This is our City: Claudio Ranieri Has Lost The Plot, Manchester City's Shortcomings And Season So Far

15 March 2016

Claudio Ranieri Has Lost The Plot, Manchester City's Shortcomings And Season So Far



All I keep reading in the news this week is, Ranieri claiming other clubs are still in the title race, it's as if he's trying to hold on to some myth that Leicester City will win it for no other reason than being worthy winners. Maybe in the fairy tale a lot of fans and pundits are spinning but not in my world, the real world of fact, not fantasy. Statistically we are still in the title race but Leicester City are going to have to lose 3 of their fixtures or draw most of them for Arsenal or Manchester City to stand a chance, even so Tottenham Hotspur are going to have to equally hit a brick wall. Even then Manchester City are going to have to win all our remaining fixtures to stand a chance.

Jamie Vardy cost £1 million + addons in 2012 and Riyah Mahrez cost £375.000 + addons, while they are low fees the truth of the matter is. It's cost, it's money, so in reality not one single professional club in the world can deny they have won anything without spending money. In fact Kasper Schmeichel cost them £1.5 million, Robert Huth £3.2 million, N'Golo Kante £6.8 million, Danny Drinkwater £1 million (from the Stretford Massive), Gokhan Inler £5.3 million, shinji Okazaki £8.5 million. Tell me they haven't tried to buy glory like the rest of us, I'll remind you you're delusional.

Fairy Tale you say? I'm not taking anything away from Leicester City, if they win the league then congratulations. They will be worthy winners for consistency alone but, it stops there because this is no fairy tale and the facts prove so. As far as their fans are concerned it may well be a fairy tale but, in the World of Football fairy tales are extremely rare. Now if Leicester City won the Champions League with the team they now have next season, then you will have yourselves a real fairy tale to tell your grand children.

All the usual top 5 of the Stretford Massive, Liverpool, Chelsea, Arsenal, Manchester City have played out very poor seasons, under achieved massively. They can all point too vast injuries to playing staff and bad luck with match officials but, when it comes down to it that's only half the story.

I only really ever follow my own beloved club, rarely pay much attention too the others unless they're our immediate opponents, but I do follow Sport news avidly. So I'm well aware of at least the Stretford Massive, Manchester City and Arsenal suffering injuries to their key and best players.

Manchester City lost Vincent Kompany, Sergio Aguero and then Kevin De Bruyne to injuries against Everton FC, yes I'm blaming Everton and their players. I remember well Gareth Barry and Muhamed Besic tag teaming Sergio Aguero causing his injury, the loss of all three players had all but destroyed Manchester City's fight for the title, the writing was on the wall early on in the season, but us seasoned Manchester City fans ever the optimists in the face of adversity clung on to hope. We've been without Samir Nasri the entire season and Pablo Zabaleta has been out with an injury also, Wilfried Bony is a total and utter failure, we've seen no return on his ridiculous transfer fee. The fact we've stayed in the title race for so long, is down to the rest of our depleted team fighting for it and it's been a tough one this season.


Outsiders and the media would have us believe we have the strongest squad in the league, two players in every position. What they don't see is players getting on in age, Zabaleta 31, Sagna 33, Clichy 30, Demichelis 35, Kolarov 30, Cabellero 34, Toure 32. Of all these 7 players, I'd only keep one if I were Guardiola, that player being Pablo Zabaleta.

What the media have failed to acknowledge are injuries to key players on top of that, not to mention that fact they have been reluctant to point their finger at Manuel Pellegrini. After all it's extremely hard to not like the guy, even if he was your enemy you'd still struggle to hate him.

When Manuel Pellegrini arrived I was excited by his track record of giving youth a chance, despite knowing it wouldn't be so many unlike his work at Malaga. After all he couldn't possibly do as badly as Roberto Mancini did in his last season in charge could he? I thought here we are getting a seasoned and experienced coach who's capable of fixing our problems, and that he did, he never let us down in that department. He steadied the ship and brought more success, all be it erratic and not unlike Mancini, but there's one thing we can not say and that is that they are or were failures. Both Mancini and Pellegrini both deserve respect despite their failing and shortcomings.

And Pellegrini's failure was to put faith in Wilfried Bony, no one on planet Earth with even the slightest intelligence can fail to admit Wilfried Bony has been Manchester City's biggest ever flop. That may sound harsh considering he came from one club playing a completely different style to another, but great players adapt and succeed and that there is the problem. Bony is not a great player and his statistics at Swansea City we're false, just like when the Stretford Massive played through Cristiano Ronaldo the season he scored 40 odd goals in the Premier League.

When we have a rising star in Kelechi Iheanacho on our bench, coming off our bench and scoring goals. Something Wilfried Bony has failed to do, It's criminal of Pellegrini to treat Iheanacho so poorly, He's proved himself time and time again to be worthy of a first team place, Pellegrini has constantly slapped the lad down. Iheanacho is a very humble kid and I find it refreshing listening to him when behind the reporters mic, if he keeps on working hard, improving then boy have we got a world class player on our hands.

I strongly believe had Pellegrini dropped Bony in place of Iheanacho, we would still be in the title race in a more healthy position.

We've also suffered by poor officiating in key title fighting games, like denied stone wall penalties against Everton, Tottenham Hotspur and Leicester City of the incidents I recall. I'm sure there were more incidents but those stand out in the title race more than any. They can point to referee's only being human and claim that decisions balance out over the course of a season but, I don't buy that fiction one single bit. Poor officiating has this season played a huge part in negatively affecting our title fight.

The fact we stubbornly stayed in 4 competitions for so long also made a huge impact on our season, which was why Pellegrini sacrificed the FA Cup in the end as far as I'm concerned. Credit to our young lads though for putting up a valiant fight against Chelsea, for the first 45 minutes they made Chelsea look average.

But back to Ranieri and his opinion that other clubs are still in the title race, well he's right about Tottenham Hotspur but wrong about Arsenal and Manchester City. Is he trying to add more credit to his predicted title win? Yes I think so without a doubt, he's trying to paint it up as much as possible. After all no club wants to admit to winning the league because everyone else was rubbish and gifted it too them.

I'm not going to take anything from Manchester City's worthy players, they've done their best under the circumstances. I'm not going to get on Pellegrini's back and run him down because he's done enough to earn my respect. I'm not going to lambaste match officials for their failings, I'm just going to strike this season off as what it is. A season of fortune, fortunate to still be in the Champions League race, fortunate to win the League Cup and fortunate to still be alive and well to experience it all with my son.

Here's hoping to qualifying for the Champions League, looking forward to the arrival of Pep Guardiola and a brighter blue future.

Claudio Ranieri, pull your head out and see it for what it is, a strange season and probably your last chance saloon for success before you retire so don't try paint it for what it isn't and enjoy it while it lasts.






12 comments:

  1. Yeah, nobody but man city have had bad luck and bad decisions..pitiful self serving excuses for over paid failures.somebody needs to take their head out of their arses..

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    1. Please do highlight all the bad luckand bad decisions that Leicester City have suffered, that have negatively affected their season, try back it up wuth fact. Otherwise just suck it up and accept the truth even if it doesn't sit well or suit your self serving purpose.

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    2. Anonymous15/3/16

      Ahaha so citys season hasnt been plauged by injurys and shite refereeing next season you will all be eating dust when pep comes and takes the leauge by storm!!!!!

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  2. Anonymous16/3/16

    Perhaps you haven't heard Ranieri admit it is a crazy season, and that next season he expects Leicester to finish between 10th and 6th? Nobody in Leicester believes we are the greatest, but we recognise that this season presents a very rare opportunity.

    Ranieri's comments are more likely to be to keep the Leicester players focused, and perhaps to manage expectations and pressure.

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    1. How does lying to his players keep their focus? Does he think his players are too stupid to see the title is theirs too lose and Tottenham Hotspur are the only threat at present, unless they hit an almighty dip in form. Why does he have to lie and imply Arsenal and Manchester City are still in the title race? Even us City fans can admit our chances are pretty slim, ask most City fans around and they will tell you so. Even more so now that we've lost Kompany again.

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    2. Anonymous18/3/16

      Manchester City and Arsenal's chances of winning the title are similar to Leicester avoiding relegation at this time last season. Almost impossible, but strange things have been happening in the Premier league this season.

      As long as the media are busy talking about Ranieri's comments rather than how Leicester are going to win i think it's better for the team.

      The Leicester team are not experienced or mentally prepared for a title run in, and any attempt to deflect attention is worth trying.

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  3. Are you really suggesting Leicesters spending and man city's is equivalent? Didn't you spend 100 million in the summer?

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    1. Bit of a stupid question if you ask me Tom, where did I say it was equivalent? Whether you like it or not the fact stands, you're buying the title just like everyone else before you. Hey that's not a bad thing at all, it's just a fact. So to paint it as a fairy tale considering the FACTS, is ludicrous because you all know, everyone knows the established top English clubs have been poor. That's my point that I'm getting at, like I said I'm not taking anything from whoever wins the title, they deserve it for consistency and or determination.

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  4. If all you wish to do is insult me, then don't expect your comment to be published.

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  5. Anonymous18/3/16

    By your logic, Pellegrini is lying to his players by saying they're still in the title race. Has he 'lost the plot' as well?

    You say Man City are out of the title race, but then say your chances are 'pretty slim', implying that you are not out of the title race - which is it?

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    1. It's both pal, City are out of the title race and we were before we lost too the rags too, that pretty slim hope was down to us winning our remaining games and Leicester losing theirs. I'm not bigvon hope so believed we were out ofcthe race and i was right, but being the English Premier League is as unpredictable as it is and it was statistically possible, why deny the possibility.

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