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22nd September 2015
04:40pm BST

Despite the fine - and the criticism - he received at the time, McCarthy does not regret his team selection from 2009 and feels avoiding relegation vindicated his decision to pit the likes of George Friend and Segundo Castillo against the defending Premier League champions, with stars such as Dimitar Berbatov in their ranks.
“You might remember an incident a few years ago when I changed one or two players going to Old Trafford as Wolves manager – it was eleven. Actually it was 10 because one was injured and forced upon me! “We were fined for that, which was nonsense, because I still believe firmly, avidly, that my job as a manager is to get points for my team. “And if I’m playing Tottenham away, Man United away and Burnley at home, and I get six points out of those games, then I’ve managed my club particularly well. “That’s what I did. “I told all my players what I was going to do and a few of them were going ‘oh, I want to play at Old Trafford’ and I said ‘well f****** keep us up and play there next year because let me tell you they won’t get relegated’. “That’s the same for me on Wednesday night. Those that don’t play will be told ‘get promoted, then you can play against them twice next season in the league’.”The rest of us might be getting a little excited about McCarthy going toe-to-toe with Louis Van Gaal for the first time since that historic 2001 World Cup qualifier win at Lansdowne Road but the Ipswich boss seems unmoved by the reunion. For him it's all about Saturday and the clash with second-from-bottom Bristol City. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sr7oUg1trVo Never change Mick, never change.