One sentence in defence of MON: it wasn't all bad. His record was decent; I wish it was better. Many of his signings were good; but too many were overpaid donkeys. And his football isn't as Joe Kinnear-ish as sometimes portrayed.I was fooled. I thought that he was a very good manager. Towards the end it was obvious that he had run out of ideas, and that he was overrated. He was merely a decent manager, good at his thing, and stuck to his ideas. But he had clear limitations, and some of his ideas were very out-dated.But what really stains his reputation, is his behaviour before, during and after his resignation. Its lack of decency, elegance and grace showed that he after five years at the club still only thought about himself, and never cared for us. For a Villa fan that's hard to take.
Quote from: Eigentor on November 04, 2011, 09:22:42 PMOne sentence in defence of MON: it wasn't all bad. His record was decent; I wish it was better. Many of his signings were good; but too many were overpaid donkeys. And his football isn't as Joe Kinnear-ish as sometimes portrayed.I was fooled. I thought that he was a very good manager. Towards the end it was obvious that he had run out of ideas, and that he was overrated. He was merely a decent manager, good at his thing, and stuck to his ideas. But he had clear limitations, and some of his ideas were very out-dated.But what really stains his reputation, is his behaviour before, during and after his resignation. Its lack of decency, elegance and grace showed that he after five years at the club still only thought about himself, and never cared for us. For a Villa fan that's hard to take.An excellent, reasoned summation.
It's a subject that will remain divisive for many years to come. Those who still think the sun shines out of Magic Martin's arse aren't going to be swayed at this juncture. Likewise, those who were critical of the bloke. Or outright disliked him.Eigentor sums up most of my feelings on the subject, but the biggest emotion I still feel about the whole thing is regret. Regret that he didn't at least stick around for another 12 months (whichever way you want to cut it, the manner of his departure was very unsatisfactory). But mostly regret that the old coot couldn't change.Make no mistake, to have the success he has had at various levels of the game, he must have something about him. And based on that success, perhaps that's why he didn't think he needed to change. "I've done it my way so far, screw what anyone else says." But on the weekend when Siralex hits his 25th anniversary at Old Toilet, there can be no greater illustration in the game that even the very best aren't too big or to successful to adapt.Fergiescum was the typical meat and potatoes 4-4-2 merchant for many years, jobs for his mates on the coaching staff and all the rest of it. Up to and including his first few trophies with the Red Mancs.But to his credit (as much as it pains me to say that) it was never enough for him, just to do things as they had always been done. He took on promising young coach who he wasn't particularly friendly with in McLaren, a guy who despite his (thoroughly deserved) comedy reputation in later years was actually ahead of the game at that stage, utilising prozone and the likes. After that he took on Queiroz -and exposed his players to a more European approach to training and tactics. As well as tapping into a burgeoning foreign market for young players.If MON had been just a wee bit receptive to some of that kind of fresh input -allied with his more traditional motivational qualities- we could have been talking about a potentially great Villa manager.
I'd like to thank mon for the many wins we got in march every year, the glorious flowing football we played and for the many trophies. Oh and that fantastic night out in moscow
MON may have thought that our inevitable downward curve after his departure would have helped his stock rise. In fact, it's done the opposite as everyone knows his role in that downturn is as great, if not greater, than anyone else's.