Quote from: pauliewalnuts on April 15, 2012, 11:16:33 PMThe horrible, horrible thing is ..... and it makes me feel a bit queasy to admit this ... but it looks increasingly like the man most responsible for a lot of things going well in the 06-10 period was O'Neill.When he left and they were "on their own", it all started going pear shaped.Don't get me wrong, the pube headed one was a vindictive shit and his half arsed transfer policy is a big contributing factor to where we are, but it's really hard not to look at events since and think that once the new kids were handed the ship and told "it's all yours", it headed straight for the rocks.I think a lot of it was to do with when you're on a roll, all pulling together, things generate themselves. He left, the momentum stopped rolling...
The horrible, horrible thing is ..... and it makes me feel a bit queasy to admit this ... but it looks increasingly like the man most responsible for a lot of things going well in the 06-10 period was O'Neill.When he left and they were "on their own", it all started going pear shaped.Don't get me wrong, the pube headed one was a vindictive shit and his half arsed transfer policy is a big contributing factor to where we are, but it's really hard not to look at events since and think that once the new kids were handed the ship and told "it's all yours", it headed straight for the rocks.
Quote from: hawkeye on April 15, 2012, 11:30:37 PMThis get a good football man in is hokum, you need a good CEO, someone who can appoint the right people Head Scout, 1st Team Manager and so on, most football people know nothing about running organisations.THis all goes back to O'Neill. When you take over a business in a field you know nothing about, you need to employ people who know what they're doing. Lerner inherited O'Neill on Ellis's recommendation, and at first having an old fashioned manager who looked like he'd run most aspects of the football side must have been a weight off Lerner's shoulders. It became increasingly obvious though, that without anybody at all putting the brakes on O'Neill's ego, that Lerner was effectively just signing away the future of the club and the value of his investment with every blank cheque.
This get a good football man in is hokum, you need a good CEO, someone who can appoint the right people Head Scout, 1st Team Manager and so on, most football people know nothing about running organisations.
I find it odd that people think there won't be anyone to buy the club. We're a Premier League club (for now), with a big stadium and a big fanbase. There's huge potential here, as there was at Man City and we'd be a decent proposition to anyone with deep pockets.
Quote from: dave.woodhall on April 15, 2012, 11:20:51 PMQuote from: PeterWithesShin on April 15, 2012, 11:19:14 PMI think the board and Randy need help, someone with a bit more football knowledge to offer advice. They do, but of the usually quoted suspects, Sir Graham's at Watford, BFR's retired and Ian Taylor is a great bloke but whether that transfers into business ability remains to be seen. I think it is also too easy to point at someone who clearly loves the club and assume they'd be the man. Ian Taylor is a Villa fan who played for the club, and does a bit of meet and greet. Like you said, how does that transfer to the skillset he'd need?Also, there's always the question f whether people mentioned would even want to do the job. Martin Laursen is a good example of that. Perhaps he likes doing a bit of media work and seeing his family?It is too easy to go for the sentimental option, although I understand the thinking, when what we need are cold hard business decisions.I'd rather have a tough, cold bastard who had no prior attachment to the club, but who'd do a fucking good job.
Quote from: PeterWithesShin on April 15, 2012, 11:19:14 PMI think the board and Randy need help, someone with a bit more football knowledge to offer advice. They do, but of the usually quoted suspects, Sir Graham's at Watford, BFR's retired and Ian Taylor is a great bloke but whether that transfers into business ability remains to be seen.
I think the board and Randy need help, someone with a bit more football knowledge to offer advice.
Quote from: hawkeye on April 15, 2012, 11:32:13 PMQuote from: dave.woodhall on April 15, 2012, 11:29:22 PMThat's always been our problem. We've had too may Villa people working for us. Now we have too many Randy people. Was it you who said Houllier gave the impression of being a consultant, here to fix a problem with no company loyalty or feeling for any other department?No that was meThere was probably a lot of truth in it. His biggest problem was trying to do things too quickly.
Quote from: dave.woodhall on April 15, 2012, 11:29:22 PMThat's always been our problem. We've had too may Villa people working for us. Now we have too many Randy people. Was it you who said Houllier gave the impression of being a consultant, here to fix a problem with no company loyalty or feeling for any other department?No that was me
That's always been our problem. We've had too may Villa people working for us. Now we have too many Randy people. Was it you who said Houllier gave the impression of being a consultant, here to fix a problem with no company loyalty or feeling for any other department?
THis all goes back to O'Neill. When you take over a business in a field you know nothing about, you need to employ people who know what they're doing. Lerner inherited O'Neill on Ellis's recommendation, and at first having an old fashioned manager who looked like he'd run most aspects of the football side must have been a weight off Lerner's shoulders. It became increasingly obvious though, that without anybody at all putting the brakes on O'Neill's ego, that Lerner was effectively just signing away the future of the club and the value of his investment with every blank cheque.
Quote from: dave.woodhall on April 15, 2012, 11:18:22 PMQuote from: pauliewalnuts on April 15, 2012, 11:16:33 PMThe horrible, horrible thing is ..... and it makes me feel a bit queasy to admit this ... but it looks increasingly like the man most responsible for a lot of things going well in the 06-10 period was O'Neill.When he left and they were "on their own", it all started going pear shaped.Don't get me wrong, the pube headed one was a vindictive shit and his half arsed transfer policy is a big contributing factor to where we are, but it's really hard not to look at events since and think that once the new kids were handed the ship and told "it's all yours", it headed straight for the rocks.I think a lot of it was to do with when you're on a roll, all pulling together, things generate themselves. He left, the momentum stopped rolling...So who created the momentum. Doesn't that point to Paulie being correct.
It is interesting that with MON, Richard FitzGerald and Michael Cunnah (and, in fact, wasn't there another one for a short spell) didn't last long as CEO with MON, which raises the inevitable conclusion that Randy allowed them to walk at the behest of the manager (interesting too to see how Quinn went so quickly after MON's arrival at Sunderland).
Quote from: hawkeye on April 15, 2012, 11:37:23 PMAnd I agree with you here, the best organisations have a disconnect between the Executive and the Shareholders, The Chairman represents the Shareholders the CEO represents the business and is accountable to The Chairman. As soon as these lines get blurred you have problems.
Quote from: pauliewalnuts on April 15, 2012, 11:51:39 PMIt is interesting that with MON, Richard FitzGerald and Michael Cunnah (and, in fact, wasn't there another one for a short spell) didn't last long as CEO with MON, which raises the inevitable conclusion that Randy allowed them to walk at the behest of the manager (interesting too to see how Quinn went so quickly after MON's arrival at Sunderland).Just those two. Cunnah was a strange one - he arrived seemingly with some sort of remit to re-build the ground, him coming led to FitzG leaving, but he was never formally CEO and left soon after.
Quote from: dave.woodhall on April 15, 2012, 11:54:17 PMQuote from: pauliewalnuts on April 15, 2012, 11:51:39 PMIt is interesting that with MON, Richard FitzGerald and Michael Cunnah (and, in fact, wasn't there another one for a short spell) didn't last long as CEO with MON, which raises the inevitable conclusion that Randy allowed them to walk at the behest of the manager (interesting too to see how Quinn went so quickly after MON's arrival at Sunderland).Just those two. Cunnah was a strange one - he arrived seemingly with some sort of remit to re-build the ground, him coming led to FitzG leaving, but he was never formally CEO and left soon after. FitzGerald left as he couldn't work with MON - that's something I've heard from as close to the horse's mouth as you can get.