collapse collapse

Please donate to help towards the costs of keeping this site going. Thank You.

Follow us on...

Author Topic: Season turning point?  (Read 24766 times)

Offline eastie

  • Member
  • Posts: 19940
  • Age: 58
Re: Season turning point?
« Reply #120 on: May 09, 2013, 02:40:43 PM »
IMO the future isn't Bannan or Albrighton etc. We should be looking to get more from Gardner and Carruthers etc.  Fonzies probably gonna get moved on too.

I had high hopes for Bannan when he first broke through, but this is the sad truth of it now.

Indeed it is.

Online Monty

  • Member
  • *
  • Posts: 25580
  • Location: pastaland
  • GM : 25.05.2024
Re: Season turning point?
« Reply #121 on: May 09, 2013, 04:49:45 PM »
Agreed. I think that generation of youth prospects may well have been ruined by a combination of MON's intransigent distrust, the turmoil of the GH year and the bucolic ineptitude of McLeish. Their most crucial years of development - the semi-legendary 18-22 figure Wenger speaks of - have been nothing short of disastrous. Bannan especially needs a change of scene, I think. Now is the time of Gardner, Carruthers etc.

Offline Concrete John

  • Member
  • Posts: 15175
  • Location: Flying blind on a rocket cycle
  • GM : Mar, 2014
Re: Season turning point?
« Reply #122 on: May 09, 2013, 04:53:26 PM »
Not too sure about that.  If they are good enough they'll show it once they leave and, managerial turmoil aside, they mainly still had the same youth coaches like K-Mac teaching the the same basic skills.

Online Monty

  • Member
  • *
  • Posts: 25580
  • Location: pastaland
  • GM : 25.05.2024
Re: Season turning point?
« Reply #123 on: May 09, 2013, 04:59:37 PM »
There's only so much you can learn in training. They didn't get match experience in the right way at all - it was either thrown in at the deep end or never played at all. Also our dressing room sounded absolutely poisonous, a terrible environment for young players, and with most of the damage done McLeish comes in to compound it with a football style built on fear and misery and spends most of his time blaming the young players for our problems.

I think they will come good in the long run, but they need a change of scene. There are so many variables in youth development, and if a few small things go wrong that could be the line between success and failure. They need to rebuild their careers Steven Davis style, I think, and I think a few can certainly do it.

 


SimplePortal 2.3.6 © 2008-2014, SimplePortal