Ian Taylor or Sid Cowens
Bob Bradley is an interesting one. No idea what his club career has been like but he's very highly thought of in football circles. I thought he'd end up at Fulham to be honest.
Quote from: Arsey on August 09, 2010, 05:43:08 PMNice of MON to wait until just before the season starts. I would make Moyes an offer he can not refuse. Failing that Jol isn't a bad shout. Whoever it is I hope they are given money to spend but I just don't think the money is there anymore.We cannot make Moyes an offer unless Everton allow us to. They'd be unwilling at the best of times but 5 days before the start of the season there is not a chance they'd agree.
Nice of MON to wait until just before the season starts. I would make Moyes an offer he can not refuse. Failing that Jol isn't a bad shout. Whoever it is I hope they are given money to spend but I just don't think the money is there anymore.
Quote from: hilts_coolerking on August 09, 2010, 05:39:56 PMPersonally, I think Martin Jol should be at the lower end of the range of managers we should be considering.Even though I was vocal in my criticism of O'Neill, I always said that if the alternative was someone like Curbishley then we should stick by O'Neill. If we can appoint a genuinely top class manager then O'Neill's work over the last four years can be built on to achieve real success. If we appoint someone of Curbishley's calibre then it's back to the doldrums, I'm afraid.I think it all hinges on how much money there is for the new manager. Pretty much everything else is in place.And how many 'genuinely top class' managers are currently looking for work? Of those how many are looking for work at a club about to sell their best player and where all the signs point to a club looking to cut back not push on?
Personally, I think Martin Jol should be at the lower end of the range of managers we should be considering.Even though I was vocal in my criticism of O'Neill, I always said that if the alternative was someone like Curbishley then we should stick by O'Neill. If we can appoint a genuinely top class manager then O'Neill's work over the last four years can be built on to achieve real success. If we appoint someone of Curbishley's calibre then it's back to the doldrums, I'm afraid.I think it all hinges on how much money there is for the new manager. Pretty much everything else is in place.
Quote from: Chris Smith on August 09, 2010, 05:43:31 PMQuote from: hilts_coolerking on August 09, 2010, 05:39:56 PMPersonally, I think Martin Jol should be at the lower end of the range of managers we should be considering.Even though I was vocal in my criticism of O'Neill, I always said that if the alternative was someone like Curbishley then we should stick by O'Neill. If we can appoint a genuinely top class manager then O'Neill's work over the last four years can be built on to achieve real success. If we appoint someone of Curbishley's calibre then it's back to the doldrums, I'm afraid.I think it all hinges on how much money there is for the new manager. Pretty much everything else is in place.And how many 'genuinely top class' managers are currently looking for work? Of those how many are looking for work at a club about to sell their best player and where all the signs point to a club looking to cut back not push on?Chris, playing devil's advocate here, but were all of the signs design to help make up MON's mind? Milner aside which is a case of getting stupid money for a player, then was every other development really just a systematic way of dismantling the control MON had at the club.If then the club go hire someone with new rules established, then they could theoretically loosen purse strings while continuing to strive towards their own objectives of expansion coupled with wage reduction of unused players.
Quote from: toronto villa on August 09, 2010, 05:50:46 PMQuote from: Chris Smith on August 09, 2010, 05:43:31 PMQuote from: hilts_coolerking on August 09, 2010, 05:39:56 PMPersonally, I think Martin Jol should be at the lower end of the range of managers we should be considering.Even though I was vocal in my criticism of O'Neill, I always said that if the alternative was someone like Curbishley then we should stick by O'Neill. If we can appoint a genuinely top class manager then O'Neill's work over the last four years can be built on to achieve real success. If we appoint someone of Curbishley's calibre then it's back to the doldrums, I'm afraid.I think it all hinges on how much money there is for the new manager. Pretty much everything else is in place.And how many 'genuinely top class' managers are currently looking for work? Of those how many are looking for work at a club about to sell their best player and where all the signs point to a club looking to cut back not push on?Chris, playing devil's advocate here, but were all of the signs design to help make up MON's mind? Milner aside which is a case of getting stupid money for a player, then was every other development really just a systematic way of dismantling the control MON had at the club.If then the club go hire someone with new rules established, then they could theoretically loosen purse strings while continuing to strive towards their own objectives of expansion coupled with wage reduction of unused players.If they wanted rid why not just sack him? Why cause a rift that leaved them 5 days before the season starts to find a replacement?