Almost three weeks in I think we need to stop looking at the timing on MON's departure and more to the lack of a new man being appointed as our biggest problem right now.
Quote from: clampy on August 27, 2010, 09:58:11 AMAs convenient as it is, we're going to have stope blaming the previous manager eventually. The only one's to blame for Sunday and last night's debacle are the players and KMac. My idea of getting back into a game is not throwing a striker out wide and a centre half up front. Sunday league tactics at best, not what you'd expect from a coach of a Premiership side.And why, then, is a coach with no managerial experience being forced into a position where he makes such basic mistakes?MON is going to remain at blame for the wider turmoil at the club for a fair while yet, I'm afraid.Manager and entire coaching staff gone five days before the start of the season. We now have no manager, we don't have enough coaches - they said last night, we physically do not have enough coaches to be coaching all the various teams at the moment - the transfer window is about to slam shut, we've had some duff results, and a chairman who has never appointed a football club manager in his life is being forced to find a replacement at short notice.MON didn't directly cause the Newcastle debacle, and he didn't lose the match last night, but you'd have to be naive to think that these results aren't reflecting the utter chaos at the club at the moment. He really could not have caused much more damage than that if he'd tried.Throw in the "performances" last night and last weekend of some of the very same expensive, high earning, unused players which he bought and was asked to do something about, refused, and left over, and it doesn't reflect too well on him.
As convenient as it is, we're going to have stope blaming the previous manager eventually. The only one's to blame for Sunday and last night's debacle are the players and KMac. My idea of getting back into a game is not throwing a striker out wide and a centre half up front. Sunday league tactics at best, not what you'd expect from a coach of a Premiership side.
Perhaps it's time for certain people to put their unadulterated hatred for MON, which was there well before he left, aside and have a look at the bigger picture.
I didn't like O'Neill as a person and said so a few times on here even before he did the dirty on us. I always thought he had a nasty, selfish, vindictive side to him. Events have certainly lent support to that theory.I can't make my mind up about the squad he left us though. At first I thought it strong enough to still challenge at the top end, even without Milner, if handled well. However the more I think about it the more I think O'Neill's MO was based on signing average to good players he could control, and then try to get more than the sum of their parts out of them. It's beginning to look like he did very well to get that group of players to 6th in 3 successive seasons. He is undoubtedly good at getting okay players to look better, but I sincerley doubt he could have got us any higher with those type of players and that kind of approach. [b/]With a few injuries cropping up, and without O'Neill's ability to get more out of less, the squad suddenly looks a lot more "average" than the recent league finishes suggested. The biggest indictment against him is that he seemed to deliberatley plan his walkout for a time when it would prevent us addressing the manager situation and improving on the squad. That is unforgiveabe and puts him up there with Mr Sugarbags and the man with Maradonna's shirt amongst the worst of Villa villains in my book.
but why not get someone like Staunton (previously worked with K-Mac) or Dean Saunders to come in on say a 1 month contract to ease the short term problem?
Quote from: John M on August 27, 2010, 10:09:45 AMAlmost three weeks in I think we need to stop looking at the timing on MON's departure and more to the lack of a new man being appointed as our biggest problem right now.Which ignores the fact that had he not left when he did, we wouldn't be trying to appoint a new manager at the worst time possible in the first place
Quote from: jonzy85 on August 27, 2010, 10:18:58 AMPerhaps it's time for certain people to put their unadulterated hatred for MON, which was there well before he left, aside and have a look at the bigger picture.Who is that referring to?Not me, I hope, as you're miles from the truth.
Quote from: pauliewalnuts on August 27, 2010, 10:22:25 AMQuote from: jonzy85 on August 27, 2010, 10:18:58 AMPerhaps it's time for certain people to put their unadulterated hatred for MON, which was there well before he left, aside and have a look at the bigger picture.Who is that referring to?Not me, I hope, as you're miles from the truth.Not specifically you, even though you are one of the more voiciferous ones in putting the blame 100% at MON's door and from memory you were not a particularly big fan of his when he was at the club.
However, the squad he left SHOULD NOT lose 6-0 to Newcastle away and throw away leads twice at home in Europe in the Preliminary Rounds.MON's departure and timing thereof, will affect our chances of challenging for top 4, especially given the slow response to appointing the new man.It is not an excuse for this week's debacle.