Right. What about before then? Are his decisions in the positions he held prior to 2010 not important?
Quote from: pauliewalnuts on March 26, 2012, 05:24:31 PMQuote from: Stu on March 26, 2012, 05:21:39 PMQuote from: pauliewalnuts on March 26, 2012, 05:19:32 PMQuote from: Stu on March 26, 2012, 05:18:17 PMQuote from: dave.woodhall on March 26, 2012, 05:15:14 PMWhich is what appears to have happened from his appointment as CEO in May 2010.And O'Neill won a tribunal for constructive dismissal against the club. That's not to say I think O'Neill was an innocent party, but I'd love to know what it was all about.Now many times are we going to hear this?He didn't win it.He took a lot of money from us though, right?We settled.That's not the same as him winning.If Villa had to pay him any cash after he walked out, then the arbitration tribunal must have backed his version of events to a degree though, surely?And we still don't know what the settlement was, other than a few ambiguous words about managerial costs in the recent release of the annual finances.
Quote from: Stu on March 26, 2012, 05:21:39 PMQuote from: pauliewalnuts on March 26, 2012, 05:19:32 PMQuote from: Stu on March 26, 2012, 05:18:17 PMQuote from: dave.woodhall on March 26, 2012, 05:15:14 PMWhich is what appears to have happened from his appointment as CEO in May 2010.And O'Neill won a tribunal for constructive dismissal against the club. That's not to say I think O'Neill was an innocent party, but I'd love to know what it was all about.Now many times are we going to hear this?He didn't win it.He took a lot of money from us though, right?We settled.That's not the same as him winning.
Quote from: pauliewalnuts on March 26, 2012, 05:19:32 PMQuote from: Stu on March 26, 2012, 05:18:17 PMQuote from: dave.woodhall on March 26, 2012, 05:15:14 PMWhich is what appears to have happened from his appointment as CEO in May 2010.And O'Neill won a tribunal for constructive dismissal against the club. That's not to say I think O'Neill was an innocent party, but I'd love to know what it was all about.Now many times are we going to hear this?He didn't win it.He took a lot of money from us though, right?
Quote from: Stu on March 26, 2012, 05:18:17 PMQuote from: dave.woodhall on March 26, 2012, 05:15:14 PMWhich is what appears to have happened from his appointment as CEO in May 2010.And O'Neill won a tribunal for constructive dismissal against the club. That's not to say I think O'Neill was an innocent party, but I'd love to know what it was all about.Now many times are we going to hear this?He didn't win it.
Quote from: dave.woodhall on March 26, 2012, 05:15:14 PMWhich is what appears to have happened from his appointment as CEO in May 2010.And O'Neill won a tribunal for constructive dismissal against the club. That's not to say I think O'Neill was an innocent party, but I'd love to know what it was all about.
Which is what appears to have happened from his appointment as CEO in May 2010.
On the subject of O'Neill, it's now generally reckoned that Randy's biggest error was letting him spend too much money. Given it's almost certain that having no more or severely restricted funds for new players was the root cause of him walking out, let's imagine this scenario:January 2009, Villa are pushing hard for a top four place and O'Neill wants Heskey. If Randy had refused, what would have happened?
MON walks out, says he's entitled to x.MON walks out, club say he's entitled to y.It goes to tribunal, both agree on a point somewhere between x and y.That's entirely not the same thing as MON winning.Don't get me wrong, I think Faulkner is a total disaster and way, way out of his depth in the job, but I don't really see the need to start rewriting history as far as O'Neill was concerned in order to have more shit to chuck at Faulkner, and concluding that he "won" his tribunal and it was a case of constructive dismissal is both ignoring the facts, and putting a spin on it to suit your argument.You could just as easily turn it around and say "well, MON clearly had fucked the club around enough for the tribunal to decide the club's case had some merit".
Quote from: glasses on March 26, 2012, 05:23:33 PMRight. What about before then? Are his decisions in the positions he held prior to 2010 not important?As I don't know what decisions he had ultimate responsibility for before 2010, or since then for that matter, how can I know if they were important or not?
The fact that it appears to only be O'Neill talking about 'very satisfactory' outcomes to the tribunal while the board said nothing doesn't help when trying to scotch the perception that O'Neill 'won'.
Quote from: dave.woodhall on March 26, 2012, 05:29:51 PMQuote from: glasses on March 26, 2012, 05:23:33 PMRight. What about before then? Are his decisions in the positions he held prior to 2010 not important?As I don't know what decisions he had ultimate responsibility for before 2010, or since then for that matter, how can I know if they were important or not?Fair enough. If what I was told was true, which I have no reason to believe it isn't, he was in a position from at least August 2008 to have significant responsibility within the club where the finances are concerned, and still has. Therefore based on information I have been given, I rest a huge amount of blame on Faulkner being shit, and only in the job because of his close friendship with Lerner.As for your hypothetical scenario regarding Heskey, I wish they had refused to sanction the deal, but another purely hypothetical argument could be that it wouldn't have made a blind bit of difference, and O'Neill wouldn't have walked then, like you seem to insinuate he would have.
Well, if you think he is doing a good job, fair enough.I don't.