🚨 Gavi: “Hansi Flick is a father to me. I thank him and appreciate him so much”.
“He told me: be the Gavi you always have been, go and compete like you always do”.
“He has done everything for me every time that I have been injured. I hope he can stay for many years with us”.
🚨🇵🇹 Inter and Barcelona have been both in contact again with João Cancelo’s camp in the last 24h.
Inter want Cancelo while Barcelona aware of the opportunity and still discussing internally.
Race on, as he’s 100% leaving Al Hilal this month.
➕🎥 https://t.co/dMKvcIyO2l
Meet Bobby…
On Sunday, he led out his beloved @ManUtd alongside his hero Bruno Fernandes, to become the club’s first ever wheelchair-using mascot.
This is his story ❤️
You cannot be a healthy, successful football club without creating the conditions for people to buy into your idea and them wanting to embark on the journey together.
You certainly can’t if there is animosity, apprehension, fear, and an absence of goodwill.
If there is no bond with the supporters, no sense of belonging or appreciation for staff, and a lack of understanding that what happens off the pitch will colour what happens on it, you will be married to a cycle of misery and failure.
No-one would argue that Manchester United need to make more financially responsible decisions and their workforce was severely bloated in comparison to rivals.
The cold way of implementing their ‘transformation plan,’ however, is eroding togetherness, leading to a situation with “morale at its lowest,” which as Ruben Amorim admitted “affects the environment.”
A loss of love, of pride, of experience. The £66 flat ticket rate for members, doing away with concessions, and the threat of price hikes will also see the loss of loyal fans that have still supported a team delivering a season of record lows. It has been players, past and present, that have shown a caring touch and have tried to go out of their way, even financially, to cure some of the cost-cutting decisions.
You cannot be a healthy, successful football club if you continue to mask the fact that the greatest problems have been the ownership of the Glazers, the interest cost of their leveraged buyout (over £1 billion), plus the ridiculously poor recruitment and general football decisions under their watch, which have continued thus far under INEOS.