Rio Ferdinand has revealed what he believes were a series of
mistakes David Moyes made during his unsuccessful stint as manager of
Manchester United — including the banning of chips the night before matches.
Former United defender Ferdinand — who made an unhappy
return to Old Trafford when his QPR side were hammered 4-0 in the Premier
League by his old club on Sunday — has had his say on Moyes’s woeful 10 months
in charge of United in his autobiography ‘#2Sides’, which is being serialised
in the Sun.
The 35-year old centre-back also labelled Moyes’s tactics
“embarrassing” and said the Scot had brought with him the “mentality of a small
club” following his time in charge of Everton.
But Ferdinand said one of the first signs of looming trouble
was Moyes’s ban on the tradition of players eating chips the evening before a
game.
“It’s not something to go to the barricades over (the
chips)…And guess what happened after Moyes left and Ryan Giggs took over?
“Moyes has been gone about 20 minutes, we’re on the bikes
warming up for the first training session and one of the lads says: ‘You know
what? We’ve got to get on to Giggsy. We’ve got to get him to get us our chips
back.”‘
Former England defender Ferdinand, who won 81 caps, said the
players became confused by Moyes’s tactics.
“Moyes’s innovations mostly led to negativity and confusion.
“Sometimes our main
tactic was the long, high, diagonal cross. It was embarrassing. In one home
game against Fulham we had 81 crosses! I was thinking, why are we doing this?
Andy Carroll doesn’t play for us!
“The whole approach was alien. Other times Moyes wanted lots
of passing. He’d say: ‘Today I want us to have 600 passes in the game. Last
week it was only 400′. Who cares? I’d rather score five goals from 10 passes.”
Moyes was the hand-picked successor of former United manager
Alex Ferguson, who retired in 2013 after more than 26 years in charge at Old
Trafford, during which time he had become British football’s most successful
manager.
But before the following season was finished, Moyes had been
sacked with United finishing the campaign seventh in the Premier League — a
position which meant they failed to qualify for both the lucrative Champions
League and the second-tier Europa League.
Ferdinand said he knew it was time for him to leave United
after 12 years at Old Trafford when Moyes dropped him for the Champions League
tie with Bayern Munich while the club trained on a public park — something he
labelled “amateurish”.
United lost 3-1 in Germany and, following a 2-0 defeat at
Everton, Moyes was sacked on April 22.
Ferdinand said Moyes spent too much time focusing on the
strengths of the opposition, which created a climate of fear in the dressing
room.
“Before every game he made a point of showing us videos of
how dangerous the other team could be. On the morning of a game we’d spend half
an hour on the training ground, drilling to stop them,” he said.
“There was so much attention to the subject it suddenly
became a worry.”
He added: “You heard a lot of guys complaining: ‘I just
don’t know what he wants’. He had me doubting everything.”
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