@Regulus_291 Why'd you have to put fcking Regulus on the same row as my girl Emilia ๐ญ
The dude's completely impossible to interact with, you would only take that seat if you have a death wish lmao
This is not mine. This is yours. This is ours.
From all the players, staff and everyone involved in the club, to you guys who supported us every single day of the season.
Grateful for your love and support โค๏ธ
There are places we pass through in lifeโฆ and there are places that become part of who we are.
Manchester will forever be my home.
To the city, the club, and every supporter, my sincerest thank you. These past four years have been unforgettable, filled with moments my family and I will carry with us for the rest of our lives. There simply arenโt enough words to describe the happiness and warmth weโve felt here.
Thank you for every cheer, every memory, and for making us feel at home from the very first day.
Forever a Red Devil โค๏ธ
The strongest case for Sir Alex Ferguson over Pep Guardiola is actually pretty simple.
Football management is more than tactics.
Pep may have influenced football more stylistically, but Ferguson mastered every single aspect of management at the highest level for over 25 years. He wasnโt just coaching a team, he was running an empire.
What makes Ferguson unique is that he built multiple great teams from scratch and kept winning through entirely different football eras. Most managers have one peak cycle. Ferguson had about four.
The early 90s side with Cantona was different from the Treble side. The Treble side was different from the Ronaldo/Rooney era. Then he still won another title in 2013 with a squad that honestly had no business dominating the league the way it did. That level of reinvention over two decades is probably the hardest achievement in football management history.
And unlike Pep, Ferguson did not always have the best squad, best structure, or most money. He regularly outperformed stronger teams through mentality, adaptability, and sheer force of leadership. Thereโs a reason rival fans still talk about โFergie Timeโ almost like mythology, his teams psychologically overwhelmed opponents before games even started.
Another thing people underrate is how difficult Fergusonโs environment was. The Premier League during his era had constantly changing rivals:
Arsenal under Wenger
Chelsea under Mourinho with Roman Abramovichโs money
Liverpool historically
Newcastleโs rise in the 90s
Blackburn spending heavily
Then later the rise of billionaire-backed clubs
Yet Ferguson remained the constant.
Pep, meanwhile, has mostly coached elite, ready-made superclubs with extraordinary infrastructure already in place. Thatโs not his fault, but it matters in historical comparisons. Ferguson turned young players into world stars repeatedly. Beckham, Giggs, Scholes, Ronaldo, Rooney different generations entirely. Pep improves elite players, Ferguson often created them.
And then thereโs the longevity argument, which is massive. Staying at the top for 25+ years in football is nearly impossible now. Dressing rooms change, tactics evolve, player power grows, ownership changes happen, pressure increases. Ferguson survived all of it and still retired as champion.
Pep may end up as the greatest tactical coach ever. But Fergusonโs argument is that he was the more complete football manager leader, builder, psychologist, developer, winner, and cultural architect all in one.
@AnimexTwts Man's got a point. Naruto, however, has to many fillers. Whereas JJK could really use a few more.
The baseball episode in S1 was one of my favorites ๐
@RpsAgainstTrump By "A lot of people" he means that HE confused the two and thought they were talking about vision, until someone explained it to his out of touch ass like he was 6.