I'm afraid they are!!!The most worrying part of yesterday was the heads down, drooping shoulders look from most of our players at the start of the 2nd half as if the game was already lost!!!!We had 1 shot on target and that was Bents penalty but that shouldn't be a major surprise because so far this season we have barely managed more than 3 or 4 in any game, including the 2 we have won.There seems to be a total lack of passion from players and the majority of our fans too and the sending off for me just papered over the cracks and detracted from what was a totally dismal performance. We had 10 men against the self titled West Bromwich Barcelona, not the real Barca !!!!! You see teams with 10 men get results every week, but the fact that we couldn't do the basics and seemed resigned to defeat with the scores level and half the game left was embarrasing.I've heard some fans questioning Lerner and even laying the blame at his door, but with the players we have we should be capable of better performances than what we have had so far this season. The buck as always stops with the manager and I suppose as Lerner gave him the job he has to take a certain responsibility.The current squad with a half decent manager would finish mid table comfortably, but yesterday had bottom six or even worse stamped all over it!!!
Quote from: toronto villa on October 23, 2011, 02:04:00 PMI'm trying to get my head around why Newcastle have pulled out of their funk faster than us, and a part of is their support. It helps massively to be united in a cause. Between the two Birmingham clubs there is an air of resignation, and that's kind of how it feels watching us right now.They got relegated first, TV. Blimey.
I'm trying to get my head around why Newcastle have pulled out of their funk faster than us, and a part of is their support. It helps massively to be united in a cause. Between the two Birmingham clubs there is an air of resignation, and that's kind of how it feels watching us right now.
Quote from: Stu on October 23, 2011, 03:45:52 PMQuote from: toronto villa on October 23, 2011, 02:04:00 PMI'm trying to get my head around why Newcastle have pulled out of their funk faster than us, and a part of is their support. It helps massively to be united in a cause. Between the two Birmingham clubs there is an air of resignation, and that's kind of how it feels watching us right now.They got relegated first, TV. Blimey.It's also nonsense to say it is their support.Their support have spent most of the last three or four years at war with their board, most recently when they dumped the very popular Hughton and replaced him with the widely disliked Pardew, who got the job largely because he's a casino-going mate of Mike Ashley. In fact, if you were looking for a club with a bigger "disconnect" between fans and board, you'd struggle to find a better example than Newcastle.If it is in some part the fault of the fans that things are so downhearted at Villa Park of late, I really don't know what we're supposed to do about it.I turned up yesterday, as did the other season ticket holders who sit around us, and we were served up the same dollop of shit we've been served up consistently this season. One shot on target all match, and that was the penalty. Against Albion. If you want a reason for the current malaise, that's got a lot to do with it. Meanwhile the owners are the other side of the Atlantic - again - running the club by email.It all starts at the top, and if the people running the club can't show any passion about it, then God help us. In the meantime, the suggestion that it's somehow in part our fault - those of us still buying the tickets at the very least - I find reasonably offensive, I have to say.I didn't sell Ashley Young and Stewart Downing and not replace them, and I didn't appoint a manager guaranteed to alienate fans from club and deflate any remaining optimism, and nor did I spend the last summer waxing lyrical about Deloitte football finance league tables in one breath and how skint we are in the other, and nor did any of the other 34,000 who bothered to roll up yesterday.The whole situation so far this season, the way things have panned out, was utterly predictable since this summer. It was also largely avoidable. Bravo, Randy.
We've got a crap owner, who's run out of cash and isn't interested any more, and we've got a crap manager who plays rubbish football. There's very little to be positive about when it comes to Villa at the moment, which is partly why our crowds are so low.
Quote from: pauliewalnuts on October 23, 2011, 08:00:32 PMQuote from: Stu on October 23, 2011, 03:45:52 PMQuote from: toronto villa on October 23, 2011, 02:04:00 PMI'm trying to get my head around why Newcastle have pulled out of their funk faster than us, and a part of is their support. It helps massively to be united in a cause. Between the two Birmingham clubs there is an air of resignation, and that's kind of how it feels watching us right now.They got relegated first, TV. Blimey.It's also nonsense to say it is their support.Their support have spent most of the last three or four years at war with their board, most recently when they dumped the very popular Hughton and replaced him with the widely disliked Pardew, who got the job largely because he's a casino-going mate of Mike Ashley. In fact, if you were looking for a club with a bigger "disconnect" between fans and board, you'd struggle to find a better example than Newcastle.If it is in some part the fault of the fans that things are so downhearted at Villa Park of late, I really don't know what we're supposed to do about it.I turned up yesterday, as did the other season ticket holders who sit around us, and we were served up the same dollop of shit we've been served up consistently this season. One shot on target all match, and that was the penalty. Against Albion. If you want a reason for the current malaise, that's got a lot to do with it. Meanwhile the owners are the other side of the Atlantic - again - running the club by email.It all starts at the top, and if the people running the club can't show any passion about it, then God help us. In the meantime, the suggestion that it's somehow in part our fault - those of us still buying the tickets at the very least - I find reasonably offensive, I have to say.I didn't sell Ashley Young and Stewart Downing and not replace them, and I didn't appoint a manager guaranteed to alienate fans from club and deflate any remaining optimism, and nor did I spend the last summer waxing lyrical about Deloitte football finance league tables in one breath and how skint we are in the other, and nor did any of the other 34,000 who bothered to roll up yesterday.The whole situation so far this season, the way things have panned out, was utterly predictable since this summer. It was also largely avoidable. Bravo, Randy.I've said it before, but I might as well retire from H&V as Paulie always puts my views over far better than I ever could.
I still stand by my opinion that it all stems down to him leaving us in the lurch in the way he did.