If he has to rebuild from scratch thne yes it will. If he just adds to what we already have then we need to acknowledge the foundations MON laid down.
Quote from: John M on September 09, 2010, 12:13:35 PMIf he has to rebuild from scratch thne yes it will. If he just adds to what we already have then we need to acknowledge the foundations MON laid down.Hence the decent squad comment. It is decent, good even, but I don't think anyone could say it's anything more than that. Every manager is going to try and stamp their mark over the squad, so can see quite a few comings and goings over the next 18 months or so, particularly left back, goalkeeper (which would have to happen sooner or later anyway), and up front.His legacy outside of the first team is much much poorer, for the reasons outlined already.
Coaching and scouting will change, that I would not argue. However these are extensions of any managers style and the people he likes around him, so whether good, bad or indifferent would change anyway. I think the team that takes the field, which is what it's all directed towards, is the real measure. And as you say that's pretty good right now!
Quote from: John M on September 09, 2010, 12:20:58 PMCoaching and scouting will change, that I would not argue. However these are extensions of any managers style and the people he likes around him, so whether good, bad or indifferent would change anyway. I think the team that takes the field, which is what it's all directed towards, is the real measure. And as you say that's pretty good right now!Pretty good is a bit underwhelming considering the money paid.
Mark Kelly: The legacy of MON is fans willing to accept any old shit provided we win. I wish more fans had that winning mentality. There are far too many these days who don't understand the difference between a football club and a soap opera, or dare I say a Portuguese novela.
Quote from: Mark Kelly on September 09, 2010, 11:42:41 AMThe legacy of MON is fans willing to accept any old shit provided we win.I think you'll find that 99% of football fans will put winning ahead of pretty football everytime. Clearly you and Tony Mowbray are in the other 1%.
The legacy of MON is fans willing to accept any old shit provided we win.
Quote from: Mark Kelly on September 09, 2010, 11:42:41 AMThe legacy of MON is fans willing to accept any old shit provided we win. as opposed to the "getting hammered 6-0 away at Newcastle any old shit" I know which one i prefer.
Quote from: Chris Smith on September 09, 2010, 12:11:44 PMQuote from: Mark Kelly on September 09, 2010, 11:42:41 AMThe legacy of MON is fans willing to accept any old shit provided we win.I think you'll find that 99% of football fans will put winning ahead of pretty football everytime. Clearly you and Tony Mowbray are in the other 1%.Once again Chris you deliberately miss the point. If your definition of decent football is restricted to Mowbray, you really have little understanding of modern football. You really must have hated the West Ham game.
Quote from: Mark Kelly on September 09, 2010, 01:04:48 PMQuote from: Chris Smith on September 09, 2010, 12:11:44 PMQuote from: Mark Kelly on September 09, 2010, 11:42:41 AMThe legacy of MON is fans willing to accept any old shit provided we win.I think you'll find that 99% of football fans will put winning ahead of pretty football everytime. Clearly you and Tony Mowbray are in the other 1%.Once again Chris you deliberately miss the point. If your definition of decent football is restricted to Mowbray, you really have little understanding of modern football. You really must have hated the West Ham game.Exactly. The idea that somehow winning football and attractive football need to be different is exactly the attitude that has held England back for generations. From Hungary in '53 to the Germans in '10, English football has suffered from exactly the same deficiencies. Any notion that somehow possession is too risky a strategy to be a good one for winning, or that it's preferable to put in endless crosses in the vain hope that something will happen rather than crafting a move with a definite purpose, or that defenders should always hack it as far away as possible from their goal because passing is such a dangerous luxury - these notions were never right and now they're just laughable.