Ideally there should be a 60 seconds of booing 6 minutes in to signify his inability to get us anywhere near the top 4 or the 83rd minute to commemorate how much (nett) money he pissed up the wall (I'd include what he wasted on wages as well but i can't see the game having 30 minutes of stoppage time.)
I'm pointing out to you there are 2 sides to the story as opposed to the dead head attitude that MON is wrong in all things, read my post and you'll see that's precisely what I'm saying, so please correct me if I'm wrong the hearing that occurred after the game who did they find in favour of.As for him getting on with the job you've either lived a very sheltered life are your talking rubbish, many many many times in all kind of situations and circumstances surrounding all manner of things sometimes sometimes you are left with no alternative to go a certain way, if you look back at the previous 6 months of MON's tenure Randy Lerner made it publicly clear he was no longer prepared to support MON and he didn't walk out then, it took him another 6 months.There is way more to this than meets the eye that either you or I are privvy to.The 2 sides to this story are that they are both as bad as each other, that said looking at the track record of the club since MON's departure I know where my sympathies lies with.Under MON we had Europe, we had good league standings, we had winning ways, we had Cup finals and we where a great opposition to anybody out there. Look at us now.
Quote from: mal on April 11, 2012, 10:38:00 AMQuote from: richard moore on April 11, 2012, 09:23:57 AMAs good an example of a cheque book manager as you will ever see - and even then we could only just about hit sixth in a very mediocre leaguePlease explain reversal of form at Sunderland? A little reading on this site should tell you that MON+chequebook = disaster around the corner. If anything he's the very definition of a non-chequebook manager and would surely suit a partnership with the right director of football...MON is one of the best managers in the game, that's very widely excepted, look at the pattern of events that have befallen the club since his departure and it becomes very obvious that the situation that led to MON going wasn't just down to him, and to believe that a club like Villa are still counting the cost from the MON era, years or seasons after him going is tosh, Villa are suffering from ineptitude, was then and still are now, even more so, that's what we are suffering from, and I have to say this, these so called horrendous figures that where chalked up by MON, I would love to see the actual figures of his expenditure of the wage deals he created and how that balances out with the fact that a lot of the players have since been moved on and at a profit, Like Young, like Downing like Milner, massive influx of money from these, what was it he paid for those 3 players, Young 10ML, Milner 12ML and Downing 12ML was it and how much did they go for, and as for Heskey, there have been 2 managers since MON and neither have opted for getting rid, why not.Just a further point that had nothing to do with MON who are the current highest earners in the club at this time, correct me if I'm wrong but pretty sure it starts with Ireland and Bent.
Quote from: richard moore on April 11, 2012, 09:23:57 AMAs good an example of a cheque book manager as you will ever see - and even then we could only just about hit sixth in a very mediocre leaguePlease explain reversal of form at Sunderland? A little reading on this site should tell you that MON+chequebook = disaster around the corner. If anything he's the very definition of a non-chequebook manager and would surely suit a partnership with the right director of football...
As good an example of a cheque book manager as you will ever see - and even then we could only just about hit sixth in a very mediocre league
Under MON we had Europe, we had good league standings, we had winning ways, we had Cup finals and we where a great opposition to anybody out there. Look at us now.
Quote from: Villanation on April 11, 2012, 11:05:05 AMUnder MON we had Europe, we had good league standings, we had winning ways, we had Cup finals and we where a great opposition to anybody out there. Look at us now.I know it's a quibbling point, but we didn't have "cup finals" at all.
All he has over the likes of Bruce, Dowie and even McLeish is a clearly magnetic personality, which can carry you only so far, and certainly not into the top 4.
Quote from: pauliewalnuts on April 11, 2012, 11:36:12 AMQuote from: Villanation on April 11, 2012, 11:05:05 AMUnder MON we had Europe, we had good league standings, we had winning ways, we had Cup finals and we where a great opposition to anybody out there. Look at us now.I know it's a quibbling point, but we didn't have "cup finals" at all.And we didn't have much Europe, the only year we got through to the next round was the infamous Moscow debacle.For those of us who believed in him and believed in his hype it was a tough thing to come to terms with, but my God is Martin O'Neill a limited manager. He appears bright, engaging, thoughtful, persuasive - all the qualities which make so many former players talk about running through brick walls for him - but underneath it all he has a very limited and, frankly, antiquated footballing outlook. He is a fantastic motivator, but especially of the players he tends to buy: limited, jobbing, hard-working, unspectacular. There are exceptions - Ash and, to some degree, Downing - but his football template has always been the same no matter what division. All he has over the likes of Bruce, Dowie and even McLeish is a clearly magnetic personality, which can carry you only so far, and certainly not into the top 4.
Quote from: Monty on April 11, 2012, 11:44:45 AM All he has over the likes of Bruce, Dowie and even McLeish is a clearly magnetic personality, which can carry you only so far, and certainly not into the top 4.It's carried him for about 15 years.
Quote from: dave.woodhall on April 11, 2012, 11:47:07 AMQuote from: Monty on April 11, 2012, 11:44:45 AM All he has over the likes of Bruce, Dowie and even McLeish is a clearly magnetic personality, which can carry you only so far, and certainly not into the top 4.It's carried him for about 15 years. It can carry you so long, but only so far. Football, in particular English football, is littered with limited managers whose longevity in the game is contrasted with their ability, but who keep getting jobs.