Just backs up the thought some of the playing squad are a disgrace as a well as Frank not being up to it.
In a relegation battle and doing this?
Whoever is next needs to wipe out that changing room and stop the rot.
A squad with a large number of dislikable players.
All sorts of teams with contrasting philosophies can and do play out from the back - it doesn't really say anything here.
Ange & Frank both play a high number of crosses - does that make them similar managers stylistically?
Not because of Ange though. That's what I am trying to say. It's was because the 3 teams occupying the bottom 3 were uniquely bad. We still lost at various points to 2 of them I believe.
Indeed, his team selections were always about this - conservative and worrying about opposition even if they weren't that good.Confirms what most of us saw with our own eyes, and called out here on the forum way back in august. (yes, I checked! Check Bournemouth-matchthread, for one)
And this has been one of the major gripes for a lot of us. I expect more such stories to emerge.
I don't even think Poch returning is a good idea but at this point it makes sense. Like you say, it exorcises that ghost and the cloud that lingers in most fan's minds about what could have been or what could be.I don't think Poch is the answer but until he gets another shot he's always going to be lurking in the background. Get it done with. If it works out great, if not at least it puts it to bed once and for all.
So the previous, previous manager paid absolutely 0 mind to what the opposition might do to our detriment and then the last manager paid too much attention to what the opposition might do.Confirms what most of us saw with our own eyes, and called out here on the forum way back in august. (yes, I checked! Check Bournemouth-matchthread, for one)
And this has been one of the major gripes for a lot of us. I expect more such stories to emerge.
So the previous, previous manager paid absolutely 0 mind to what the opposition might do to our detriment and then the last manager paid too much attention to what the opposition might do.
There is a balance to be found somewhere. Be nice if twe could appoint a person who has it.
Whether he will admit it or not, when he walks in the door of his house this pm, and leans back against the front door as he shuts it, he will utter a sigh of relief.Indeed, his team selections were always about this - conservative and worrying about opposition even if they weren't that good.
Just didn't see how he was a fit for this club, I made a comment when he was appointed I feared we would chew him up and spit him out like we have other managers and here we are.
Feel for him, very much like Nuno handled himself fantastically under the circumstances - and like Nuno, I expect him to rise again at a slightly lesser club. Good luck to him, wasn't nice seeing such a good guy go though this and relieved he has been put out of his misery.....
I don't even think Poch returning is a good idea but at this point it makes sense. Like you say, it exorcises that ghost and the cloud that lingers in most fan's minds about what could have been or what could be.
I think maybe we just have to see it likely fail to just get past him as a coach. We don't have the same calibre of talent hence my doubts but I dunno. We've tried most other things at this point.![]()
Initially, yes. Though keep in mind, last time around quite a few of 'the fans' turned on Poch towards the end...Only way I want Poch back is if the board back him.. and seriously, as I’d hate for him to be set up to fail. In some ways getting him back and him demanding the backing as being conditional might force the hand of the board to truly back the manager, more so rather than another name, as they know fans would be onto them and not the manager.
Think it's a question of sequencing mate. Most coaches, I think, do both, but it's the order they do it in that defines them. We've tended to do better as a club with idealists who first prioritize imposing our own style, over adapting to others. But that doesn't mean they don't do the latter, just that it's not the first thing they do.
Ange, Poch and Harry were idealists. Mourinho, Nuno and Frank, pragmatists. AVB was in a sort of halfway house, though the style he imposed was largely 'give it to Bale'.
The last pragmatist who got a sustained tune out of the squad was...I think BMJ?
Interesting, I’ve only seen Porro and Palinha’s social media posts about TF’s departure. Anyone seen anymore?
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