So, it has finally happened. The inevitable day has finally arrived.  Fergie has left the building .After 26 years in charge of Manchester United, Sir Alex Ferguson has resigned. I used to be a huge fan of wrestling (to an extent still am).This just reminds of the time when Shawn Michaels retired.It was just like the end of an era.I left wataching wrestling long ago but still used to see it now and then.HBK was like the constant there.When he retired,a part of me (and wrestling for some) died.Almost same thing is happening in football currently.You don’t need to be a football fan, or even a sports fan to know who Fergie is. For me, and several others who are my age, Sir Alex Ferguson is Manchester United. Players have gone, players have come, but Fergie remained. He has been the constant, an inevitability that straight-armed every juggernaut that came its way – Be it foreign money, younger managers or most importantly, time.Yes I can go on and on about his achievements (especially since I am a red :D)

People say Manchester United has the most number of plastic/fake fans.To an extent this is true ,especially in India where I live, But those same people don't say why,it's because Sir Alex have so brought much success to the team that even those who don't watch football know about Manchester United and the legends born from it.To explain this point just think about QPR ,they don't have many fake fans either.

When I switch on the television the next season, things would have changed. A sense of immortality lost. There won’t be the traditional gum chewing. There will be no news of the usual hairdryer. There will be no ‘Fergie time’. Football will played over 90 minutes again. Even the rival manager will shake a stranger’s hand, taking a moment to accept the change.

I will like to share some of his memorable quotes:


On Ryan Giggs "I remember the first time I saw him. He was 13 and just floated over the ground like a cocker spaniel chasing a piece of silver paper in the wind."

On Gary Neville "If he was an inch taller he'd be the best centre-half in Britain. His father is 6ft 2in – I'd check the milkman."

On Paul Ince "I used to have a saying that when a player is at his peak, he feels as though he can climb Everest in his slippers. That's what he was like."

On Italians "When an Italian tells me it's pasta on the plate I check under the sauce to make sure. They are the inventors of the smokescreen."

On the 1999 Champions League triumph "I can't believe it. I can't believe it. Football. Bloody hell."

On media criticism of Juan Sebastián Verón "On you go. I'm no fucking talking to you. He's a fucking great player. Yous are fucking idiots."

On Liverpool "My greatest challenge is not what's happening at the moment, my greatest challenge was knocking Liverpool right off their fucking perch. And you can print that."

On the 2003 title race "It's getting tickly now – squeaky-bum time, I call it."

On kicking a boot into David Beckham's face in 2003 "It was a freakish incident. If I tried it 100 or a million times it couldn't happen again. If I could I would have carried on playing!"

On Filippo Inzaghi "That lad must have been born offside."

On Arsène Wenger "They say he's an intelligent man, right? Speaks five languages. I've got a 15-year-old boy from the Ivory Coast who speaks five languages!"

On his former charges as managers "It can be difficult to pinpoint who would make it as a manager. For instance, nobody here thought Mark Hughes would become a manager, never in a million years, and we all thought Bryan Robson was a certainty to be a top manager."

On the referee Alan Wiley "The pace of the game demanded a referee who was fit. It is an indictment of our game. You see referees abroad who are as fit as butcher's dogs. We have some who are fit. He wasn't fit. He was taking 30 seconds to book a player. He was needing a rest. It was ridiculous."

On José Mourinho "He was certainly full of it, calling me boss and big man when we had our post-match drink after the first leg. But it would help if his greetings were accompanied by a decent glass of wine. What he gave me was paint-stripper."

On Rafael Benítez, reacting to the Spaniard's infamous 'facts' press conference "I think he was an angry man. He must have been disturbed for some reason. I think you have got to cut through the venom of it and hopefully he'll reflect and understand what he said was absolutely ridiculous."

On whether Liverpool would win the title in 2007 "You must be joking. Do I look as if I'm a masochist ready to cut myself? How does relegation sound instead?"

On Old Trafford "The crowd were dead. It was like a funeral out there."

On Manchester City's Carlos Tévez poster "It's City, isn't it? They are a small club, with a small mentality. All they can talk about is Manchester United, that's all they've done and they can't get away from it."

On City again "Sometimes you have a noisy neighbour. You cannot do anything about that. They will always be noisy. You just have to get on with your life, put your television on and turn it up a bit louder."

On Wayne Rooney's transfer request "Sometimes you look in a field and you see a cow and you think it's a better cow than the one you've got in your own field. It's a fact. Right? And it never really works out that way."

On Cristiano Ronaldo to Real Madrid "Do you think I would enter into a contract with that mob? Absolutely no chance. I would not sell them a virus. That is a 'No' by the way. There is no agreement whatsoever between the clubs."

On Manchester United's 19th league title "It's not so much passing Liverpool. It's more important that United are the best team in the country in terms of winning titles."

And on their 20th "Look at me – it's taken 10 years off me today. It's these tablets, they're great!"

And my favourite one:

"It's a mission. I am deadly serious about it – some people would say too serious ... we will get there. Believe me. And when it happens life will change for Liverpool – dramatically."   -----Sir Alex in 1988



By Anurag Sharma ,a true red from Delhi India :)