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Carlo Ancelotti might be the perfect man to handle Manchester United's pampered stars

David Moyes. Louis van Gaal. Jose Mourinho. Ole Gunnar Solskjaer.

All of Manchester United's permanent managers in the years since Sir Alex Ferguson's retirement have had flaws. Massive ones. Flaws that ultimately cost them their jobs.

Some may never have succeeded even in the best conditions. For some, the stage was too big and for others, it's clear the game had passed their methods by.

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But all of them, even more so as the years have rolled by, have had to deal with a squad brimming with footballers who have a massively inflated sense of self-importance and (in the case of some) a misguided belief that they've done enough in the game to be able to question the manager.

It has been the same story time and time again. Results take a slight hit and then 'leaks' begin to spring from the training ground like a sinking ship. You know the ones: complaints about training, unhappy heads in the dressing room, not playing for the manager.

The latest example occurred just a few weeks ago, with even interim manager Ralf Rangnick not safe from the treatment. This time there was the added spice of an apparent split in the dressing room, as well as some lazy at best — and quite troubling at worst — reports of American coach Chris Armas being labelled as Ted Lasso.

But otherwise, the story was the same, as Rangnick's training methods came in for criticism from whoever leaked the story to ESPN. There were complaints about 'old fashioned' sessions that worked on shape and organisations, two aspects of their game that without question needed plenty of work after a woeful start to the season.

If United's stars want to spend their mornings

Read more on manchestereveningnews.co.uk