Man City Review 09/10
You jump from tenth to fifth, finish a couple of points off a Champions League place, get to a semi final of the League Cup. Not a bad season, is it? |
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Over his half season tenure, Mancini pulled up few trees and did little to suggest he is the long term appointment City need to elevate themselves well above where they are now. Stamford Bridge and Aston Villa at Eastland’s apart, Mancini stalled in the games that mattered. Down the home straight against an insipid Liverpool they offered nothing, gave United too much respect in another limp show, and seemed devoid of belief to beat a tired Arsenal. This was all before Spurs rocked up and showed a team of talents how to play as a talented team. How much of this is down to Mancini is up for debate, but also throw in the defeats to Everton and Hull, the blowing of the League Cup semi and crashing out to Stoke in the FA Cup, and Mancini will need to hit the deck running.
In fairness to the Italian, he was brought in to handle a squad of somebody else’s players and had no time to accustom the group to his methods and practices. At least he will have the benefit of his own pre-season and time to implement his philosophies. The dog chasing tail scenario now is what the Blues do over the summer. The conundrum is how to strengthen the team without constantly disrupting the equilibrium and harmony that is vital for successful teams. If you analyse the club’s transfers over the last 18 months, the policy of spending big has been of limited benefit.
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There was no doubt whatever it cost to gain Carlos
Tevez was money well spent, but what of the rest?
£25m for Emmanuel Adebayor, who didn’t do much after his manic dart down the touchline against Arsenal. His old Gunner’s teammate Kolo Toure never made the back four his responsibility as much as you’d like after parting with £15m, Joleon Lescott is worth nothing like £22m and Roque Santa Cruz will be lucky to get another shot after doing little to justify his £17m price tag. The less said of Robinho and Jo the better. The more cerebral transfers like Shay Given, Gareth Barry, Craig Bellamy, Nigel De Jong, Pablo Zabaleta and Adam Johnson, yielded the best return in terms of quality and value, regardless of City’s bottomless bank balance.
The challenge now upcoming is to progress once again and gradually make those steps up to where the mouthpieces suggest they want to be. Problem is that’s easier said than done and takes much more than money to achieve. The last six titles have gone to either Chelsea or United and last time out the material gap is 21 points between the champions and City. Whilst they can inch away at that, and go through gradual stages of improvement, what City severely lack is the identity and spirit that United and Chelsea have formed through the last decade of success and competing for honours. That can only be gained through harbouring a mentality and an indelible desire to win, weathering storms, coming through adversity and staving off the challenge of the rest of the land. None of that can be bought and City need to reverse and age old tradition of comedic failure if they are to end that hunt for silverware. The ticker counter draped down from the Stretford End may read 34 years, but that is now obsolete, it should be rewound and read 18 months, and this is where the real pressure builds. Tick tock...
John Baines for Manchester Gossip Sports
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