I'm a big supporter of Randy and Co. but I still think they made mistakes in allowing O'Neill to increase the wage bill to 85% of turnover. Back the manager on his football knowledge, fair enough, but why let him deal with financials when he has no qualifications to do so? It was asking for trouble, and I'd be willing to bet most if not all of O'Neill's signings would have joined us even if lower wages were offered. Lets' face it they were hardly world class superstars he was signing were they?
Quote from: brontebilly on November 30, 2010, 09:16:11 PMThe board has made mistakes too and as supporters we should be questioning them on it. Not burying our heads in the sand blaming MON. Who gave MON the funds to spend - 45m-50m net in the 2008/09 season? Money the club could not afford and are now paying the price for? Then ...Quote from: brontebilly on November 30, 2010, 09:16:11 PMHow tight is the money situation at Villa Park?I can't work out what you're saying. First you're criticising them for giving the manager too much to spend, then a few lines later, you're moaning about the lack of money to spend.If the board had said no to some of the players MON wanted and their salaries, I've no doubt you'd be moaning about that, but now you're moaning that the board are to blame for paying big salaries.And ...Quote from: brontebilly on November 30, 2010, 09:16:11 PMinsulted and abused? Hyperbole alert!!!!Well, insulted might include you and your pathetic "Mr Krulak" arsey student routine the other day.
The board has made mistakes too and as supporters we should be questioning them on it. Not burying our heads in the sand blaming MON. Who gave MON the funds to spend - 45m-50m net in the 2008/09 season? Money the club could not afford and are now paying the price for?
How tight is the money situation at Villa Park?
insulted and abused? Hyperbole alert!!!!
I'm a big supporter of Randy and Co. but I still think they made mistakes in allowing O'Neill to increase the wage bill to 85% of turnover.
Quote from: ktvillan on November 30, 2010, 10:13:47 PMI'm a big supporter of Randy and Co. but I still think they made mistakes in allowing O'Neill to increase the wage bill to 85% of turnover. Back the manager on his football knowledge, fair enough, but why let him deal with financials when he has no qualifications to do so? It was asking for trouble, and I'd be willing to bet most if not all of O'Neill's signings would have joined us even if lower wages were offered. Lets' face it they were hardly world class superstars he was signing were they?So which member of the board should have made the decision as to what level of wages we should have offered?
If O'Neill had wanted to sign both Reo-Coker and Sneijder and offered both £80k per week, should they have backed him on one and not the other? Or neither? Or both?
It seems like you want demand the best of both worlds, all with the benefit of hindsight.
Quote from: ktvillan on November 30, 2010, 10:13:47 PMI'm a big supporter of Randy and Co. but I still think they made mistakes in allowing O'Neill to increase the wage bill to 85% of turnover. Perhaps they thought he would deliver and the success on the pitch with just a bit more backing? The knock on effect being increased revenue and a more even split re wages to turnover.In fairness, if he was asking them to fork out for higher wages in the summer of 09 he'd have been arguing from a position of strength and would have been a hard man to refuse. We'd gone close to 4th the season before, so even if they had some doubts about certain aspects of his management it would be easy to reason that there was far more good than bad.His habit for leaving deals late into the transfer window is probably a major factor in average players being on extortionate wages too. That more than anything else had a killer impact on the wage bill. Also, would the board really know the difference between a Sidwell, Beye or Heskey and a good player actually worth the wages that trio alone are on? Doubtful. So you can blame them for that if you wish but it seems harsh that we'd criticise a board for letting a football manager manage.
Quote from: KevinGage on December 01, 2010, 09:53:00 AMQuote from: ktvillan on November 30, 2010, 10:13:47 PMI'm a big supporter of Randy and Co. but I still think they made mistakes in allowing O'Neill to increase the wage bill to 85% of turnover. Perhaps they thought he would deliver and the success on the pitch with just a bit more backing? The knock on effect being increased revenue and a more even split re wages to turnover.In fairness, if he was asking them to fork out for higher wages in the summer of 09 he'd have been arguing from a position of strength and would have been a hard man to refuse. We'd gone close to 4th the season before, so even if they had some doubts about certain aspects of his management it would be easy to reason that there was far more good than bad.His habit for leaving deals late into the transfer window is probably a major factor in average players being on extortionate wages too. That more than anything else had a killer impact on the wage bill. Also, would the board really know the difference between a Sidwell, Beye or Heskey and a good player actually worth the wages that trio alone are on? Doubtful. So you can blame them for that if you wish but it seems harsh that we'd criticise a board for letting a football manager manage. I’m all for allowing the manager to manage and for the Board to back the manager, but don’t see why a team manager’s duties should include control of wages/contract negotiations. I don’t see how playing professional football for 15 years (whilst having all your financial dealings handled by lawyers and agents) and then coaching for 20 years (whilst having all your financial dealings handled by lawyers and agents) would give anyone the necessary skills and financial acumen to make a good job of it. I can’t think of many other large businesses that would put an operational manager in sole charge of contract negotiations and remuneration.In many clubs the players are identified by the manager, but contracts are negotiated by the Chief Exec or one of the Board members. I believe David Dein used to handle the contract stuff at Arsenal for example, and I would think Kenyon would be involved at Chelsea. Someone with a bit of experience in contractual matters but who also knows a fair bit about the football market, what players are worth, what other clubs are paying etc. We were without anyone with that kind of background on the Board for much of O'Neill's reign and the result is a lot of players on 10-20k a week more than they are probably worth, and more than we could probably have got them for.
Enter Paul Faulkner. From summer 09 onwards MON seemed to have less control on certain aspects of transfers, mentioning Faulkner by name. This indicates the board were concerned or -at the very least- looking to reduce MON's workload in that area.I don't think any other manager will enjoy the free reign he enjoyed between 2006-09. Probably for the best too.
I'll admit it.After tonight's evidence, we need options to replace the fecking useless Dunne, so perhaps we should be thinking about recalling him. He can't be any worse. Can he?