Solskjær Haunted by Pochettino's Ghost Amid Old Trafford High-Wire Act

Ole Gunnar Solskjær, seen here during the comeback win at West Ham, has the backing of Manchester United’s board.
Photograph: Javier García/BPI/Shutterstock
Ole Gunnar Solskjær, seen here during the comeback win at West Ham, has the backing of Manchester United’s board. Photograph: Javier García/BPI/Shutterstock
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Solskjær Haunted by Pochettino's Ghost Amid Old Trafford High-Wire Act

Ole Gunnar Solskjær, seen here during the comeback win at West Ham, has the backing of Manchester United’s board.
Photograph: Javier García/BPI/Shutterstock
Ole Gunnar Solskjær, seen here during the comeback win at West Ham, has the backing of Manchester United’s board. Photograph: Javier García/BPI/Shutterstock

For Ole Gunnar Solskjær, the cycle is wearyingly familiar. The Manchester United manager can win and sometimes win well and it is usually down to Bruno Fernandes or possibly Marcus Rashford. But when he loses it is his head on the chopping block or, more precisely, the list of trending topics on social media.

#OleOut is normally accompanied by some sort of reference to Mauricio Pochettino, the out-of-work former Tottenham manager, whom a section of supporters have anointed as Solskjær’s successor-in-waiting. It has been this way for the best part of a year – Ole at the wheel; Pochettino looming aggressively in his mirrors.

Pochettino has had to wait but he is prepared to do so for a top job, which he believes he merits after his work at Spurs. It is not necessarily United – he is also of interest to Real Madrid – but he knows that select powerbrokers at Old Trafford wanted him in 2016 when they sought to replace Louis van Gaal. And that was before he had done his best stuff. In the end, United played safer and chose a proven winner in José Mourinho.

Pochettino is in no rush. He continues to be paid by Spurs, who dismissed him in November of last year after his first protracted downturn. He could have got back into the game by now because he has had proposals but he can afford to be picky.

Pochettino’s achievements at Spurs – rebuilding the club, establishing them in the Premier League’s top four on a relative shoestring – have not been diminished by the passing of time. If anything, they have been enhanced, romanticized, and his availability has been a major problem for Solskjær.

Any United manager is obliged to win every week. It is not realistic but elite-level football cares not for such detail. Solskjær, though, must also outperform the hypothetical notion of how Pochettino might do at Old Trafford – continuing in the home derby with Manchester City on Saturday. How can anybody beat a ghost?

Solskjær was everybody’s favorite caretaker manager, his record in the post after taking over from Mourinho close to perfect. It was blotted only by the league defeat at Arsenal and the FA Cup quarter-final exit at Wolves – the two games before his confirmation as the permanent manager in March 2019. But even then, the doubters wondered whether there ought to have been a broader sample size upon which to judge his suitability. Why not wait until the end of the season?

Solskjær’s United flatlined between the Arsenal fixture and then and, had the club waited, the decision might not have been so clear-cut. The background noise around him has since been remorselessly loud, save for the period that followed the game’s restart after lockdown last season, when Solskjær had everybody fit and his team played some fine front-foot football en route to a third-place finish.

United are good to watch when they are breaking at pace, and Fernandes brings variation, making things happen between the lines. Where Solskjær has succeeded has been in the creation of an excitement mostly absent during the tenures of David Moyes, Van Gaal, and Mourinho. His team badly lacked fitness in the first two weeks of this season but, once they had built it, they have looked as if they can always create chances – apart from in the dismal 1-0 home defeat against Arsenal.

Since the October international break they have taken 16 points from an available 21. They are five off top spot with a game in hand. Beat City and the table could look rosier.

But nobody seems to be talking this way. Instead, Solskjær is only ever one bad result from an unforgiving spotlight and the calls for Pochettino. It does not matter that the board say they are solidly behind him. Or even that there is such a will among the diehards for Solskjær to succeed. The noise is constant and Solskjær cannot find the mute button.

It has come to feel as though the wins are merely a means of shooing the wolf from the door, of staying alive, rather than building blocks, the means to generate momentum. And when that happens to any manager, there can be no mid-to-long-term picture.

The reasons for the pessimism are rooted in the chaotic nature of so many of United’s matches. Fans like consistency, control, clarity of vision. With Solskjær, it has usually felt off-the-cuff, reactive. When United are not counterattacking, it can be difficult to discern any sophistication in their patterns. Moreover, successfully chasing games as Solskjær’s team have done on a number of occasions might be thrilling but it is not sustainable.

It is hard to predict which United will turn up, even from one half to the next, and it is as if there has been a role reversal in Manchester. These days City are stable from the top down, with the clear identity on the pitch.

Solskjær’s high-wire act has been heavy on extremes, with the best victories elevated by drama and improbability; the never-say-die spirit reflects the club’s traditions and delights the fan-base. But the lows have been almost comically so and the defensive disasters, particularly this season – most recently against RB Leipzig in United’s Champions League exit on Tuesday – have led to legitimate questions about Solskjær’s tactical acumen. When the same bad things keep happening – the slow starts, the disorganization – the credit in the bank runs dry.

How good is this United squad? Without question, it contains imbalances and it is hardly Solskjær’s fault that the club failed to sign a center-half and winger during the most recent transfer window. He needs to win the league or, at the very least, challenge seriously for it but is that realistic when, man-for-man, United are compared with Liverpool or City?

So to the derby. Solskjær has won three of his five as a manager against City and it would not be a stunning surprise if he were to win again. Lose, and he knows the drill.

(The Guardian)



Olympics in India a ‘Dream’ Facing Many Hurdles

A laborer fixes the Olympic signage at the entrance of a venue ahead of the upcoming 141st International Olympic Committee (IOC) session in Mumbai on October 11, 2023. (AFP)
A laborer fixes the Olympic signage at the entrance of a venue ahead of the upcoming 141st International Olympic Committee (IOC) session in Mumbai on October 11, 2023. (AFP)
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Olympics in India a ‘Dream’ Facing Many Hurdles

A laborer fixes the Olympic signage at the entrance of a venue ahead of the upcoming 141st International Olympic Committee (IOC) session in Mumbai on October 11, 2023. (AFP)
A laborer fixes the Olympic signage at the entrance of a venue ahead of the upcoming 141st International Olympic Committee (IOC) session in Mumbai on October 11, 2023. (AFP)

India says it wants the 2036 Olympics in what is seen as an attempt by Narendra Modi to cement his legacy, but the country faces numerous challenges to host the biggest show on earth.

The prime minister says staging the Games in a nation where cricket is the only sport that really matters is the "dream and aspiration" of 1.4 billion people.

Experts say it is more about Modi's personal ambitions and leaving his mark on the world stage, while also sending a message about India's political and economic rise.

Modi, who is also pushing for a permanent seat on the UN Security Council, will be 86 in 2036.

"Hosting the Olympics will, in a way, burnish India's credentials as a global power," said academic Ronojoy Sen, author of "Nation at Play", a history of sport in India.

"The current government wants to showcase India's rise and its place on the global high table, and hosting the Olympic Games is one way to do it."

Already the most populous nation, India is on track to become the world's third-biggest economy long before the planned Olympics.

- Olympics in 50-degree heat? -

India submitted a formal letter of intent to the International Olympic Committee in October, but has not said where it wants to hold the Games.

Local media are tipping Ahmedabad in Modi's home state of Gujarat, a semi-arid region where temperatures surge above 50 degrees Celsius (122F) in summer.

Gujarat state has already floated a company, the Gujarat Olympic Planning and Infrastructure Corporation, with a $710 million budget.

Ahmedabad has about six million people, its heart boasting a UNESCO-listed 15th-century wall which sprawls out into a rapidly growing metropolis.

The city is home to a 130,000-seater arena, the world's biggest cricket stadium, named after Modi. It staged the 2023 Cricket World Cup final.

The city is also the headquarters of the Adani Group conglomerate, headed by billionaire tycoon and Modi's close friend Gautam Adani.

Adani was the principal sponsor for the Indian team at this summer's Paris Olympics, where the country's athletes won one silver and five bronze medals.

- 'Window of opportunity' -

Despite its vast population India's record at the Olympics is poor for a country of its size, winning only 10 gold medals in its history.

Sports lawyer Nandan Kamath said hosting an Olympics was an "unprecedented window of opportunity" to strengthen Indian sport.

"I'd like to see the Olympics as a two-week-long wedding event," he said.

"A wedding is a gateway to a marriage. The work you do before the event, and all that follows, solidifies the relationship."

Outside cricket, which will be played at the Los Angeles Games in 2028, Indian strengths traditionally include hockey and wrestling.

New Delhi is reported to be pushing for the inclusion at the Olympics of Indian sports including kabaddi and kho kho -- tag team sports -- and yoga.

Retired tennis pro Manisha Malhotra, a former Olympian and now talent scout, agreed that global sporting events can boost grassroots sports but worries India might deploy a "top-down" approach.

"Big money will come in for the elite athletes, the 2036 medal hopefuls, but it will probably end at that," said Malhotra, president of the privately funded training center, the Inspire Institute of Sport.

Veteran sports journalist Sharda Ugra said India's underwhelming sports record -- apart from cricket -- was "because of its governance structure, sporting administrations and paucity of events".

"So then, is it viable for us to be building large stadiums just because we are going to be holding the Olympics?

"The answer is definitely no."

The Indian Olympic Association is split between two rival factions, with its president P.T. Usha admitting to "internal challenges" to any bid.

- 'Poor reputation' -

After Los Angeles, Brisbane will stage the 2032 Games.

The United States and Australia both have deep experience of hosting major sporting events, including previous Olympics.

India has staged World Cups for cricket and the Asian Games twice, the last time in 1982, but it has never had an event the size of an Olympics.

Many are skeptical it can successfully pull it off.

The 2010 Commonwealth Games in New Delhi were marked by construction delays, substandard infrastructure and accusations of corruption.

Many venues today are in a poor state.

"India will need serious repairing of its poor reputation on punctuality and cleanliness," The Indian Express daily wrote in an editorial.

"While stadium aesthetics look pretty in PowerPoint presentations and 3D printing, leaking roofs or sub-par sustainability goals in construction won't help in India making the cut."