Quote from: Steve kirk on October 26, 2013, 08:16:07 PMJust checked stats from last season and after 9 games we had 5 points, have I just made us all feel a teeny weeny bit better?I'd rather compare to the tail end of last season where we seemed to be progressing. We looked decent in attack, but this season we seem to have regressed. Teams have worked us out somewhat. We don't look as effective going forward. Gabby and Weimann don't look like they could hit a barn door. Benteke has been rushed back too soon. Lack of a plan B is a worry. I know our home form is total shite and doesn't look like improving, but I don't think we'll be as effective away from home as we were last season (particularly 2nd half of the season). We're not gonna have too many more games like Man City either. That was a once a season kind of game.
Just checked stats from last season and after 9 games we had 5 points, have I just made us all feel a teeny weeny bit better?
Looking at the Mcarthy challenge on Westwood, how is that not a straight Red? Very dangerous lunge
Quote from: supertom on October 26, 2013, 08:23:18 PMQuote from: Steve kirk on October 26, 2013, 08:16:07 PMJust checked stats from last season and after 9 games we had 5 points, have I just made us all feel a teeny weeny bit better?I'd rather compare to the tail end of last season where we seemed to be progressing. We looked decent in attack, but this season we seem to have regressed. Teams have worked us out somewhat. We don't look as effective going forward. Gabby and Weimann don't look like they could hit a barn door. Benteke has been rushed back too soon. Lack of a plan B is a worry. I know our home form is total shite and doesn't look like improving, but I don't think we'll be as effective away from home as we were last season (particularly 2nd half of the season). We're not gonna have too many more games like Man City either. That was a once a season kind of game. Was Arsenal once in a season as well? We have had the toughest start to the season we have had in over 20 years. We are a better side than the results so far suggest. However after driving from the Isle of Wight via Leicester for today's game it only adds to the frustration of our extremely poor home form. The first 60 mins today were better but we cannot afford to miss those chances and still expect to win. On another day that result would have been very different.
Until we start playing a pressing game at home to make up for our lack of quality,our home form will carry on being piss poor.Mind you 4 managers haven't managed it!
It seems to me that what it boils down to is we must endure week after week of games like that one yesterday, the Spurs game and the Hull game on the promise that Lambert will get it right. I respect the posters who point out that the club was in a mess when Lambert came but in all truth I see very little improvement in real terms on where we were when O'Neill flounced out.Yes, I give you that we have tried to play a better, more fluent game but even that has been abandoned and hoofball rules again. We saw yesterday Benteke on the pitch and two target men centre forwards were on the bench. We come under pressure and the ball gets lumped forward. THAT is what is happening. It should not be happening and is nowhere in the master plan that we are encouraged to believe Lambert has. Even on BT Sport the other evening a summarizer being critical of an Italian game said of a piece of play "that was pure Guzan lumping it forward". THAT is how we are seen in football at this time.To buy into the Lambert master plan where everything works out fine at some indeterminate point in the future you have take on board that Lambert is a shrewd and canny, insightful operator. He is well into his second season with us and I see no concrete evidence that he is any of those things.The very core of our malaise is our absentee owner. Everton have an owner who is a poor man compared with Lerner but he is Everton through and through. He puts every penny he has on the line for the club he loves and it shows. We have an owner for whom our club is a sideshow, a hobby, an interest, left in the hands of others to run.The owner has obviously, post MON, placed strict cash limits on what can and cannot be done with the simple directive to his board that losses are to be reduced and Premiership security achieved at an affordable cost. Aston Villa has become a business, nothing more, nothing less.So, Lambert, given his modest bag of money is like a man playing roulette in a casino who covers the table with small bets in order to maximise his winning chances. That is not having a master plan. That is playing the percentages and that is precisely what we are getting by way of results. You finish up going skint. Believe me I have been there (ask Bob).What lies down this road is not some claret and blue dawn when all the bargain buys start to surge up the table and into the CL. What lies down this road is collapsing attendances at games and our business oriented club executive become aware that the fans are not a crop to be harvested any more and Bent style signings are used to try to lure the crowds back.This is nothing new at Villa Park. Trevor Ford was my ealiest experience of the same situation fifty or more years ago.How can I sum up my deep unease?Paul Lambert does not have a master plan. He is winging it.
Quote from: bertlambshank on October 27, 2013, 09:00:31 AMUntil we start playing a pressing game at home to make up for our lack of quality,our home form will carry on being piss poor.Mind you 4 managers haven't managed it!Agree with this. The amount of time barry had on numerous occasions yesterday was worryingly familiar. I think we need Sylla in there as he has a great engine on him and will help to press further up the pitch
We can't miss chances like we did and expect to win games. It was frustrating because I thought we played some nice stuff in the first half. Also, i'm not sure what point was of throwing a 6ft striker on and taking off a winger.