
"No, no, no. No one. Not even the Pope will change... This is my job. This is my responsibility. This is my life. So, I will not change that. The Portuguese coach's comments came at the end of another turbulent week for United, which included a visit from minority shareholder Sir Jim Ratcliffe, who arrived by helicopter at Carrington on Thursday."
"If I'm a player and I have a coach that, with a lot of pressure and [people] all around the world, are saying 'you need to change the system', says 'I'm going to change', they will look at me in a different way. Everything is important when you think about the impact that a decision is going to have on the team. I'm doing things my way. I hope to have the time to change but it will be an evolution."
Ruben Amorim insisted he will not change his preferred system, saying the decision is his responsibility and part of his life. The club experienced a turbulent week, including a visit from minority shareholder Sir Jim Ratcliffe to Carrington. Amorim faced criticism for persisting with a 3-4-2-1 formation after one league win in four and an EFL Cup exit to League Two Grimsby. He said yielding to public pressure would harm his credibility with players and described any adjustments as an evolution. United have upcoming fixtures against Chelsea, Brentford and Sunderland before the international break.
Read at 101GREATGOALS.COM
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