"There was always a chance it was going to come to this," Gary Neville said, recently reflecting on the dark day Manchester United's stars gathered with Sir Alex Ferguson and his staff to watch Roy Keane's "destroyed" interview in 2005. It was an attempt to clear the air. It didn't work. "This moment...
was sort of coming," Neville admits, referring to a seemingly inevitable confrontation between his captain and his manager that proved fatal for the relationship between two men who are, at the end of the day, mirrors of one another. Stubborn.
Hungry. Born winners. "That meeting was horrific, by the way... it was horrific, let's be clear. It's not funny.
Honestly, it was horrific. You could not say anything. "You thought 'oh for f***s sake'. "You knew that was it." FEATURE: I was told to snub United and sign for Tottenham - I shouldn't have listened OPINION: Sancho has contradicted himself with comments on Ronaldo and United When Manchester United are losing Keane still cannot hide his frustration, firing broadsides at under-performing players from the Sky Sports studio.