Forget about the performance or entertainment. It's only the result that matters.
Really? There's also comment from Aidan O'Hara in the Independent and Dunphy in The Star and I'm sure you'll see comment elsewhere over the course of the week.
I think the clue might be in the headline off the article itself.......
Good read, lot of excuises in it for me though and Humphries is so sycophantic with Keane these days it's beyond belief. No need for the comments about Clarke, it can't be pleasant to have that bitterness towards other people inside.
If I had to pay for the players that Keane bought and their wages and the large amount of players that he bought then I would be asking questions as well.
Roy Keane is just a mortal man and has to answer for his actions like anyone else.
A footall manager is just an employee afterall and when he or supporters lose sight of this they have lost the plot.
Read it yesterday and as a Keane fan he really is not making many friends coming out and saying some the stuff he has said.
I taught the piece about Clarke was little low.
The problem with Keane is that he was not used to seeing players not as good as him unable to track back etc from championship standard and to repeat this process in the premiership.
I don't think he is cut out to be premiership manager he has much to learn.
Although I will say i would he did a better job then people give him credit for he did get them promoted from nowhere in fairness but he championship standard at best.
Larry Be Wyse
www.acsportsimages.com
Correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't Keane say that he accepted many of his signings were mediocre but he needed bodies and subsequently having a lot of players not playing naturally led to discontent. Then he goes on to criticise Clarke for saying that players were unhappy?
Anyway, my recollection is that what Clarke said is that all Keane did was shout at people. Clarke may have had experience of it or may have been told by his mates at the club. He didn't need to have been there. Cheap shot by Keane and shows he doesn't take criticism well.
I thought Keane's comments about Ellis (who put in £25 million of his own money into the cluab and actually offered Keane a new contract) were a bit daft. Contrary to the view above that he was right to walk away, it just goes to show that Keane has no respect for authority and that any potential club owner would be mad to hire him.
In my opinion Ellis was perfectly entitled to ask why the club manager doesn't live near Sunderland. Quinn doesn't have a day-to-day involvement with the playing side so he can live where where he likes.
Personally I've little time for Keane (on the basis of articles like this anyway) but then again by all accounts Lance Armstrong is an utterly horrible character. Doesn't mean he wasn't great.
Last edited by Stuttgart88; 23/02/2009 at 5:59 PM.
I agreed wholeheartedly on that when I saw the quote. In the article, he mentions that he's ****ed at Clarke for an interview he gave claiming Keane had lost the dressing room. That may be the source of it. Still in poor taste though.
You can't spell failure without FAI
Keane's lack of people skills were not such a big deal when he was a player. As a manager they are his downfall
http://pix.ie/widgets/generate/accou...000-F5F5FF.jpg
"It's time for the FAI to grow up." John O'Donoghue, Minister for Sport, RTE , Sunday 7 Nov 2004
Because it was about his service to Ireland. This, on the other hand, is about Keane's role in leaving a Premiership club - not a smidgeon about Ireland as far as I can see. Anyway, the powers that be have decided that this is relevant to the Irish team and who am I to question this![]()
Forget about the performance or entertainment. It's only the result that matters.
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