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Posted August 25, 2014 22:24 · last edited March 18, 2021 07:19

City looking fightening already.

Be fascinating to see if Rodgers is the right manager to get the best out of Balotelli. Some great anecdotes about him.

Mario Sconcerti, writing in Corriere della Sera, neatly summed up the Balotelli phenomenon as “the strange talent of making everyone happy when he arrives and even happier when he leaves.” Another one on twitter about him being the only player in the world for whom champagne bottles are popped on his arrival, and also on his departure.

My favourite is from Mourinho:

Mourinho reckons his book of Balotelli anecdotes would stretch to 200 pages and the one he likes to tell the most is a belter. “We went to play Rubin Kazan in the Champions League. All my other strikers were injured. No Diego Milito, no Samuel Eto’o. I was really in trouble. Mario got a yellow card in the 42nd minute and when I got into the dressing room at half-time I spent 14 minutes of the 15 available speaking to Mario. I said to him: ‘Mario, I can’t change you, I have no strikers on the bench, don’t touch anybody and play only the ball. Mario, if someone provokes you, don’t react. If we lose the ball, no reaction. If the referee makes a mistake, no reaction. Please.” A pause. “The 46th minute: red card.”

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Unknown editor edited March 18, 2021 07:19

City looking fightening already.

Be fascinating to see if Rodgers is the right manager to get the best out of Balotelli. Some great anecdotes about him.

Mario Sconcerti, writing in Corriere della Sera, neatly summed up the Balotelli phenomenon as “the strange talent of making everyone happy when he arrives and even happier when he leaves.” Another one on twitter about him being the only player in the world for whom champagne bottles are popped on his arrival, and also on his departure.

My favourite is from Mourinho:

Mourinho reckons his book of Balotelli anecdotes would stretch to 200 pages and the one he likes to tell the most is a belter. “We went to play Rubin Kazan in the Champions League. All my other strikers were injured. No Diego Milito, no Samuel Eto’o. I was really in trouble. Mario got a yellow card in the 42nd minute and when I got into the dressing room at half-time I spent 14 minutes of the 15 available speaking to Mario. I said to him: ‘Mario, I can’t change you, I have no strikers on the bench, don’t touch anybody and play only the ball. Mario, if someone provokes you, don’t react. If we lose the ball, no reaction. If the referee makes a mistake, no reaction. Please.” A pause. “The 46th minute: red card.”

ajc28 edited August 25, 2014 22:25

City looking fightening already.

Be fascinating to see if Rodgers is the right manager to get the best out of Balotelli. Some great anecdotes about him.

Mario Sconcerti, writing in Corriere della Sera, neatly summed up the Balotelli phenomenon as “the strange talent of making everyone happy when he arrives and even happier when he leaves.”

My favourite is from Mourinho:

Mourinho reckons his book of Balotelli anecdotes would stretch to 200 pages and the one he likes to tell the most is a belter. “We went to play Rubin Kazan in the Champions League. All my other strikers were injured. No Diego Milito, no Samuel Eto’o. I was really in trouble. Mario got a yellow card in the 42nd minute and when I got into the dressing room at half-time I spent 14 minutes of the 15 available speaking to Mario. I said to him: ‘Mario, I can’t change you, I have no strikers on the bench, don’t touch anybody and play only the ball. Mario, if someone provokes you, don’t react. If we lose the ball, no reaction. If the referee makes a mistake, no reaction. Please.” A pause. “The 46th minute: red card.”