What a choice. The chair or lethal injection?
The failure to sign Keane had nothing to do with Ellis, It was Gregory who didn't think he was good enough for the fee required.I also think Gregory's thinking might have been influenced by Siralex's comments saying that he would only 'pay about £500,000 for a player like that.'
Ellis - Lethal injectionBlandy - The chairAt least the injection is quick and painless.
Quote from: Montbert on January 13, 2013, 12:54:17 PMWhat a choice. The chair or lethal injection?Great stuff.
Gregory said on watching Keane again that another reason he decided against him when wolves fans were coming up saying ' you've got to sign him '- which he found very strange.
Quote from: Rip Van doin' the Lambert walk on January 13, 2013, 12:56:10 PMEllis - Lethal injectionBlandy - The chairAt least the injection is quick and painless. whereas Lerner is someone with a blunt axe trying to hit a tree and constantly getting you instead.
Quote from: dave.woodhall on January 13, 2013, 11:39:59 AMQuote from: Rissbert on January 13, 2013, 11:31:16 AMQuote from: Ross on January 13, 2013, 11:20:18 AMI'm not buying the revisionist 'Uncle Doug' crap. He was dreadful and Lerner is not doing any better. One thing I will say is at least Doug's mega ego meant he was always around, rather than our current peculiar reclusive absent owner. From the early 90s to about 96/7, I was as proud to be a Villa fan as I've ever been. Consistently good managers, great players, excellent football, nearly always around the top of the table and two trophies. The current set up is a disgrace, and Lerner a c*** of the first water.Nice comparison, neatly using the best of Ellis's time, the worst of Randy's and ignoring a couple of relegation battles. Selective indeed.Lets not forget also all the money The old c**t put into the club...
Quote from: Rissbert on January 13, 2013, 11:31:16 AMQuote from: Ross on January 13, 2013, 11:20:18 AMI'm not buying the revisionist 'Uncle Doug' crap. He was dreadful and Lerner is not doing any better. One thing I will say is at least Doug's mega ego meant he was always around, rather than our current peculiar reclusive absent owner. From the early 90s to about 96/7, I was as proud to be a Villa fan as I've ever been. Consistently good managers, great players, excellent football, nearly always around the top of the table and two trophies. The current set up is a disgrace, and Lerner a c*** of the first water.Nice comparison, neatly using the best of Ellis's time, the worst of Randy's and ignoring a couple of relegation battles.
Quote from: Ross on January 13, 2013, 11:20:18 AMI'm not buying the revisionist 'Uncle Doug' crap. He was dreadful and Lerner is not doing any better. One thing I will say is at least Doug's mega ego meant he was always around, rather than our current peculiar reclusive absent owner. From the early 90s to about 96/7, I was as proud to be a Villa fan as I've ever been. Consistently good managers, great players, excellent football, nearly always around the top of the table and two trophies. The current set up is a disgrace, and Lerner a c*** of the first water.
I'm not buying the revisionist 'Uncle Doug' crap. He was dreadful and Lerner is not doing any better. One thing I will say is at least Doug's mega ego meant he was always around, rather than our current peculiar reclusive absent owner.
Do you want a man in charge who invented the bicycle kick or the cloaking device ?
Quote from: Andy_Lochhead_in_the_air on January 13, 2013, 01:02:18 PMDo you want a man in charge who invented the bicycle kick or the cloaking device ?Damn , you made me spill my lager !
God knows the charge sheet against Doug was long enough, but as I - and others - have said before, at least he knew football world inside out and, more to the point, everyone knew who he was. He knew whose hand to shake and everyone would take his call. Plus, as a master of bull-shit himself, he could spot it a mile off. I can't imagine Doug being impressed by a letter from Sir Alex, when all the necessary evidence to the contrary was sitting a few of miles away. Doug made mistakes. Some very big ones. His treatment of Tony Barton was disgraceful and the razing to the ground of the Trinity Road stand was sacrilege. However, he also took the club from the brink of oblivion to a mainstay of the top division, with a few Wembley appearances along the way. For the most part, the journey under Doug - certainly up until about 2000 - had more ups than downs. And more to the point, the downs were very quickly followed by an up.Lerner, on the other hand, seems clueless to the workings of English football, is an absentee landlord who has appointed a management team who seem incapable of even the fundamentals, and has set the club on a trajectory that I increasingly fear means one relegation is the least of our worries.