Hehe, I totally Agree, you do too? Former Manchester United defender Gary Neville believes Angel Di Maria and Mesut Ozil must get over leaving Real Madrid if they are to succeed in the Premier League.
Both players have struggled since joining United and Arsenal
respectively for combined fees in excess of €120 million, with the
Argentine coming under increased scrutiny after twice being substituted
early on in games in the last week by manager Louis van Gaal.
Ozil, meanwhile, has failed to replicate his best form on a regular
basis since moving to north London in 2013, and Neville feels the pair
must move on from their disappointment at departing Madrid.
"Within days of signing for United, Di Maria released a letter to Real
Madrid supporters insisting it was never his wish to leave the
Bernabeu," he wrote in his column for the Daily Telegraph.
"Having grown up in and around Manchester as a United supporter, it is
easy to regard the club as the biggest in the world, but we have to
accept that, as a South American, playing for Real Madrid or Barcelona
is probably the fantasy of every footballer from that part of the world
and Di Maria has moved to England after being told he was not wanted at
his dream club.
"So he has come to United when he did not want
to leave Madrid, has suffered the trauma of a burglary, and started to
work for a new manager while playing in a team that is still in a
‘storm’ phase of development.
"All of those are factors that would go some way to explaining why Di Maria has struggled after his bright start."
On Ozil, he added: "Just like Di Maria, Ozil was pushed out of Madrid
and he has since struggled to be the game-changer that I believe a £42m
[€50m] player should be for Arsenal.
"It is not enough for a
player of Ozil's ability, he does not influence games as he should, but
maybe Arsenal and United fans need to accept that it will take longer
for the German and Di Maria to come good.
"For me, it is as
though leaving Real Madrid has been like a bad divorce for the pair of
them - a messy end to a relationship that will take maybe eighteen
months to two years to overcome.
"So while it would be easy to
say that Di Maria must now start playing, stop sulking and get on with
justifying his price tag, you cannot ignore the effect that leaving
Madrid has had on him - a psychological low which must have been
exacerbated by the burglary."
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