


So less than 24-hours after that failed attack, when Patricia left for work, she knew from news reports that police were in a race against time to catch the bombers. This time, the terrorists' bombs failed to explode and they fled. Then, on 21 July 2005, four men targeted the capital’s transport network in a carbon-copy style attack. Just two weeks earlier, a series of bomb attacks killed 52 people, injured hundreds and London was left reeling.

You’re not going to call him boss because you know he’s only a bit-part player.On 22 July 2005, when Patricia da Silva learned that police marksman had killed a man at Stockwell Underground Station in London, she had no reason to second-guess news reports describing the deceased as a terrorist. “There’s going to be a few attitude problems towards somebody who’s not really their boss. It’s about the people you have to work with and if you know that you’ve got someone there and that he’s only going to be there for a short while. “If they’re going to come in and know they’ve only got a certain amount of time to work, if they’re willing to sign for that and say ‘that’s it’, then how are those people going to get the best from these players? But if you’re going to go and bring one of those experienced managers in - and they are experienced, if it’s not a number of clubs, it’s a number of games they’ve had in Champions League football, it’s trophies that they’ve gone and won in Europe," Parker told Betfred. “It’s not good because it’s Manchester United and that this is the path they’re going down. Paul Parker has offered his thoughts on United's decision to appoint an interim manager following Solskjaer's sacking after an agreement was reached with Ralf Rangnick on Thursday.
