My 14 year old lad summed Villa up. 'We are the new Stoke'.
Quote from: TheZogman on November 22, 2011, 04:42:50 PMThe thing is, as soon as the owners knew the extent of Houllier's desire to rebuild and how much it would cost them he was never going to be able to stay.Moving on, one of the great disappointments of this season has been the lack of chances given to our young players, something the club keep on telling us is an important part of their vision. Well aside from Bannan pre-drink driving incident and Herd none of them have been given a shot. Albrighton and Clark have fallen well down the pecking order, Weimann and Delfouneso have barely got a game, Hogg sold off cheaply, Baker loaned out and we're yet to see the supposedly super-talented Gardner play for the first team. It would not be as hurtful if the players getting a game were good but they are not.excellent point well made - especially the last line - what can we really lose by playing them and letting them express themselvesI would never thought i would say this but i would even accept relegation if it meant a team ofBannanAlbrightonFonzClarkHerdWeinmannBakerGardenerJohnsonGrealishLichajwere given a decent chance - actually the more i think about it i would really love to see that team evn if it was in the chanpionship and allowed to gel
The thing is, as soon as the owners knew the extent of Houllier's desire to rebuild and how much it would cost them he was never going to be able to stay.Moving on, one of the great disappointments of this season has been the lack of chances given to our young players, something the club keep on telling us is an important part of their vision. Well aside from Bannan pre-drink driving incident and Herd none of them have been given a shot. Albrighton and Clark have fallen well down the pecking order, Weimann and Delfouneso have barely got a game, Hogg sold off cheaply, Baker loaned out and we're yet to see the supposedly super-talented Gardner play for the first team. It would not be as hurtful if the players getting a game were good but they are not.
Quote from: steffo on November 22, 2011, 03:03:20 PMMy 14 year old lad summed Villa up. 'We are the new Stoke'. Your son is an optimist - we're not that good.
Quote from: steffo on November 22, 2011, 03:03:20 PMMy 14 year old lad summed Villa up. 'We are the new Stoke'. Quote from: EffDee on November 22, 2011, 04:24:19 PMQuote from: steffo on November 22, 2011, 03:03:20 PMMy 14 year old lad summed Villa up. 'We are the new Stoke'. Your son is an optimist - we're not that good.I watched us last night and simply thought: "Birmingham City".
Quote from: Hookeysmith on November 22, 2011, 04:49:14 PMQuote from: TheZogman on November 22, 2011, 04:42:50 PMThe thing is, as soon as the owners knew the extent of Houllier's desire to rebuild and how much it would cost them he was never going to be able to stay.Moving on, one of the great disappointments of this season has been the lack of chances given to our young players, something the club keep on telling us is an important part of their vision. Well aside from Bannan pre-drink driving incident and Herd none of them have been given a shot. Albrighton and Clark have fallen well down the pecking order, Weimann and Delfouneso have barely got a game, Hogg sold off cheaply, Baker loaned out and we're yet to see the supposedly super-talented Gardner play for the first team. It would not be as hurtful if the players getting a game were good but they are not.excellent point well made - especially the last line - what can we really lose by playing them and letting them express themselvesI would never thought i would say this but i would even accept relegation if it meant a team ofBannanAlbrightonFonzClarkHerdWeinmannBakerGardenerJohnsonGrealishLichajwere given a decent chance - actually the more i think about it i would really love to see that team evn if it was in the chanpionship and allowed to gelPlay that team and you'd get your wish because we would be relegated. Our kids aren't as good as the hype continues to tell us.
Didn't Faulkner mention something about trying to implement an Ajax style approach last year? Hence Houllier and more of an emphasis on technical ability, training and intergrating the successful youth sides.
Houllier goes -and he had to go- and we opt for McLeish. Where is the continuity, the strategy? RL talks about being impressed with Big Ecks passion for the game, how engaging he is and how he buys into the importance of making the most of our youth team. I can well believe McLeish is engaging. I can well believe McLeish also told him what he wanted to hear. But a quick glance at the clubs he's managed previously doesn't mark him out as a boss who likes to give youth (or flair) it's chance.