Agree completely. That's really my whole point about this. The board have made a lot of mistakes but its the management of our playing squad that has hampered us most of all. I have some sympathy for all of our previous managers because none of them have come into a situation that has given them a strong platform for success, and it seems to get worse with each one.
Ole IMO looked to be getting the squad back on track, but even then we still have a board that lets Lingard & Pogba run down contracts, makes seemingly no attempt to sell the likes of Martial, Bailly or Donny (among others), signs Heaton when we already have a pissed off reserve keeper too good to never play, renews Matic and Mata and then to top it all off throw in the Ronaldo hand grenade when I'm certain Ole would have much preferred a midfielder.
It undermines everything else that the board try to do. I personally have no issue with any of the managerial appointments despite how they turned out, and they clearly make good commercial decisions, but its all for nothing if we can't manage our squad of players properly.
"We have money" is entirely the wrong way to think about. It's one of the reasons we are in this mess. When you think you can buy everything with money, you get players that put money above everything. Now I'm not saying this is the case with everyone in this squad, but for a lot of them - it is. Think about it, you are 20-something years old and you've just signed a 3-year contract for 300k - 400k in the most commercial sport on the planet. You've made it in life. You are famous on social media, you got your licensing deals, sponsorships, all that. Why try anymore?
Moving on to the responsibility on the Glazers. When you are a leader people expect you to make the right decisions. To do that you have to have a clear goal in mind. You will make wrong choices, but if you have a clear goal, likeminded people will see that and will naturally be drawn to that and help you.
And here lies the problem - competitive success isn't the goal of our leaders. Financial success for the duration of their stay is. As long as they get their dividends and don't draw too much scrutiny - everything is fine.
Think about PSG for a second. They have all the money in the world, but have failed to impress for years now. Why is that? Because the club's owner is more interested in his status. That's what all the big stars in PSG are - status symbols for him. And so he does what he can to be best buds with them? Need money? Got it. Need break in the middle of the season? Sure.
Now look at Real Madrid. They also have a lot of money. But their fans, and say what you will about Perez, at the end of the day they
demand the best in return. The goal of Real Madrid is to be the biggest club in the world. That's what Perez equates to status. That's his goal. And that's why they have been the most successful club. Players go there for moneyz sure, but they also go there if they want their names etched on the wall of football history.
Back to us, you'd think competitive success would mean financial success, right? True, but competitive success requires investment and that comes with risk.
(I'd also question the competence of the Glazers as their money was actually made by their father and not them). The Glazers do not like risk, like many big-time CEOs, investment bankers and such. No, they are content with leeching off of the club for as long as they can. This is their goal. And since they actually haven't invested any of their own money, they don't really care if the club eventually degrades. They can just bail if they need to.
Remember what I said about the nature of your goal and it drawing like-minded people? Well, there you have it. As we have become a safe retirement home and charity fund for has-beens and never-will-bes. We can buy our way to a point, but you have to be hungry to walk the extra mile. This is exactly how you reach mediocrity - which we have.
The Glazers aren't interested in the structure or squad of the club. And if there is trouble, they can just throw
the club's money at it and pacify the fans for the time being.
Which is why they are the problem. The squad and the managers carry the immediate blame, but the lack of long-term competitive success is 100% on the Glazers. And ultimately they decide who comes and goes.