All this leads me to believe that Lambert knows we need that player and actively wants to recruit for that position but no one was available for a fee he was happy to pay during the summer. If I'm right, whilst it is disappointing we didn't get the player we need, I'm happier with this approach than signing the wrong player or paying the wrong fee out of panic, very few panic buys work out well.
Quote from: Concrete John on November 06, 2013, 12:48:49 PMQuote from: edgysatsuma89 on November 06, 2013, 12:18:00 PMMy biggest issue with Lambert is the way he reverts to the 'Bradford' tactics.Has that actually happened? Other than Bradford itself, of course. Against Newcastle there was more than a whiff of the 'loads of strikers, that way' tactic.
Quote from: edgysatsuma89 on November 06, 2013, 12:18:00 PMMy biggest issue with Lambert is the way he reverts to the 'Bradford' tactics.Has that actually happened? Other than Bradford itself, of course.
My biggest issue with Lambert is the way he reverts to the 'Bradford' tactics.
Quote from: Montbert on November 06, 2013, 12:50:15 PMQuote from: Concrete John on November 06, 2013, 12:48:49 PMQuote from: edgysatsuma89 on November 06, 2013, 12:18:00 PMMy biggest issue with Lambert is the way he reverts to the 'Bradford' tactics.Has that actually happened? Other than Bradford itself, of course. Against Newcastle there was more than a whiff of the 'loads of strikers, that way' tactic.No where near it for me, but fair enough it's a valid opinion.
Quote from: Concrete John on November 06, 2013, 01:06:32 PMQuote from: Montbert on November 06, 2013, 12:50:15 PMQuote from: Concrete John on November 06, 2013, 12:48:49 PMQuote from: edgysatsuma89 on November 06, 2013, 12:18:00 PMMy biggest issue with Lambert is the way he reverts to the 'Bradford' tactics.Has that actually happened? Other than Bradford itself, of course. Against Newcastle there was more than a whiff of the 'loads of strikers, that way' tactic.No where near it for me, but fair enough it's a valid opinion.It ended up as it, I think. Against Bradford, that tactic went on for a good half-hour, whereas against Newcastle it was more like ten minutes. Still, it looked a little desperate and very unimaginative.
Tactics are, it's true, mainly defensive, or at least formations are. Bu if you're set up to create conditions of chaos for the oppo, then that's how chaos leads to goals. If you have chaos in attack, it's simple for defenders.
Quote from: paul_e on November 06, 2013, 12:00:00 PMQuote from: pauliewalnuts on November 06, 2013, 11:46:00 AMQuote from: paul_e on November 06, 2013, 11:15:27 AMAll this leads me to believe that Lambert knows we need that player and actively wants to recruit for that position but no one was available for a fee he was happy to pay during the summer. If I'm right, whilst it is disappointing we didn't get the player we need, I'm happier with this approach than signing the wrong player or paying the wrong fee out of panic, very few panic buys work out well.Whilst by and large I agree with what you're saying, why does the alternative to getting the player he really wants have to be signing the wrong player or panic buying?I find it hard to believe he just has "target number 1" and no back up options for his transfer moves. In fact, I would imagine a few of the players we have bought over the last year or two will not have been his first choice - that's just the way it is, pretty much at every club.I never suggested there was 1 target he was willing to wait for, I said no one {he wanted} was available for a fee he was willing to pay. We know of enquiries about at least 1, and almost certainly 2, what we don't know is if that's everyone we looked at or not. Part of getting a full appraisal of a player is that you need to commit a lot of time to it, if all of the attacking midfielders he was sure of were unavailable for a sensible fee we'd have either pay over the odds for one of them or we'd have signed someone he hadn't scouted to a level he was happy with, which is what I meant by the 'wrong player'. Signing a player you've not really scouted because you need to fill a gap is a panic buy, and generally they don't turn out all that well.Out of interest, who are the players we know he enquired about?
Quote from: pauliewalnuts on November 06, 2013, 11:46:00 AMQuote from: paul_e on November 06, 2013, 11:15:27 AMAll this leads me to believe that Lambert knows we need that player and actively wants to recruit for that position but no one was available for a fee he was happy to pay during the summer. If I'm right, whilst it is disappointing we didn't get the player we need, I'm happier with this approach than signing the wrong player or paying the wrong fee out of panic, very few panic buys work out well.Whilst by and large I agree with what you're saying, why does the alternative to getting the player he really wants have to be signing the wrong player or panic buying?I find it hard to believe he just has "target number 1" and no back up options for his transfer moves. In fact, I would imagine a few of the players we have bought over the last year or two will not have been his first choice - that's just the way it is, pretty much at every club.I never suggested there was 1 target he was willing to wait for, I said no one {he wanted} was available for a fee he was willing to pay. We know of enquiries about at least 1, and almost certainly 2, what we don't know is if that's everyone we looked at or not. Part of getting a full appraisal of a player is that you need to commit a lot of time to it, if all of the attacking midfielders he was sure of were unavailable for a sensible fee we'd have either pay over the odds for one of them or we'd have signed someone he hadn't scouted to a level he was happy with, which is what I meant by the 'wrong player'. Signing a player you've not really scouted because you need to fill a gap is a panic buy, and generally they don't turn out all that well.
Quote from: paul_e on November 06, 2013, 11:15:27 AMAll this leads me to believe that Lambert knows we need that player and actively wants to recruit for that position but no one was available for a fee he was happy to pay during the summer. If I'm right, whilst it is disappointing we didn't get the player we need, I'm happier with this approach than signing the wrong player or paying the wrong fee out of panic, very few panic buys work out well.Whilst by and large I agree with what you're saying, why does the alternative to getting the player he really wants have to be signing the wrong player or panic buying?I find it hard to believe he just has "target number 1" and no back up options for his transfer moves. In fact, I would imagine a few of the players we have bought over the last year or two will not have been his first choice - that's just the way it is, pretty much at every club.
Quote from: pauliewalnuts on November 06, 2013, 12:22:40 PMIt is far too early to judge Kozak, so I don't really get why people are calling him a poor signing.I must admit, though, he looks far from mobile, so I wonder how he's going to fit in with our front line.To play to his strengths would be a start - he is certainly no lone target man .Probably more of a natural goalscorer than gabby or Weimann - I would give him a few games alongside benteke and see how they go , using bacuna and tonev to provide width .
It is far too early to judge Kozak, so I don't really get why people are calling him a poor signing.I must admit, though, he looks far from mobile, so I wonder how he's going to fit in with our front line.
Goals don't count if I say so.
Quote from: Montbert on November 06, 2013, 01:17:40 PMTactics are, it's true, mainly defensive, or at least formations are. Bu if you're set up to create conditions of chaos for the oppo, then that's how chaos leads to goals. If you have chaos in attack, it's simple for defenders.This is the piece that supports what Liveprool and Newcastle have done well this season: maintaining an energetic and pressing game all over the pitch, and moving the ball quickly to mobile receivers. We are not doing enough pressing and do not move the ball swiftly enough (which means we get closed down and the ball ends up back with the two worst distributors in the team, Guzan and Baker).As an aside, Petrov was a very good pass-and-move player: didn't dally on the ball much at all.
honda might be an option this January. I read his contract is soon to expire so would be cheap fee wise. I'd question his motivation however as most footballers seem to choose Russia for the cash rather than footballing reasons.
Quote from: Mister E on November 06, 2013, 01:22:35 PMQuote from: Montbert on November 06, 2013, 01:17:40 PMTactics are, it's true, mainly defensive, or at least formations are. Bu if you're set up to create conditions of chaos for the oppo, then that's how chaos leads to goals. If you have chaos in attack, it's simple for defenders.This is the piece that supports what Liveprool and Newcastle have done well this season: maintaining an energetic and pressing game all over the pitch, and moving the ball quickly to mobile receivers. We are not doing enough pressing and do not move the ball swiftly enough (which means we get closed down and the ball ends up back with the two worst distributors in the team, Guzan and Baker).As an aside, Petrov was a very good pass-and-move player: didn't dally on the ball much at all.The best pressing team for me is southampton - and they are reaping the rewards.