Mawande writes.
Sure
they may have won last season's league title and one of the most expensively
assembled squads in the history of the game, but I am not easily impressed, and
Manchester City does not impress me at all.
Champions. Vincent Kompany holds the Premiership trophy aloft. Quality side or the best of a bad bunch? |
I
believe that any team that wins a contest, be it the league, a match or
tournament, does so because they deserve to. Take nothing away from Manchester
City, they fully deserved to win the Premiership because they were at the top
of the standings when the last game was done and dusted. But really, they were
the best of an average lot. And somehow Manchester United managed to blow an 8
point lead with 5 games to go that handed City the title. Does that make City's
victory a fluke or was it good fortune? Good fortune I’d say, but a better Man
United squad would not have let such a hug lead slip so close to the end.
Silva and Toure. The two world class players at City. |
While
they sneaked past the finish line in first place over in England, they were
shown up to be short of the quality that so characterises sides with
championship pedigree when competing with elite clubs. They looked horribly out
of place in their debut Champions League season, failing to proceed past the
group stages, where they featured in a group including Bayern Munich, who were
runners up in the Champions League and the German Bundesliga; Napoli, who
claimed 5th place in Serie A; and Villareal who were relegated from La Liga.
Quite baffling that a side that would go on to win the English championship
would struggle to make it out of a group that did not have a single other title
winner, if not for the explanation that the league season in England did not have
an outstanding team.
Mancini. |
Like
I say, I don't think that Man City have outstanding quality as a team, I see
the club simply as an expensively assembled group. And at that, I think only
Yaya Toure, David Silva and maybe Carlos Tevez were worth the money paid for
their services and perhaps Vincent Kompany was a bargain at six million pounds,
considering that Chelsea’s David Luiz cost the London club 4 times that amount.
Roberto Mancini is a reactive as opposed to a
proactive manager. Many will say that he is the typical conservative
Italian manager but really, with the money and the players he had at his
disposal, it is quite poor of him that he often employs defensive, read as
negative, tactics where you'll often find against the bigger teams in Premiership, his starting XI comprises 2 defensive midfielders.
Sinclair: Who wants to play for England when you can sit on the City bench? |
Looking
at the signings that were made in the European summer, one cannot believe that
Manchester City serious about building a dynasty as many of their players have
claimed. Their business was done mainly on the last of the window and while
they may be decent players, Maicon is past his prime and Scott Sinclair well, is
not world class and can barely get a look in for the England national team.
It
is possible that this may read as a rant, but far from it, it’s just that the
City side is not as good as it has been claimed. They are nowhere near the
great sides that the English Premiership has seen over the years. I know sports and competition make the biggest and worst tasting humble pies, and should
City retain the Premiership or win the Champions League, I will be the first to admit it and serve myself a huge slice of said pies. Until then, I will continue to believe that they are an overrated
club.
What do you think?
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