So in other words United - and most other clubs - pursue the definition of
insanity. It's an interesting point. Do football teams actually
need a manager? Most clubs have a 'fitness coach', 'goalkeeping coach' etc. so a near-seven figure sum for basically pinning up the team sheet seems a bit excessive. (Plus the tiresome post-match interviews that he's 'disappointed' in those same players)
But, given that as a nation we're intent on preserving the status quo (and never winning a global sporting event ever again), what 'signs' should the lamentably useless interviewing board at United look for? A distinguished career as a player? Absolutely not. Almost all successful managers had indifferent playing careers. History is littered with 'great' players who failed to cut is as managers.
A long career as a manager? No. It always ends in the sack. Besides, the ridiculous sums these chancers are paid means that they're multi-millionaires, which means they're no longer...
...young and hungry. Guys like Flitcroft at Bury who can still remember the slings and arrows he faced every match, and how to counter them.
That's the best option at our level.
Just my thoughts but, as Rodgers and Advocaat proved at the weekend (and the 64 clubs who sacked their manager in the top four divisions last season), maybe I'm on to something?