassing at the end but to me there's no comparison between him and Sanchez. For the first half season he was one of our best players and people were excited. Sanchez hasn't even gotten to that stage.
I find it real weird how people can act like a rat and end up looking like a rat too.
Di Maria looks very ratty.
He wasn’t good for a half season though. Looked great in a handful of games, very early on, which created a feel good factor which meant it took fecking ages for everyone to accept that actually, yeah, he’s been a bit shit.
I don't remember it the same way, but to me that's quibbling over details. My view is that di María showed us what he could potentially offer at his best for a sustained period, and then totally fell apart. No doubt van Gaal played a role but di María's inability to adapt is his own problem. Sánchez is more comparable to Falcao, for me. Never even got up and running; just a slow motion car crash. Well, Sánchez is doing it in slow motion whereas Falcao was just a series of pathetic mini-crashes.
So, big picture, I think it's unfair to put Sánchez in the same bucket. Di María stopped trying. Sánchez keeps trying but seemingly isn't able.
He was doing what Pogba done under Mourinho, but took it one step further, I understand you hate the manager and their tactics, but to take a steaming dump on a club and its fans for that reason is pretty shocking, effort is the minimum requirement really.
Disagree completely with that. Pogba was our best player under Mourinho this season, then he had a few shockers just like he did last season when he was supportive of the manager. This led to him being dropped.
In my opinion Mourinho tried to force Pogba to become a player he wasn't. Pogba was forced to have defensive concentration throughout the whole game, which is not his game. He can defend in spurts, but his main qualities are going forward.
Through sheer talent! What I'm trying to say is that they both gave up because of their managers.
Actually, the Falcao analogy is a good one. He came good eventually, at a different club. I hope Sanchez doesn’t have to leave to do the same.
Has Di Maria been as good in France as Falcao? I don’t think he has, right? Although I don’t watch Ligue Un.
Actually, the Falcao analogy is a good one. He came good eventually, at a different club. I hope Sanchez doesn’t have to leave to do the same.
Has Di Maria been as good in France as Falcao? I don’t think he has, right? Although I don’t watch Ligue Un.
If you look at Di Maria's stats in his first season in France he scored 10 and assists 18 in 26(4) apps which is what you'd expect from a forward of his standing playing for PSG in the French League. Since then his number have dropped off.
Looking at the numbers his peak definitely seemed to be his last season at Madrid, his season with us and his first season in France. I do think he could have been an amazing player for us. I remember watching him against Germany for Argentina early in his United career and he was on fire.
He's pretty much a full-time midfielder now though.If you look at Di Maria's stats in his first season in France he scored 10 and assists 18 in 26(4) apps which is what you'd expect from a forward of his standing playing for PSG in the French League. Since then his number have dropped off.
Looking at the numbers his peak definitely seemed to be his last season at Madrid, his season with us and his first season in France. I do think he could have been an amazing player for us. I remember watching him against Germany for Argentina early in his United career and he was on fire.
Pretty sure his very last appearance for us against Hull, he took himself off ‘injured’ and remembering it looking pathetically clear he wasn’t injured at all. He’s also the reason why I’m not too keen on having any more Argentinians in the squad with him being the straw that broke the camels back after Heinze and Tevez.
Yeah, you pay that kind of humongous wages to him so that you could rotate him with a highly talented 23 year old who has done lot more for us than the mercenary. At those wages him being a rotating option is madness. He needs to give world class performances week in week out as he was bought as a finished article/superstar.I guess rotating with Martial is the likely option.
You are correct that Di Maria was much better than Sanchez (particularly early on) however my post was aimed at comparing ownership and responsibility of the footballer and manager, and not the actual peformance levels. Eventually though, whether though ability or mentality, Di Maria reached absolutely woeful performance levels much like Sanchez. For me, that's too much to put on the manager entirely. I understand a players level dropping like Pogba or Martial or anyone else due to the managers treatment or tactics, but unless you and the manager have some wierd personal issues, it shouldn't result in abysmal showings.I don't remember it the same way, but to me that's quibbling over details. My view is that di María showed us what he could potentially offer at his best for a sustained period, and then totally fell apart. No doubt van Gaal played a role but di María's inability to adapt is his own problem. Sánchez is more comparable to Falcao, for me. Never even got up and running; just a slow motion car crash. Well, Sánchez is doing it in slow motion whereas Falcao was just a series of pathetic mini-crashes.
So, big picture, I think it's unfair to put Sánchez in the same bucket. Di María stopped trying. Sánchez keeps trying but seemingly isn't able.
You are correct that Di Maria was much better than Sanchez (particularly early on) however my post was aimed at comparing ownership and responsibility of the footballer and manager, and not the actual peformance levels. Eventually though, whether though ability or mentality, Di Maria reached absolutely woeful performance levels much like Sanchez. For me, that's too much to put on the manager entirely. I understand a players level dropping like Pogba or Martial or anyone else due to the managers treatment or tactics, but unless you and the manager have some wierd personal issues, it shouldn't result in abysmal showings.
I suppose we'll know soon about Sanchez. I understand your point and accept the same although I'd like to see whether Sanchez is completely done or this is his level.Yeah I don't agree that Sanchez has dropped his level because of factors within his control. I agree di Maria did, albeit I understand his position. Sanchez is playing poorly because he can't play better, IMO. Like Falcao, it wasn't his fault or van Gaal's fault.
I suppose we'll know soon about Sanchez. I understand your point and accept the same although I'd like to see whether Sanchez is completely done or this is his level.
But again, I'd reiterate that I was speaking more specifically regarding the shifting of blame onto the manager and the whole notion that the manager is 'ruining' the player. Even if we accept your analysis, both wouldn't be cases of a manager ruining a player because in Sanchez's case, he would have regressed himself and had no better version of himself to offer and in ADM's, his own attitude and professionalism was too poor to shift blame.
Now one could make argument that the managers were wrong to sign these players and they'd be right. But that's a different discussion.