It does make more sense to me than the 'spiteful MON dropped us in the shit on purpose' arguments.
I do think that where he got it wrong was in the way other clubs have reacted to it. If he'd have left Villa at the end of the season before, he might have had a chance of a better job. Leaving when he did, he just made himself look a chequebook manager prone to petulant strops.
I agree though, I can't see him at a club as big as Villa again. Rightly or wrongly his ship's sailed.
Still think he could end up at Newcastle if they lose patience with Pardew.
For my part, I don't have any difficulty in imaging that Paul Faulkner misjudged something and made O'Neill's position untenable. On that basis, until I learn more about what happened, I'm willing to give O'Neill the benefit of the doubt.
The wage bill was/is the issue. It was getting out of control, and that meant that we had to get someone off the wage bill before we could get someone new on it. In other words, sell before we could buy. So sell-to-buy didn't necessarily mean that we had to generate our transfer budget from player sales. If my understanding is correct, that is.
For someone who goes on so much about how "facts are sacred" you don't half stretch them. I've never said I know why he left. I know he did so at a time that could appear to have been inspired by malice, behaving in a way that caused maximum inconvenience. Why he did so is something I have no idea about. I've left it to others to infer that he did so because his working conditions had been made intolerable. The "facts" you use in evidence are, indeed, compelling. Unfortunately for you, they undermine your case. When you're having to bring up the likes of Osbourne, Davies and Sidwell as evidence of the sort of economies that would make O'Neill's job impossible, you really are on dodgy ground. You missed out Salifou and a handful of reserves as well so I'll add them for you. Now let's look at the other side, namely Darren Bent. I would hardly say that such a purchase is the act of a club whose manager had been told he had to make so many economies he couldn't do his job properly.
Quote from: dave.woodhall on June 26, 2011, 01:39:05 PMFor someone who goes on so much about how "facts are sacred" you don't half stretch them. I've never said I know why he left. I know he did so at a time that could appear to have been inspired by malice, behaving in a way that caused maximum inconvenience. Why he did so is something I have no idea about. I've left it to others to infer that he did so because his working conditions had been made intolerable. The "facts" you use in evidence are, indeed, compelling. Unfortunately for you, they undermine your case. When you're having to bring up the likes of Osbourne, Davies and Sidwell as evidence of the sort of economies that would make O'Neill's job impossible, you really are on dodgy ground. You missed out Salifou and a handful of reserves as well so I'll add them for you. Now let's look at the other side, namely Darren Bent. I would hardly say that such a purchase is the act of a club whose manager had been told he had to make so many economies he couldn't do his job properly. With regard to the Darren Bent purchase, I wonder how much of that was due to the fact that we were well on course for relegation as we simply weren't scoring enough goals? Therefore, the situation was different to last Summer and they HAD to gamble.
MoN was a vainglorious egomaniac who thought he could call the bluff of Randy about the wage bill issue and that failed. And the way he left makes him a goatmilker in the same mould as that ferrous crankshaft Hodge. Nothing would satisfy me more than to shove a pineapple up his duplex flange. If he never got a job again I would find it splendiferous. As far as I'm concerned he is about as much use as a Tugboat in Dry Dock.Oh, and have I mentioned I think he is a c***?
I'm not ruling out the possibility that MON could have a legitimate reason to be unhappy with the board. But I struggle to think that said reason would justify the decision to walk out on us at the worst possible time.