Here's why I think it was important for Houllier not to be doing the things he did at Anfield. Please don't read it if you think we've done this to death.Let's imagine he'd taken over at Arsenal or Man Utd, returned to Anfield, and did those things. How would it have come across then? Well, I don't think the fans of those clubs would have had to worry about it happening, because it would never have happened in that way. A slight wave, an acknowledgement, maybe, but not all the other gushing and fawning. There would have been absolute hell to pay, otherwise. Much worse than he got from us. I think Houllier would have been under no illusion that - whether it was Arsenal or Man Utd he'd returned with - his new club would not stand for any such starry-eyed nonsense. And this is the crux of the problem. His perception was that it'd be okay to do what he did, because he returned with Villa. It was only Villa. We are not at the level of Man Utd, Arsenal or Liverpool. We're smaller than those clubs and, as such, shouldn't expect the levels of respect that the bigger clubs get. I don't for one second think that he reasoned any of this out before he went to Anfield, I think he did what he did naturally. But the feeling is there, we are a team that traditionally finished between 8th and 12th, remember. We're only Villa.If ever we want to enjoy real sustained success, we have to, as a club, free ourselves of the 'we're only Villa' mentality. I fully believe that our many failures in the past, our inability to push on from positions of strength, our failure to win make-or-break matches, has been in part down to this psychological problem. Think like winners, and you've got a better chance of winning. Think like losers, and you'll beat yourself before a ball has been kicked. Think like a team that will not tolerate losing habitually, and you'll bust a gut to win at all costs. At 2-0 down against Liverpool, we were already thinking we'd lost - as the manager admitted - when there was everything to play for. Neither Man Utd, Arsenal nor Liverpool would ever dream of thinking in that way. Houllier's actions, and the subsequent internet drama-queenery, might have made him realise that - despite how Aston Villa are perceived in the media and in football generally - there are many fans out there that want to shake off the 'we're just Villa' mentality. We're Aston Villa. We are fucking proud of that fact. And we demand that our manager - whoever he might be, whoever he's managed previously, and whoever he returns to play, with Aston Villa - respects that pride, leads by example and goes about instilling it among his players. I suspect Messrs Rinder and McGregor might have agreed.
I would prefer that we didn't become Newcastle and gave the guy a chance to turn the situation around. It may not work out or he may just build the club a solid foundation after MON pulled the rug out from underneath it.
Have to agree entirely.I can get over him acting like an idiot. It's the fact that he has come in and publicly stated that he sees us as a mid-table team, despite the fact that we finished 6th the last 3 seasons, being close to the top 4, that worries me. When he took the job he said it's not as if we are Liverpool, even though we finished ahead of them last year. It's not going to happen but the sooner he is gone the better for the club.
Quote from: Karl Bridges on December 13, 2010, 11:29:01 AMI would prefer that we didn't become Newcastle and gave the guy a chance to turn the situation around. It may not work out or he may just build the club a solid foundation after MON pulled the rug out from underneath it.Or he may just undo the solid foundation that MON had built for us. I still say we were only signing Darren Bent away from finishing top4.
Quote from: jonzy85 on December 13, 2010, 11:19:14 AMHave to agree entirely.I can get over him acting like an idiot. It's the fact that he has come in and publicly stated that he sees us as a mid-table team, despite the fact that we finished 6th the last 3 seasons, being close to the top 4, that worries me. When he took the job he said it's not as if we are Liverpool, even though we finished ahead of them last year. It's not going to happen but the sooner he is gone the better for the club.How about something radical, like giving him a chance and not getting worked up about sensationalist press quotes?
Quote from: dave.woodhall on December 13, 2010, 11:34:53 AMQuote from: jonzy85 on December 13, 2010, 11:19:14 AMHave to agree entirely.I can get over him acting like an idiot. It's the fact that he has come in and publicly stated that he sees us as a mid-table team, despite the fact that we finished 6th the last 3 seasons, being close to the top 4, that worries me. When he took the job he said it's not as if we are Liverpool, even though we finished ahead of them last year. It's not going to happen but the sooner he is gone the better for the club.How about something radical, like giving him a chance and not getting worked up about sensationalist press quotes?My point is that I dont really give a s*** about his press quotes...it's more the fact that he just doesnt seem right for the job.
My point is that I dont really give a s*** about his press quotes...it's more the fact that he just doesnt seem right for the job.
on a side note - I signed up to this forum under the influence of alcohol iirc, so if someone could correct the appalling punctuation in my name (apostrophe and capital W) i'd be eternally grateful as its putting me off forumming