I'd have loved the opportunity to sign 15 players like Paolo did. I never got that opportunity.
Quote from: DrGonzo on November 11, 2013, 01:29:54 PM I'd have loved the opportunity to sign 15 players like Paolo did. I never got that opportunity.The problem with that, Martin, is that you signing 15 players would cost about £200m.
Quote from: pauliewalnuts on November 11, 2013, 01:40:26 PMQuote from: DrGonzo on November 11, 2013, 01:29:54 PM I'd have loved the opportunity to sign 15 players like Paolo did. I never got that opportunity.The problem with that, Martin, is that you signing 15 players would cost about £200m.Quite and I'm not sure he's right about his Villa team being excellent in terms of fitness.
Quote from: Rigadon on November 11, 2013, 06:43:26 AMInteresting for MON to pick out the fitness at Villa as some kind of evidence he knew how to get a squad fit!http://www.theguardian.com/football/2013/nov/10/paolo-di-canio-martin-oneill-sunderlandI recall plenty of times where we ran out of steam after an hour.He's right about Di Canio though. Total cretin.When we shipped 7 against Chelsea, John *spits* Terry gave an interview where he basically said that everyone knows what to do agaisnt Villa - wait for us to get tired and then hammer us. MON's Villa were not fit: the same XI was overplayed to the point of burnout, he clearly doesn't understand fitness properly from his comments about diet yesterday (read them, he sounds like Godfrey Bloom) and the style of play, where we never dominated possession properly, meant we did an awful lot more running and chasing that we should've.
Interesting for MON to pick out the fitness at Villa as some kind of evidence he knew how to get a squad fit!http://www.theguardian.com/football/2013/nov/10/paolo-di-canio-martin-oneill-sunderlandI recall plenty of times where we ran out of steam after an hour.He's right about Di Canio though. Total cretin.
"I was very disappointed at the outcome. I think I would have garnered the five points necessary to have stayed up and [had] the chance maybe to have changed the side."
Quote"I was very disappointed at the outcome. I think I would have garnered the five points necessary to have stayed up and [had] the chance maybe to have changed the side."Keep talking out your arse, MON. I doubt there's a single Sunderland supporter that would agree with you.Charlatan? Pot calls kettle black.
The March 'drop-off' is a footballing myth. Yes, O'Neill's record in March was poor. Equally, in three seasons out of four, his teams had a good April/May.Knackered? Not on results.
Roy Keane has returned to the Republic of Ireland fold, insisting he is no monster.The former Manchester United skipper stepped back into the line of fire with his country this week, as the controversial choice as assistant to new boss Martin O’Neill.But Keane said: “There’s nothing to tame. I’m not some sort of animal.“I’m a footballing man. I work hard and push people – sometimes I’ve got that slightly wrong over the years. But I think I got a lot of it right.”However, the man who caused a national crisis when he walked out of the World Cup squad on the eve of the 2002 tournament believes his reputation as a trouble-maker may work in his favour.“Hopefully they are in for a pleasant surprise – particularly the lads who haven’t worked with me," he added.“I know people can believe what they hear and read. If they’re thinking some monster’s going to turn up – and, all of a sudden, I’m quite placid.”O’Neill described their partnership as “bad cop and bad, bad cop” but Keane said: “I think it’s going to be the other way round, I think I am going to have to be the good cop.“You obviously don’t know Martin as well as you think you do. He makes me look like Mother Teresa. It should be interesting.”Keane said he spoke to players in the squad he previously criticised while a manager or TV pundit, adding “I hope we’re OK with each other. There’s not any tension.”The 42-year-old Old Trafford icon was described as "frightening" by his former United boss Alex Ferguson in his new book.Fergie wrote: “The hardest part of Roy's body is his tongue. He has the most savage tongue you can imagine. He can debilitate the most confident person in the world in seconds with that tongue.“What I noticed about him that day when I was arguing with him was that his eyes started to narrow, almost to wee black beads. It was frightening to watch. And I'm from Glasgow." Keane admits he has learned lessons from his spells as manager of Sunderland and Ipswich.Keane believes his time at the two clubs has been judged unfairly, although he concedes there were plenty of things he would do differently.He said: “Where do you want to start? We could be here all day.“The area where I certainly need to improve, and every club manager would say the same, is recruitment.”But he is disappointed not to have been offered another chance since leaving Portman Road in 2011.He maintained: “I have no problems with clubs not giving me an opportunity but I would say that some clubs should certainly have spoken to me over the last year or two.“I felt clubs should have given me another opportunity to get back into football. Not every job, don’t get me wrong, I’m not waiting for the phone to ring.“But there’s a few clubs I’ve looked at and went ‘I think that would suit me, that would suit my personality’.“I think I did OK at Sunderland. Even at Ipswich we did OK. But that’s for another day. It’s a long story.”Keane insists his desire to succeed is as strong as ever but denied he would walk out on Ireland if a leading club knocked on his door.“I don’t think that will happen,” he said. “You have to live in the now instead of worrying about what might happen.“You could be sitting at home for the next year or two waiting for the opportunity but the opportunity has come to work with Martin O’Neill and I feel very lucky.”