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Does Louis van Gaal have a point with his theory that the media hides behind pundits’ opinions?

Published 10:39 11 Mar 2016 GMT

Darragh Murphy
Does Louis van Gaal have a point with his theory that the media hides behind pundits’ opinions?

Homesport

What do you think?

Moments after one of the toughest defeats to swallow of his Manchester United tenure, Louis van Gaal asked a question that pervaded the precarious position he and his club find themselves in. It followed accusations from BT Sport pundits, and United legends, Rio Ferdinand and Paul Scholes that the Red Devils' showing in Thursday night's Europa League defeat at arch-rivals Liverpool could only be described as "disjointed" and "shambolic." https://twitter.com/BeardedGenius/status/708054018786992128?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw Van Gaal was asked to comment on Ferdinand's comments by a reporter following the 2-0 defeat and the Dutchman snapped back, suggesting that the media have now begun hiding behind the beliefs of pundits as that is easier than sticking their own necks out with an opinion. "Is it important what Rio Ferdinand is saying, is that important to you?" van Gaal replied to a question at the post-match press conference. "You don't give your opinion and then you give Rio Ferdinand's opinion - that is very strong of you." https://twitter.com/GaryLineker/status/708222835886575616 Match of the Day host Gary Lineker agreed with the United boss on Twitter on Friday morning which inspired some push-back from high-profile British journalists. https://twitter.com/GaryLineker/status/708236273060880384
Does Louis van Gaal have a point with his theory that the media hides behind pundits' opinions?