The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Hoping for a merry homecoming

Ex-man United manager David Moyes returns to Old Trafford for the first time since getting sacked, on this occasion with relegation-threatened Sunderland

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

THE 'CHOSEN One' banner has gone from the Stretford End. The team has been overhauled through three consecutiv­e offseasons of lavish spending. Alex Ferguson's shadow no longer looms quite so large.

Yet, when David Moyes returns to Old Trafford on Monday for the first time since his abrupt firing by Manchester United in April 2014, he'll find things haven't changed that much at England's biggest club since his ill-fated 10-month spell there three seasons ago.

In the fourth year of the post-ferguson era, 20-time champion United is still yearning for its former glories, still searching for that attacking spark of old, and still languishin­g outside the Champions League qualificat­ion positions they once took for granted.

Recent results may have been encouragin­g for United's latest manager, Jose Mourinho, but a run of three straight wins has only left the team in sixth place heading into the match against Sunderland, the relegation-threatened northeast club coached by Moyes. A top-four finish - and therefore a place in the Champions League - is far from guaranteed for United this season. So Moyes returns to United with a feeling of 'What if?'

What if he'd been allowed to see out the six-year contract he was given after being hand-picked as a replacemen­t by Ferguson (hence the ‘Chosen One'’ moniker? Instead, as soon as United could no longer finish in the top four in that 2013-14 campaign, he was fired.

What if he'd been given more than two transfer windows to reshape an aging squad left behind by Ferguson? Moyes signed two first-team players — Marouane Fellaini and Juan Mata — at a cost of about 65 million pounds, which is nothing compared to the amount successors Louis van Gaal and Mourinho have spent. Moyes said he targeted Cristiano Ronaldo, Gareth Bale and Cesc Fabregas, and had finalized a deal for Toni Kroosbutwa­sfiredbefo­reitcouldg­othrough.

‘Unfairly treated’

"I was definitely unfairly treated," Moyes said in his pre-match news conference. "Other managers have come and gone and it's been difficult for them as well. I actually think whoever followed Alex Ferguson, whether it be Jose Mourinho then or Carlo Ancelotti or Juergen Klopp, Pep Guardiola or David Moyes, I think it would have been the same. I think it would have taken whoever it was time to change the squad around. It was going to be a rebuilding job and never get done immediatel­y."

Moyes said he was given 'plenty of reassuranc­es' he would have longer to carry out the rebuilding job - "I didn't believe I had to do it in nine months, or even 12 months" _ but is still happy to have experience­d managing such a big club.

"Disappoint­ed I didn't get to see out my contract, that's for sure," he said, "but I'll look back knowing I was really fortunate to have the chance to work with some great players, and to see how, at the real top level, things are. I enjoyed being at Manchester United."

 ?? File ?? David Moyes was axed by Manchester United in April 2014 after an ill-fated tenure. He will face his former team as Sunderland’s manager on Monday.
File David Moyes was axed by Manchester United in April 2014 after an ill-fated tenure. He will face his former team as Sunderland’s manager on Monday.

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