To be fair, Houllier said in the Chelsea post match interview that he had picked an experienced side because he thought experience was needed at Stamford Bridge.I think that we should remember, though, that he might had picked another team against Spurs if it wasn't for the fact that we were playing Chelsea three days later. Maybe he thought it would be a risk to play Stan and NRC in two matches in the space of three days just after they had recovered from injury.
Eh?
Boxing Day vs Spurs Houllier chose Hogg and Delph over NRC and Petrov, because he wanted to, he chose not to include Dunne, otherwise we could have had exactly the same team as against Chelsea minus Ashley Young.
Quote from: cdward on January 04, 2011, 10:20:19 AMBoxing Day vs Spurs Houllier chose Hogg and Delph over NRC and Petrov, because he wanted to, he chose not to include Dunne, otherwise we could have had exactly the same team as against Chelsea minus Ashley Young.Against Spurs, sure, he perhaps did have options but players were only just fit again.... Petrov was on the bench but perhaps not considered fit to start (his self-confessed return date being Jan 16 v Blues, I read).My point was, the last couple of months, Houllier has had no choice but to pick and play the likes of Hogg, Clark in midfield, Bannan... listening to some pundits, they're of the opinion he's actively dropped a handful of key senior players in preference to the young lads but then hastily swallowed humble pie v Chelsea and brought them all back. Which wasn't the case. Do you think Hogg would have started so many games had NRC/Petrov/Delph/Sidwell been available?
Quote from: Villadawg on January 04, 2011, 11:16:00 AMEh?What's the difference between a duck?One of its legs is both the same.
Where as if 'Arry had to pick his kids, they'd all be touted for England places now, even if they were wrong end of the table.
Returning to the original point of this thread, should GH be backed or sacked? Before the Chelsea match, it seemed impossible to have a sensible debate on this. The majority thought he had to be sacked because he was "clueless", "had turned a team that finished 6th into a relegation certainty", etc.I thought it was highly frustrating to read such comments. Regardless of his performance at Villa, Houllier has obvious strong points: he is highly experienced, very knowledgeable, capable of winning trophies. He has tactical nous, is adept at designing a game plan tailored to a specific opponent (that is one of the reasons why he has been successful in cup competitions) and has a good record of developing young players. All in all, I'd say he has he qualities to become a successful Villa manager.
I'd say a fair chunk of any criticism was valid, and he's by no means out of the woods yet.