Hey, has anyone been keeping up with soccer? If so, please explain, because it is something wildly absurd! The foremost explanation for this: Jamie Carragher, the English footballer and most recently Liverpool’s infamously opinionated defender, has an opinion on it. For now, the most Jesus take the wheel moment on offer is the baffling decision to keep Ruben Amorim on the bench, in a role they are calling head coach of Manchester United. What doesn’t apply there applies quite logically!
Why Jamie Carragher Is Relevant
There is one reason, and it is that Amorim is still the manager. It starts with fans the moment a team begins to lose. Afterwards, the players look depressed, and then the owners of the club care, and all of them care in the order stated, the last caring the most. The easiest thing to do is to fire the manager and hire a new one, which is like changing from one game you don’t like to a different game in the hope that it will be better.
The Bibbidi-Bobbidi-Boo Theory of Jamie Carragher
Our football pundit Carragher, like other football experts, wants to see football theories grounded in facts and logic; however, with the English football giant, Manchester United, it could be something different. He thinks that the club could be looking for the ‘right’ manager with the ‘right’ long-term strategy. Carragher wonders.
What might be the factors?
Based on football experts like Jamie Carragher, one reason could be that the club is holding out for a ‘dream coach’ who isn’t available right now. It also might be that the club needs some sort of improvement. The club could trust Amorim and wanted to give him time to solve the issues. The club could be waiting to buy new players to improve the squad before making any decisions about the coach.
Authors Opinion
For me, it looks as if Jamie Carragher feels like something is planned privately. Nothing is being planned in secret, and Manchester United actually has a strange plan for something that looks plan regarding nothing.
Does he stay or does he leave? That is certainly the most pressing question! I’m sure only time will tell if Carragher is correct. Isn’t this what makes football so lovable?