Our improvement at the end of last season...
Quote from: dave.woodhall on October 22, 2013, 10:08:41 AMQuote from: saunders_heroes on October 22, 2013, 10:01:29 AMQuote from: jeowje on October 22, 2013, 09:58:55 AMIn the eras of Brian Little and Ron Atkinson there was a more level playing field. It was much more feasible to go out and buy players capable of performing at the top end of the table.Big Ron bought players with PL experience in his tenure. No wonder we hit the ground running. No he didn't. Name me one player with any Premier League experience that he bought.Staunton, Parker, Cyrill? Unless you're referring to the top flight being called another name?
Quote from: saunders_heroes on October 22, 2013, 10:01:29 AMQuote from: jeowje on October 22, 2013, 09:58:55 AMIn the eras of Brian Little and Ron Atkinson there was a more level playing field. It was much more feasible to go out and buy players capable of performing at the top end of the table.Big Ron bought players with PL experience in his tenure. No wonder we hit the ground running. No he didn't. Name me one player with any Premier League experience that he bought.
Quote from: jeowje on October 22, 2013, 09:58:55 AMIn the eras of Brian Little and Ron Atkinson there was a more level playing field. It was much more feasible to go out and buy players capable of performing at the top end of the table.Big Ron bought players with PL experience in his tenure. No wonder we hit the ground running.
In the eras of Brian Little and Ron Atkinson there was a more level playing field. It was much more feasible to go out and buy players capable of performing at the top end of the table.
Quote from: fredm on October 22, 2013, 10:08:17 AMOur improvement at the end of last season... Note our form from February on. We were "the best of the rest" and did the likes of West Ham, Reading et al, but lost all games home and away against the top six, Everton the exception (but then we have a cracking record up there).This season, we have played almost exclusively the top six and have bettered the results in a few and conceded fewer goals along the way. These sides will beat us more often than not. The fact we stuck three past Arsenal and three past Man City is tangible evidence of improvement.We may have had to moderate the way we play; I thought Man City was very different from Lambert’s usual approach, but then that doesn’t make our approach exceptional in the context of the league. Look at the Bitters; capable of being turned over at home with some awful performances, but also capable of beating or holding decent sides. Suffering tedious 0-0 draws along the way too. Why? They’re a mid-table club. So are we.
Quote from: Ads on October 22, 2013, 11:03:45 AM Quote from: fredm on October 22, 2013, 10:08:17 AMOur improvement at the end of last season... Note our form from February on. We were "the best of the rest" and did the likes of West Ham, Reading et al, but lost all games home and away against the top six, Everton the exception (but then we have a cracking record up there).This season, we have played almost exclusively the top six and have bettered the results in a few and conceded fewer goals along the way. These sides will beat us more often than not. The fact we stuck three past Arsenal and three past Man City is tangible evidence of improvement.We may have had to moderate the way we play; I thought Man City was very different from Lambert’s usual approach, but then that doesn’t make our approach exceptional in the context of the league. Look at the Bitters; capable of being turned over at home with some awful performances, but also capable of beating or holding decent sides. Suffering tedious 0-0 draws along the way too. Why? They’re a mid-table club. So are we.Thats about it. Mid table club and not much hope of progressing higher. The kind of club that Fulham are season after season and Coventry in the distant past. A bit depressing really but in reality what we should expect.
That's your opinion Ron Manager and its not one I agree with.I don't think its possible for us to progress from the bottom six to top six in a season without spending more than the clubs who currently occupy those slots. We tried that and could neither afford nor sustain it.The alternative is a slower approach and this appears to be the problem for a lot of fans. They can see irrefutable evidence of progress, but it isn't happening at the speed they would like.If we have invested £40 million to buy 12-15 players to completely re-build the squad over two summers, with a wholesale change to the way the club operates, then I personally don't see that as being something that requires repeating summer after summer. Randy appears to be willing for the club to spend circa £20 million per summer, so why will it not be a case of next season, we spend that outlay not on building a squad, but refining it? Why will we not spend the Benteke money on top on say three £10 million pound players to supplement the squad, who will be a year older and wiser? Clark has certainly benefitted. I think Delph has too. I think we will achieve mid-table this season and continue to be inconsistent while we're at it. I completely disagree that the strategy is a failure and that we have no chance of improving. It’s a long term plan, let it work its course, as there is no alternative.
I have to agree with the poster above, we may be picking up more points on a match for match comparison with last season. But nobody will convince me we're progressing as a football side.We still play woeful football in the majority of games this season, there's very little to cling onto in terms of seeing some footballing progression or a style being put in place either (unless you class counter attacking as a welcome style of course)I'm amazed that Lambert hasn't got something in place by now, he must've spent nearly 35m-40m over the two big windows on developing his side. Big Ron and Little moulded teams with a style within much shorter periods (both by the time their first full seasons hit the ground at least)The only things pundits seem to have us pegged as are counter attacking, long ball merchants with little chance of dominating possession. Which they seem to be able to back up with stats. We may have fluked a few wins against two bigger sides, but surely that isn't fooling anyone that watches us regularly ?I'd say the Hull/Newcastle games are more the real us, and that worries me greatly.
Quote from: sirlordbaltimore on October 22, 2013, 09:14:52 AMI have to agree with the poster above, we may be picking up more points on a match for match comparison with last season. But nobody will convince me we're progressing as a football side.We still play woeful football in the majority of games this season, there's very little to cling onto in terms of seeing some footballing progression or a style being put in place either (unless you class counter attacking as a welcome style of course)I'm amazed that Lambert hasn't got something in place by now, he must've spent nearly 35m-40m over the two big windows on developing his side. Big Ron and Little moulded teams with a style within much shorter periods (both by the time their first full seasons hit the ground at least)The only things pundits seem to have us pegged as are counter attacking, long ball merchants with little chance of dominating possession. Which they seem to be able to back up with stats. We may have fluked a few wins against two bigger sides, but surely that isn't fooling anyone that watches us regularly ?I'd say the Hull/Newcastle games are more the real us, and that worries me greatly.Agree with all that