I still maintain that it will all end in tears with Houllier. The French are still pissing themselves laughing at how they got rid of him so painlessly after the South Africa/Domenech fiasco.
Sadly I'm leaning towards this. Even sadder is, I long for the O Neill days already. Say what you will about the guy, but he got results. We've gone quickly from a top 6 side not too far shy of being top 4, to being completely average, battling relegation. Granted injuries and O Neill's departure itself have played a huge part, but it's been a scary decline.
Quote from: Bad English on November 29, 2010, 08:35:52 PMI still maintain that it will all end in tears with Houllier. The French are still pissing themselves laughing at how they got rid of him so painlessly after the South Africa/Domenech fiasco.Sadly I'm leaning towards this. Even sadder is, I long for the O Neill days already. Say what you will about the guy, but he got results. We've gone quickly from a top 6 side not too far shy of being top 4, to being completely average, battling relegation. Granted injuries and O Neill's departure itself have played a huge part, but it's been a scary decline.The most frightening thing is how certain O Neill stalwarts have not stepped up to the plate since his departure. Lack of a genuine gameplan is a huge concern. For all O Neills limitations and only have plan A, at least there was actually plan A. We haven't actually improved much between K Mac and Houllier so far.Benefit of doubt and all that, but it looks worrying.
I believe he's got a role to play for us, but not from the start. He's an injection of composure and class from the bench in the final third/quarter of matches, for me.