Amorim faces mission impossible with the weak personalities in Man United squad

Ruben Amorim's record at Manchester United is indefensible, but bizarre if it may sound, I still think the club should stay with him.

I like him, he talks to a lot of common sense. He comes across as an honorable man, honest and I believe he knows what he is doing.

Sometimes it just doesn't happen. It just didn't work in his short term of office, in the summer he needs all the help he can get.

The united players he has at his disposal were again very good at applauding the supporters after a new defeat on Wednesday evening. And they deliver very good sound bits. But that's all they are, empty words. It must wear incredibly thin on the united supporters to hear the same apologies again.

To let Alejandro Garnacho cry to get in a final for 20 minutes and his brother says, “He is thrown under a bus,” before adding that he will consider his future, well …

First of all, I would be amazed if a queue of clubs was waiting around the block to buy it. Secondly, I would advise him to get off his crazy bleached hair, his Histrionics on the field and to take a good look at himself in the mirror. Think about what he really wants to be before he starts crying more.

It comes down to too much of everything too fast and he doesn't handle it very well.

He has the potential to become a player, but until he changes his attitude and looks stuck to work harder, he only remains that on a ladder of 10 laps; He is still a good player for a long time. Much as he has passed before and passed.

For Amorim, the summer offers a time for reflection. I like that he admits that he is as responsible as everyone in this; He points out no one else with the finger and has been honest in his reviews.

But he will also have to see if it perseveres with a system that the players are not happy with, these weaker personalities hand over the perfect excuse of 'it's not me, it is the system'.

These weak personalities point their finger at the manager and the system and leak stories to decide from a disastrous season and that is precisely the reason why Manchester United are where they are: in the mud.

It has been an incredibly bad season for United, and time tells you, Amorim will not have too long to get it right.

For Tottenham it is difficult to guess what Daniel Levy does then. After only having won two trophies during his 24 years as Tottenham chairman, I think it is honest to say that his decision -making was doubtful at the time.

I would imagine Tottenham 17th in the Premier League, he has sustained agents to see who would be available to replace Ange Postecoglou as a manager. After all, this is a man who fired Jose Mourinho two days before a Carabao Cup final. But Ange who wins the Europa League trophy will certainly give Levy a headache.

Logically we can look at it and see that Tottenham has won a European competition, qualified for the Champions League and a windfall of £ 100 million guaranteed.

But the acid test for a club The big as Tottenham is the competition and they have failed miserably.

As I have said before, everyone can be lucky and win a cup. If you play your mind back to how Tottenham played in Istanbul against my old team Galatasaray, they would have been a huge piece of luck that only 3-2 lost. That was a night in which they could easily have lost double digits and that is not an exaggerated explanation because Galatasaray had 28 efforts on the goal.

And since that night of November, the season has generally gone from bad to worse.

I chose not to view the Europa League -final live and it looked the right call. An average match, at its best, between two average teams, won by a filthy goal.

That is the reality. Spurs drove their happiness in the cup, but seriously did not get enough in what is important, the Premier League. Deep inside, Levy will know that.

I said weeks ago that I could not see ange surviving, so now it is a matter of leaning back and seeing what happens next.

Why we all have to observe the warning from Hutchinson

The story of AFC Wimbledon's Sam Hutchinson suffers a heart incident but continues to play and score the winning goal of sending his team to the play-offs of League Two is unique.

Sam is only 35 years old. He is young and fit, but they diagnosed that one of his arteries was 75 percent blocked. I don't know him, but I would assume that it is a Dodgy gene in his family history and it is not something he has done in his life. This is an athlete that has lived the life of an athlete, but it still happened to him.

He says that he has now mounted a stent and the doctors have given him the all-them-clear to resume his career in due course. He says it's like taking another injury. I'm not sure about that.

He was lucky in one respect as if it had happened 30 years ago, he would need a bypass where your breastbone bursts open.

Unfortunately I am more qualified than most to talk about the experience. I was 38 and manager of Liverpool when my heart problem was diagnosed. I did everything the Liverpool players did at the time, except play on match days. I was super fit, but I knew something was wrong and I was diagnosed with coronary heart disease. I have had five of those stents that have been mounted since my open heart surgery.

But Sam's experience is another memory of how heart health is not black and white, since he is young and fit. Professional players were never investigated and cared for by the clubs, but it underlines the unfortunate fact that it can happen to someone.

I am an ambassador for the British Heart Foundation and I was recently involved in the 'Every Minute Matters' campaign that teaches people how to do resuscitation (cardiopulmonary resuscitation) on everyone who has undergone a cardiac arrest.

What happened to Sam is different – but anyway, I would encourage everyone to read this, take 15 minutes out of your time, look up British Heart Foundation online and click on this link to Revivr. It can help you save someone's life.

My advice to Sunderland and Sheffield United

Sunderland and Sheffield United players passed a sleepless night on Friday, while today preparing themselves for the most valuable game in the world.

With an estimated £ 220 million in extra income that go to the winners, it is no wonder.

These two clubs are great according to someone's norms, and they will believe they deserve to be permanent members of the Premier League.

But the team that wins the play-off final of the championship is the one who handles the enormous size of the situation and the pressure of playing at Wembley.

My advice to those players today is not the opportunity to come to you and the game let you pass. Go out of that dressing room with the attitude of 'I'm going to be the best player on the field today' and see what it brings you.

That I support to come to the Champions League race

It feels like Groundhog Day, but here I say again that Pep Guardiola goes Champions League decision in a last day with Fulham, not knowing which Manchester City is popping up.

They lost from Crystal Palace in the FA Cup and dismantled Bournemouth with relatively ease. They must have a lead over Fulham, who have little different but proud to save.

I would also suspect that Newcastle United, even without Alexander Isak, is happy to beat an Everton side with 13th place, while I would take Aston Villa to beat a Manchester United side low in confidence.

The Jeopardy comes for Chelsea in Nottingham Forest. It is all to play on the last day and emphasizes why ours is the most competitive competition in the world.

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