From the moment he was appointed Manchester United boss,
it was clear Louis van Gaal would be doing things differently to his
predecessor.
His first words told their own story: "This club has
big ambitions; I too have big ambitions. Together I'm sure we will make
history."
It was a bold declaration, one that was a welcome move
away from the usual 'media speak' that accompanies such statements.
Most striking, though, was how greatly Van Gaal's words
differed from those often uttered by the beleaguered - some would say hapless -
man he replaced.
Indeed, when David Moyes first spoke to the press upon
his introduction, he had this to say: "I’m inexperienced in a lot of
things and there were some brilliant managers who could have quite easily taken
this role but the biggest confidence I got was that Sir Alex Ferguson said to
me 'you’re the next Manchester United manager'.
"I hope we play the same way, with the same
traditions and entertaining, exciting football."
While 'hope' was not in the vocabulary of Ferguson, Moyes
was forgiven; he was new after all.
Yet those comments proved the first of many missteps.
From the repeated suggestions United were 'trying to improve', to the claim
that Liverpool were favourites ahead of their Premier League meeting at Old
Trafford.
Anointed 'The Chosen One' upon his arrival, it quickly
became apparent Moyes was not 'The Right One' as United's season crumbled to
new lows on a weekly basis.
In fact, as weeks turned to months and fans increasingly
began to gaze at Chelsea's Jose Mourinho with longing eyes, that infamous
banner may as well have read 'Not The Special One'.
Banners aside, United clearly realised Moyes did not have
the character for such a job.
He was someone who openly admitted to being nervous about
going to Ferguson's house in jeans on the day he was told the top job would be
his.
By contrast, Pep Guardiola reportedly told the Barcelona
hierarchy they "did not have the balls" to appoint him back in 2008.
In that case, it turned out they did, his recruitment
heralding the richest period of success in the club's history.
But Moyes was no Guardiola, no Mourinho, no Ferguson. And
he was no Van Gaal.
Indeed, in the new man, United have almost appointed the
anti-Moyes.
A 63-year-old who has seemingly never experienced
self-doubt, he once famously claimed "Louis van Gaal has nothing more to
learn".
And who can blame him? While Moyes had done an admirable
job at Everton, albeit one that is diminished by the day as Roberto Martinez
improves upon his work, Van Gaal has an almost unrivalled CV.
Having managed Ajax's young guns to an unlikely European
Cup win in the early nineties, he has won titles at Barcelona, Bayern Munich
and, remarkably, AZ Alkmaar.
His efforts at the recent World Cup, when taking an
unheralded Netherlands squad to a third-placed finish, suggest that Van Gaal
remains at the top of his game too.
Whether or not he fulfils the promise of making history
remains to be seen.
However, unlike Moyes, he walks through the door with
complete confidence in his ability to do so.
Culled from Soccerway


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