I can't believe some people on here.Randy has never moved the goalpost's.He realised Martin was no good for Villa.Martin paid 12 million for Downing on about 50k a week, when we had Albrighton ready.Martin was no good for Villa long term, he never gave young lads a chance just wanted to buy old players on high wages to sit on the bench.Houllier will use the squad and help bring on Academy players, whereas Martin would have driven them all away ie, Gary Cahill!
If you have a squad of 24 players then even if you use all subs each week you are going to have 10 of them being paid without kicking a ball in anger. Even if you rotate players your still going to be left with the same number not doing anything. O'Neill's approach was fairly old school in that he thought of it as a first team and then the rest as cover for injury etc and this was his downfall, I think, but if he'd played Beye and Sidwell more often then the wage bill would have been just the same although results might have been worse.
It will be interesting to see what happens to the squad over coming months but we're in the fortunate position of having a decent crop of youngsters to step up as we inevitably lose more experienced players as their contracts run down.
If Sidwell and Beye had played more and weren't good enough, then he shouldn't have bought them.But using them more would have been some justification for buying them in the first place.Also, if you're going to buy somebody who is just for cover, dont pay them £40k-£50k per week.
Here are some players that we hardly used last season and a ballpark figure for their wages.Sidwell - 50k p/wShorey - 33k p/wHarewood - 27k p/wBeye - 40k p/wDavies - 30k p/wThat's £26 million in fees and £182,000 per week in wages.It's no wonder he was told to sort it and, let's get this right, it wasn't the wage bill per se that was the problem. They wanted a more equitable distribution of that outlay.
Quote from: cheltenhamlion on January 19, 2011, 01:49:53 PMHere are some players that we hardly used last season and a ballpark figure for their wages.Sidwell - 50k p/wShorey - 33k p/wHarewood - 27k p/wBeye - 40k p/wDavies - 30k p/wThat's £26 million in fees and £182,000 per week in wages.It's no wonder he was told to sort it and, let's get this right, it wasn't the wage bill per se that was the problem. They wanted a more equitable distribution of that outlay.And all those players were available for transfer in the summer with MON's agreement as well as Luke Young and NRC. The club held meetings with their agents at the beginning of the summer to inform them of what the club wanted. It's also worth noting that most of those players were first team choice at some point and needed to be moved on due to lack of performance or due to our having recruited better replacements.We've seen to our cost this season what happens when you rely too heavily on inexperienced youth as injury cover.
Aston Villa fans: Don't take 64-carat owner Randy Lerner for granted - he does careBy NEIL MOXLEYIf I owned a cap, I’d be doffing it in the direction of Aston Villa owner Randy Lerner.'Does he still care?' they asked.'He’s fed up with his plaything,' they claimed.Well, yes, he does still care. And no, he is still fully committed to making Aston Villa a success.I mean... wow! A £24million commitment in transfer fees, not to mention a contract worth in excess of £15m on the club’s record transfer signing Darren Bent.Statement of intent: Villa fans will be delighted to see new signing Darren Bent training for the first time since his £24million arrivalWhile we are at it, Jean Makoun’s signing, from Lyon is another major outlay, a £5m fee and all the associated salary costs. (I understand too, that it may not be the last. Although Villa say there is no interest in Wigan Athletic left-back Maynor Figueroa, the rumour-mill is awash with suggestions that a £4m bid is in the offing.) Whatever the outcome of the next fortnight before the window closes, the statement from Lerner could not have been more emphatic. First, that we don’t want to go down. Secondly, that I back Gerard Houllier.And really, how lucky is the Frenchman? My last Midlander column upset the hierarchy at Villa Park. I’m sorry about the fact they were brassed off, but perhaps it was a natural consequence of the drip, drip, drip of negativity over the past four months. It wasn’t written out of malice. More out of a sense of duty to supporters who clearly felt so strongly after the Sunderland game that they called for their own manager’s head. As a subjectivist, am I meant to ignore that? Furthermore, do you know what? That last piece was read over 10,000 times on this site. I’m lucky enough to have a few twitter followers too.And I can’t even remember one supporter who moaned that I had been out of order. Which probably makes Lerner’s actions all the more creditable. He’s stuck to his guns and backed his man.And how. Villa lie 17th in the Barclays Premier League table and, basically, Houllier has been handed a get-out-of-jail free card. Sorry, a get-out-of-jail for £50m card. Never mind what has passed before. Rows, ostracised players, poor results, etc. Never mind the fact that I understand the chief executive, Paul Faulkner, has been acting in a calm and composed manner in trying to smooth the ruffled feathers of one or two of the disgruntled players. That’s really good, solid, management. Evidence that Faulkner is really growing into his job in a mature manner. And as for former boss Martin O’Neill, I wondered what he was thinking this week when he learnt that Lerner had reached for his chequebook again. I mean, I had a chuckle when he was linked with David Sullivan and David Gold.I wish I had the time and inclination to lay that particular bet. Nil chance of working for that pair for any significant length of time. Not a prayer.Anyway, I digress. Was it really only six months ago that there was a ‘we must make ends meet,’ diktat issued at the Holte pub? You know, it reminds me of that tale - I’m sure it’s apocryphal - but one day a bloke in a spanking new Range Rover goes shopping. It’s really busy in the town centre and he can’t find anywhere to park for love nor money.Eventually, after a 15-minute search, he spies a free car parking space. He shapes up to reverse into it. But before he can do so, an old mini roars in from nowhere and beats him to it. Triumphant, the driver of the old heap sticks his head out of the window and taunts the bloke in the Range Rover. 'That’s what you can do when you can drive,' shouts the driver who then gets out and walks ten yards away from his car to the shops. Suddenly, the man in the Range Rover slams his own car in reverse, smashes into the mini, shunting it out of the space. He winds down his own window and says: 'That’s what you can do when you’re rich.'I think it’s a little bit like that with O’Neill. Houllier is now receiving the backing the Irishman might well have received from Lerner had he played the game a tad cuter. But talk about backing your manager. Phew. I think it’s unprecedented, givenCue applause: Randy Lerner proved he cares about Aston Villa with his expensive outlays this weekthe amount of trouble Villa are in, if you look at the current Barclays Premier League table. I’m not going to be so hypocritical as to say now that Houllier is the best thing since sliced bread because there’s a good chance that results will improve thanks to the acquisition of a £24m forward. But it’s a fact that barring two players - the full-backs - the team that should have carried a victory back to Aston on Sunday was choc-ful of the players left behind by O’Neill.It’s also a fact that Randy Lerner continues to show his deep-rooted affection and care for his club that he has gone to such lengths to ensure survival. Look at that snap-shot at Stamford Bridge when Ciaran Clark’s late equaliser went in and Lerner was jumping around like he was in the middle of the Holte End, even though a bit of decorum is usually called for in the directors’ box. He cares all right.Let’s face it Villa fans, if you want a look at how not to act during the transfer window, you need only look over at St Andrew’s and have a chortle. But that’s another story.Onwards and upwards: Villa, who held champions Chelsea twice this season, now need to push on and revive their season I fully expect a fresh air of optimism to be around Villa Park come 5.30pm on Saturday evening. Villa Park, under lights, is always atmospheric. I’ve used this pay-off line before. But, as Doug Ellis used to say when I moaned he was repeating the same message to the fans over and again: ‘Neil, you need to remind people every three months of the obvious, or else they will take it for granted.’ If Villa Park can’t find it within itself to cheer Houllier - then they can prevent themselves from charges (like me) of hypocrisy by backing someone else, because he really deserves the thanks.So step forward Randy Lerner - the sixty-four carat owner.Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-1348577/The-Midlander-Villa-fans-doubt-64-carat-owner-Lerner--does-care.html#ixzz1BUoVom9R
Also, if you're going to buy somebody who is just for cover, dont pay them £40k-£50k per week.
Quote from: Mazrim on January 19, 2011, 03:11:05 PMAlso, if you're going to buy somebody who is just for cover, dont pay them £40k-£50k per week.Spot on.But we can't lay all the blame at the door of the Villa hating madman.Randy and the board most take equal blame i'm afraid.
Quote from: Rip Van Bentfletch on January 19, 2011, 04:39:10 PMQuote from: Mazrim on January 19, 2011, 03:11:05 PMAlso, if you're going to buy somebody who is just for cover, dont pay them £40k-£50k per week.Spot on.But we can't lay all the blame at the door of the Villa hating madman.Randy and the board most take equal blame i'm afraid.Problem is you are competing with teams who have players on that and more sitting on the bench. I accept that we might not be able to afford it but in that case we have to accept that our ambitions might also have to be trimmed.
It probably goes beyond that as well ... O'Neil kept trotting out the same 11, game after game. And while they were crawling off the pitch in exhaustion around Feb/March, MON refused to use his "cover" guys earning 150k in weekly wages. At least the teams we're competing with will occasionally swap in some of the spare parts to take the load off of the main guys. MON insisted on paying out the yang for guys to sit on the bench, while driving the starting 11 into the ground. So you have one group of guys getting paid top coin to sit and another group getting paid well to be exhausted and inefficient.
Quote from: Shrek on January 19, 2011, 02:38:27 PMI can't believe some people on here.Randy has never moved the goalpost's.He realised Martin was no good for Villa.Martin paid 12 million for Downing on about 50k a week, when we had Albrighton ready.Martin was no good for Villa long term, he never gave young lads a chance just wanted to buy old players on high wages to sit on the bench.Houllier will use the squad and help bring on Academy players, whereas Martin would have driven them all away ie, Gary Cahill!I used the goalposts phrase as he wanted players wages shed before spending in the summer, but now seems happy to spend on the understanding they go soon/later. No a criticism, just an observation.If he was no good for Villa and Randy knew this, why didn't he sack him?And would that be the same Downing that's out top scorer this season?