At this point, there is really no rational way to discuss why he should stay, when all evidence points to a drastic failure of a season. No one, not even you LVG supporters, can honestly say this season has been anything otherwise. All I can say is that your reasons, no matter well articulated, sound just like excuses or rationalisation to the VAST majority of supporters (who are just as intelligent and rational as you are) who want him gone from this club. I do give you a lot of respect for defending LVG, but on merits, on morale, on just about any criteria you want to assign as a metric, LVG's performance this season has been wanting. The reason he is around is not because he deserves it but down to a cowardly and incompetent management which does not have the courage to make the change. That irks me more than anything else as to why our management wants to keep alive a relationship which has clearly failed.
I think the easy decision is to sack the manager, I'm not saying cowardly but it takes more courage to keep him on than to sack him. But the most courageous decision is not always the right one. It's not about what LvG deserves or not deserves either. He deserves to be sacked because he's responsible, and he deserves to stay because he's an honest hard working man caught in a bad situation. So courage nor deserve are arguments for any of the two decisions.
I've always defended him, and will continue to defend him against unfair criticism, from the viewpoint that once it clicks a corner is turned, you can move on from there and everything will be sunshine and halleluja from then on. But it has already clicked so many times, and the corner isn't turned, the next match or the next 20 minutes in a game it is like it has never clicked. I think we played really good football against Chelsea, i'd be happy to defend a contract extension for the responsible manager if it would be consistent, but they've fallen back one time too many. The positives you can take from a game like that aren't for the take anymore, because the players probably will not take it to next match either. But I will still defend the need for change to a different style of football, not necessarily a Van Gaal style or the closely related Pep style (who will have troubles implementing it also), but I think over the years United has been outplayed in the CL a few times too many, and not just in recent years and not only by Barcelona to not change the style. Besides beeing outplayed there's also the slow slipping out of Europe's elite.
One good thing about the signing of Van Gaal was that there was a plan how to get United back to the top and a vision of the football needed to stay there. If he's sacked, there has to be another plan. Allthough he would do allright with the European vulnerability, I don't consider Mourinho as a good plan. I think he's past it, and he's been reliant on the most expensive squads lately, which United will not have the coming 3 years, at least not without seriously overpaying for players who are not that great. So I wonder if it would actually make sense to sack Van Gaal, for the remainder of the season and for the future beyond.
Even LVG has thrown in the towel, but for some reason you still believe in him and think our squad is crap.
Obviously the squad lacks character and technique, at least in depth.
You are like one of those Japanese soldiers still fighting the allies years after WW2 officially ended. It's over man... Let it go.
As I wrote, I'm prepared to let him go. Gutted that it hasn't worked out, but I don't think it will still work out and that's why I've defended him. But what about Japan now? Unlike most here, I will not get any satisfaction from the sacking itself, it's perfectly all right to have a sense of justice or relief about it, but I personally won't. So for me it's about what comes after that, not the sacking itself.
What I liked about the signing was that is was the choice to take the club and it's football in a certain direction. That had to be done, with SAF leaving a new chapter begins and there are choices to be made, you can't just get a new manager in like Ferguson has only been there for a couple of years, you've got to redefine the club without Ferguson: What kind of football are we going to play, what kind of players do we sign and from where, and what kind of position does the manager have? The board doesn't have to make the same choices as for example Bayern or Barcelona did in the past, but they do have to make important choices for the long term.
Funkstein is more of a Van Gaal fan that a United, and has already said that he's interest will wane when he does leave, especially if expected Jose replaces him.
No, I said that if Mourinho would be the next manager my interest would probably fade. If they get a different manager with a plan (footballing plan that is, not a plan to gain advantages from beeing a cnut) I can believe in and is an expression of a chosen direction, I don't see why it should fade.