He instigated it...Nope, I am not getting into talking about him again.
I did Chief. Weather worked out nicely and the nipper loved it, particularly going on a plane.
Paolo Di Canio has defended his record as Sunderland manager and furiously denied accusations from Martin O'Neill that he was a "charlatan".The fiery Italian took over from O'Neill at the Stadium of Light in March, but he was sacked in September after the club picked up only one point from their first five games this season. New Republic of Ireland boss O'Neill branded Di Canio 'a charlatan' earlier this week, but the former Italy international insisted he saved a club that was "already sunk". Speaking in an exclusive interview with Sky Sports News, Di Canio said: "I don't know if he knows the meaning of this word charlatan. Probably I can teach him, even if I am not English. "I respect the opinion of manager Martin O'Neill but the fact that he spoke after six months, not straight away, that proves what kind of level he is. He is not very big. "A charlatan is a manager who spends £40m to be a top 10 club and then sees the club sink into the relegation zone." Di Canio also stood by his criticism of the condition of the Sunderland players when he took over, describing their fitness levels as "pathetic". "I had players who told me they had cramps from driving the car," he said. "I had three players with injuries in the calf after 20 minutes of a game. Six different players with problems means they were not fit."
To be honest, that rant about Di Canio by MON was outrageous. He shouldn't be pointing out a fellow manager's failings, especially at a club where he failed himself.
Regarding Ireland, it will be interesting if we finally get MON's side on how the Ireland/Milner transfer came about.
Di Canio agrees with the H&V consensus on one thing then.QuotePaolo Di Canio has defended his record as Sunderland manager and furiously denied accusations from Martin O'Neill that he was a "charlatan".The fiery Italian took over from O'Neill at the Stadium of Light in March, but he was sacked in September after the club picked up only one point from their first five games this season. New Republic of Ireland boss O'Neill branded Di Canio 'a charlatan' earlier this week, but the former Italy international insisted he saved a club that was "already sunk". Speaking in an exclusive interview with Sky Sports News, Di Canio said: "I don't know if he knows the meaning of this word charlatan. Probably I can teach him, even if I am not English. "I respect the opinion of manager Martin O'Neill but the fact that he spoke after six months, not straight away, that proves what kind of level he is. He is not very big. "A charlatan is a manager who spends £40m to be a top 10 club and then sees the club sink into the relegation zone." Di Canio also stood by his criticism of the condition of the Sunderland players when he took over, describing their fitness levels as "pathetic". "I had players who told me they had cramps from driving the car," he said. "I had three players with injuries in the calf after 20 minutes of a game. Six different players with problems means they were not fit."
I can well believe the mobile phones stories - mon is apparently notorious with not getting back to people or contacting them days later when they call him - I think he followed the cloughie guide to management but without the tactical nous of cloughie or the eagle eyes peter Taylor to spot a player .Mon is in many ways stuck in a time warp regarding modern methods and management - the Irish job may suit him and he may be hero worshipped if successful - qualification for the euros is not beyond him .Man management and motivation are his main attributes .
Quote from: eastie on November 15, 2013, 11:43:12 AMI can well believe the mobile phones stories - mon is apparently notorious with not getting back to people or contacting them days later when they call him - I think he followed the cloughie guide to management but without the tactical nous of cloughie or the eagle eyes peter Taylor to spot a player .Mon is in many ways stuck in a time warp regarding modern methods and management - the Irish job may suit him and he may be hero worshipped if successful - qualification for the euros is not beyond him .Man management and motivation are his main attributes .Surely at international level you need modern methods and management too though? Granted 24 teams out of 53 qualify for the Euros so maybe the arm around the shoulder and stirring speeches in the dressing room might be enough.
They're just as bad as each other to be honest. PDC can sit there and claim that O Neill wouldn't have pulled off two wins and the points required to stay up. Honestly I think he probably would have in the end, and they'd have started better this season too had O Neill spent Di Canios money on 3-4 O Neill signings rather than 15 new players. Di Canio is far too much of a clown to manage at the top level. O Neill is past it at club footy. Both are gobshites.