Much will be written about Sir Alex Ferguson after his retirement today. His 27 years at Manchester United made them the biggest club in England and arguably the world. In my opinion, what made him the best was how he won when, really, he didn’t have the best side. Even if he didn’t have the best players, his teams would win and win and win and waited for competitors to get complacent and slip-up. That they would peak around March, the most crucial time of the season, was testament to their fitness and his training regimes. Three seasons highlight what made him such a ruthless winner.
2002/03
Arsenal had won the league in the previous campaign and would go on to win it again the next. At the end of the season, five Arsenal players made it to the ‘team of the season’; Paul Scholes was the only United player chosen. That year, Arsenal were 8 points clear at the top of the table by March. But as Sir Alex Ferguson’s Manchester United teams always do, they beat what was in front of them and waited for Arsenal to make a mistake.
In Thierry Henry, Arsenal had the best player in the league and finished the season top scorers. But Manchester United knew that giving themselves a chance meant keeping a mean defence. The paid an English transfer record £29.1 million for defender Rio Ferdinand and ended up conceding the fewest goals that season. Ferguson has never been afraid to bet big. Arsenal slipped and Ferguson pounced: they won 9 of their last 10 games, drawing once with Arsenal.
2010/11
In 2009, Cristiano Ronaldo left Manchester United and Chelsea blitzed their way to the league title. 2010/11 was to my mind, it was one of the least dramatic, least memorable Premier League seasons in recent times. Dimitar Berbatov was United’s and the league’s top scorer with just 20 goals. They won just four times away from home. But other teams were equally mediocre. Chelsea and ManchesterCity finished on just 71 points: it seemed no one wanted to win the league.
Ferguson, though, did. And he instilled this mentality into club captain Nemanja Vidic. The Serbian defender scored 5 crucial goals and won the player of the season award. Was it memorable? No. Did United win? Yes. That sums it up.
2012/13
In the drama that surrounded ManchesterCity’s last minute league winning goal in the 2011/12 season, many people forgot that Manchester United only lost the title on goal difference. It was another solid but unspectacular Ferguson team that had pushed its competition till the very end. As this season begun and Ferguson showed off his latest big bet, striker Robin van Persie, I still questioned whether gaping holes in his team were going to be exploited.
They still lacked that mouth-watering midfield they had in the 90s and they were conceding far too many goals. Chelsea had signed the sparkling talents of Hazard, Oscar, Marin, Moses and Ba. ManchesterCity still had their title winning side. But as the others floundered, van Persie kept rescuing United. Their 2-1 win at home to Arsenal summed the up: they didn’t create much but took the chances they knew they would be presented with. Quietly brilliant performances by non-glamorous names like Evans, Jones and Carrick gave van Persie and Manchester United the license to pounce.
Whenever you looked at Manchester United team sheets – no matter how uninspiring they may seem compared to the nouveau-rich clubs’- you always had to consider who the 12th name on the roster. Alex Ferguson has consistently improved his players and gotten more out of them than was thought possible. He’s the reason why you Manchester United matches are never played ‘on paper’.
forbes.com
2002/03
Arsenal had won the league in the previous campaign and would go on to win it again the next. At the end of the season, five Arsenal players made it to the ‘team of the season’; Paul Scholes was the only United player chosen. That year, Arsenal were 8 points clear at the top of the table by March. But as Sir Alex Ferguson’s Manchester United teams always do, they beat what was in front of them and waited for Arsenal to make a mistake.
In Thierry Henry, Arsenal had the best player in the league and finished the season top scorers. But Manchester United knew that giving themselves a chance meant keeping a mean defence. The paid an English transfer record £29.1 million for defender Rio Ferdinand and ended up conceding the fewest goals that season. Ferguson has never been afraid to bet big. Arsenal slipped and Ferguson pounced: they won 9 of their last 10 games, drawing once with Arsenal.
2010/11
In 2009, Cristiano Ronaldo left Manchester United and Chelsea blitzed their way to the league title. 2010/11 was to my mind, it was one of the least dramatic, least memorable Premier League seasons in recent times. Dimitar Berbatov was United’s and the league’s top scorer with just 20 goals. They won just four times away from home. But other teams were equally mediocre. Chelsea and ManchesterCity finished on just 71 points: it seemed no one wanted to win the league.
Ferguson, though, did. And he instilled this mentality into club captain Nemanja Vidic. The Serbian defender scored 5 crucial goals and won the player of the season award. Was it memorable? No. Did United win? Yes. That sums it up.
2012/13
In the drama that surrounded ManchesterCity’s last minute league winning goal in the 2011/12 season, many people forgot that Manchester United only lost the title on goal difference. It was another solid but unspectacular Ferguson team that had pushed its competition till the very end. As this season begun and Ferguson showed off his latest big bet, striker Robin van Persie, I still questioned whether gaping holes in his team were going to be exploited.
They still lacked that mouth-watering midfield they had in the 90s and they were conceding far too many goals. Chelsea had signed the sparkling talents of Hazard, Oscar, Marin, Moses and Ba. ManchesterCity still had their title winning side. But as the others floundered, van Persie kept rescuing United. Their 2-1 win at home to Arsenal summed the up: they didn’t create much but took the chances they knew they would be presented with. Quietly brilliant performances by non-glamorous names like Evans, Jones and Carrick gave van Persie and Manchester United the license to pounce.
Whenever you looked at Manchester United team sheets – no matter how uninspiring they may seem compared to the nouveau-rich clubs’- you always had to consider who the 12th name on the roster. Alex Ferguson has consistently improved his players and gotten more out of them than was thought possible. He’s the reason why you Manchester United matches are never played ‘on paper’.
forbes.com