Vincent Kompany might have been seen as the saviour when he returned to Anderlecht as player-manager, but early results suggest it will take time for the 33-year-old to make his mark on Belgium's most successful club.
Anderlecht caused a sensation when they announced in May the appointment of Kompany, a product of the club's youth academy along with stars such as Enzo Scifo and Romelu Lukaku.
The role of player-manager is virtually non-existent these days, and the task always looked a daunting one for Kompany, who had just finished a successful 11-year spell at Manchester City.
With just two points taken from his first four games, it was announced on Thursday that Kompany, while captaining the team on the field, would leave substitutions and tactical changes to his staff during games. It is a first indication that the combination of roles was too much.
Kompany has returned to a club where much has changed since he emerged there as a teenager before joining Hamburg in 2006.
The 34-time Belgian champions finished sixth last season, 20 points behind champions Genk, who they face this Friday. This season is the club's first in 55 years without European football.
Things have not been going well for Anderlecht since the wealthy businessman Marc Coucke bought the club in late 2017, ending a period of almost 50 years in the hands of the Vanden Stock family. And now the reign of "Vince the Prince" has started in underwhelming fashion too.
Kompany was treated like a rock star when he was unveiled, citing City coach Pep Guardiola as the example to follow. "Like every supporter, I suffered last season," he said.
He hopes to have a big impact on the field, providing he stays fit. He also hopes instilling a new philosophy can revive the fortunes of a club who were once a leading European force.
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"He is just a human being, as well as being a very good footballer, but I get the feeling he thinks he's God."
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