Skip to main content

To RVP or not to RVP? That is the question!

David Moyes is faced with a mirror image of what his predecessor faced in March 2013. Both had a striker seaching for form with talk of being unhappy and both had Danny Welbeck to fill in.

Welbeck is once again putting his hands up but this time it's not Rooney facing the axe but rather Robin Van Persie.

Against West Bromwich Albion, bringing Van Persie off after 63 minutes at first glance looked like a precautionary measure, just after beign booked he was fortunate to not be off for a rash challenge on Reid moments before. With Liverpool next and Olympiacos FC, so David Moyes wouldn't want to face those without the Dutch maestro, would he?

But looking closely recently Van Persie has been a shadow of himself, missing chances that last season he put away with ease, he kind of had a stuttered effect on what ever United tried to acheive last weekend. United looked a different animal with Welbeck leading the line and had more bite in the final third as well as the fluency of old returned to United’s play all this after Van Persie had been replaced.

An interesting stat was that Welbeck and Rooney exchanged 7 passes in the 27 minutes they were on the pitch together, compared with 4 between Rooney and Van Persie in 63 minutes.
If we honest Van Persie was a Sir Alex aquisition and Rooney was well on his way out of Old Trafford. He isn't as much David Moyes talisman like (5 year extension) Wayne Rooney is and it shows in Van Persie's play.
Van Persie might just be one goal away from a run of many but I feel and keep feeling just that (maybe hoping) that every week.
What Moyes has to decide is whether or not he is what the team needs to go forward this season or for that matter the next.

So David what will it be To RVP or not to RVP?

Jade Christopher Bentley Adams(@jcba)

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Premier League changes its logo.

The most lucrative football league in the world, The English Premier League (EPL), yesterday unveiled its new official logo, which will be used from the 2016-17 season onwards. The division's lion icon has been the face of England's top flight since its launch in 1992 but has undergone a makeover to give it a fresh, modern look. It means, EPL is ending its 12-year association with Barclays bank and will from now on be known simply as ‘the Premier League’. The new logo – has a crowned lion’s head gazing to the right, accompanied by either the words ‘Premier League’ or ‘PL’ -- will replace the current logo of a lion with its left paw on a football. All 20 clubs in the top flight have also agreed a new centralised sponsorship strategy, meaning the league will no longer have a named sponsor. “From next season we will move away from title sponsorship and the competition will be known as the Premier League, a decision which provided the opportunity to consider how we wanted

Liverpool's Klopp host Jose's United

WHAT THE MANAGERS SAY Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp : "Apart from the table, it's a very important game. I know about the history, I like the special stories. The whole world will watch this game, it's a big honour to be part of it. "At the end, it's up to us to perform to our best. You cannot and should not ignore the special circumstance of a game like this. You have to be ready. "They have big quality and we have to respect this, as we do. But this is Anfield. We have to show this. We have had a few nice atmospheres but I'm open for the best atmosphere. We need everybody in a Liverpool shirt in this game." Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho on concerns over disrespectful chanting at the game: "In football we have some football tragedies, if you can say that, which is a big match that you lost, the mistake that some player did, this kind of thing, and you can make fun of it in a positive way. "But the human tragedy i

Ronaldo keeps on winning - Fifa Best Player Award

Cristiano Ronaldo was named the world's best player at the inaugural Best Fifa Football Awards in Zurich. Real Madrid and Portugal forward Ronaldo, 31, beat Barcelona's Lionel Messi and Atletico Madrid's Antoine Griezmann to the prize. Ronaldo also won the Ballon d'Or in December, with both honours recognition for success in the Champions League with Real and Euro 2016 with Portugal. 2016 was quite a year for Ronaldo. As well as scoring the decisive penalty in the shootout to win the Champions League, rescuing Real with a hat-trick in the final of the Club World Cup, captaining Portugal to Euro 2016 glory and being recognised with a fourth Ballon d'Or, he now has something Messi does not - the honour of being named best Fifa men's player. The former Manchester United forward had been the favourite for the award, following a year in which he continued to deliver. The stats don’t lie: 44 games, 42 goals, 14 assists. The third best minutes-per-goal