I haven't read the whole thread so apologies if the point has been made already. In my view, the mistake was Houllier. That was the beginning of the rot. If we had got that appointment right we could be playing regular Champions League football now. If we had got in a hungry manager with good contacts on the continent we could have got more from our existing players and found a few talents on the continent. MON had reached the end of the road and the club had reached a crossroads but crucially we had the prestige to get in a top manager to take us to the next level and more prizemoney etc. Instead of setting the 'PL experience and no job' criteria we should have drawn up a list of managers and chased them. We ended up appointing somebody who never seemed to be that hungry for the job ad thought anything from 7th down was about our place in English football. That season was real struggle despite the 9th place finish. Up until April it looked very dangerous for us. It was the appointment of Houllier that sowed the seeds of doubt as to the footballing nous of the club. It was just such a bad fit and evey other week there was a new PR disaster as the club lost its way somewhat. Houllier was never a long-term appointment, it was just ridiculous.Once he went and we very publicly got rejected by Martinez it was clear that we no longer had the prestige that we had the previous year. It was also clear that there would be no more big spending (Houllier got £30m to spend) so we were never going to get a Grade A manager. Our confidence in the board and the future of the club were rocked completely by the appointment of TSM. As my friend sais last night, maybe McLeish did a good job keeping 'you lot up'? Maybe he did. But our plight is the fault of terrible miss-management at the top. If we stay up (i still think we will) it will be a long hard road back to mid-table security and from there to anything above eight. Thank you Randy.
Quote from: Irish villain on November 18, 2012, 12:33:06 PMI haven't read the whole thread so apologies if the point has been made already. In my view, the mistake was Houllier. That was the beginning of the rot. If we had got that appointment right we could be playing regular Champions League football now. If we had got in a hungry manager with good contacts on the continent we could have got more from our existing players and found a few talents on the continent. MON had reached the end of the road and the club had reached a crossroads but crucially we had the prestige to get in a top manager to take us to the next level and more prizemoney etc. Instead of setting the 'PL experience and no job' criteria we should have drawn up a list of managers and chased them. We ended up appointing somebody who never seemed to be that hungry for the job ad thought anything from 7th down was about our place in English football. That season was real struggle despite the 9th place finish. Up until April it looked very dangerous for us. It was the appointment of Houllier that sowed the seeds of doubt as to the footballing nous of the club. It was just such a bad fit and evey other week there was a new PR disaster as the club lost its way somewhat. Houllier was never a long-term appointment, it was just ridiculous.Once he went and we very publicly got rejected by Martinez it was clear that we no longer had the prestige that we had the previous year. It was also clear that there would be no more big spending (Houllier got £30m to spend) so we were never going to get a Grade A manager. Our confidence in the board and the future of the club were rocked completely by the appointment of TSM. As my friend sais last night, maybe McLeish did a good job keeping 'you lot up'? Maybe he did. But our plight is the fault of terrible miss-management at the top. If we stay up (i still think we will) it will be a long hard road back to mid-table security and from there to anything above eight. Thank you Randy. Great post.
Quote from: 5ft811st2 Durham on November 18, 2012, 04:09:11 PMQuote from: Irish villain on November 18, 2012, 12:33:06 PMI haven't read the whole thread so apologies if the point has been made already. In my view, the mistake was Houllier. That was the beginning of the rot. If we had got that appointment right we could be playing regular Champions League football now. If we had got in a hungry manager with good contacts on the continent we could have got more from our existing players and found a few talents on the continent. MON had reached the end of the road and the club had reached a crossroads but crucially we had the prestige to get in a top manager to take us to the next level and more prizemoney etc. Instead of setting the 'PL experience and no job' criteria we should have drawn up a list of managers and chased them. We ended up appointing somebody who never seemed to be that hungry for the job ad thought anything from 7th down was about our place in English football. That season was real struggle despite the 9th place finish. Up until April it looked very dangerous for us. It was the appointment of Houllier that sowed the seeds of doubt as to the footballing nous of the club. It was just such a bad fit and evey other week there was a new PR disaster as the club lost its way somewhat. Houllier was never a long-term appointment, it was just ridiculous.Once he went and we very publicly got rejected by Martinez it was clear that we no longer had the prestige that we had the previous year. It was also clear that there would be no more big spending (Houllier got £30m to spend) so we were never going to get a Grade A manager. Our confidence in the board and the future of the club were rocked completely by the appointment of TSM. As my friend sais last night, maybe McLeish did a good job keeping 'you lot up'? Maybe he did. But our plight is the fault of terrible miss-management at the top. If we stay up (i still think we will) it will be a long hard road back to mid-table security and from there to anything above eight. Thank you Randy. Great post.I don't really agree with this at all. The latter half of 2010/11 our form was top six. It was the summer of 2011 that was crucial: the combination of appointing McLeish and selling Downing. Losing Young to Man Utd was expected. Selling Downing was a big mistake even if we got a lot of money for him: he was player of the season, and selling our two of our best players instead of just one sent a terrible signal.
It's worth a moment's pause to look at how the Tesco bags have conducted affairs over the last three seasons. After Di Mattteo - a bold appointment at the time, and one that worked reasonably well in hindsight (in laying down a playing style and core of footballing players) - they managed to get Hodgson on the bounce from Liverpool and then Clark from Liverpool.Although not blessed with tons of cash to spend, they have managed to secure good managers who have had a degree of continuity in terms of play-style. They've picked up some clever purchases and blended them into a decent footballing side. They may suffer if a rash of injuries afflicts them, but you can't argue with their progress.You have to ask: why has RL not managed to do this over the last three seasons at VP? I think our recent history is pretty galling, actually, as I've pondered it over the weekend.
When The Gnasher appears with the 'meh' and the 'face/palm' and the 'larf'; that'll be the time to worry. Until then have faith. We're not actually that bad.