Sorry gpbarr but I do not accept that Lerner, Faulkner and Lambert have forged a "new and improved" Aston Villa. All three including the manager, in my opinion, are bean counters who have traded the hopes and dreams of glory for a sustainable business model. In my book that does not equate with Villa being better. What is the point of owning a club like Aston Villa and running it like a chain of launderettes?
I used to buy a turkey from my butcher for Christmas and get some local veg from the farmers market then cook it all using recipes from my favourite tv chefs. Last year I decided to save money and buy a turkey style roast from Iceland and some frozen veg. In order to save time on Christmas Day, I just chucked it in the oven and took it out a bit early. My guests pulled a face because it didn't taste very nice then spent a week puking and shitting. This year, I've decided to do the same.
I think Lambert should stay. Here's why;1. The squad we have today is IMO both better, younger, hungrier, and most importantly, isn't draining money out of the club in wages, as the one he inherited in June 2012.
Quote from: gpbarr on December 24, 2013, 08:39:42 PMI think Lambert should stay. Here's why;1. The squad we have today is IMO both better, younger, hungrier, and most importantly, isn't draining money out of the club in wages, as the one he inherited in June 2012.I think he should stay, too, but really, if that's the first line of the first reason, you've got to wonder how much our priorities have changed.I don't want to clap my hands and shout because we've got a team of eager, young players who don't cost much. I want a squad of good players. Ideally they'll not cost too much.I also am not a fan of the money-sapping wages MON saddled us with, but I don't think there's a single shred of evidence that this current squad is anywhere near better than any squad MON had - and I am including the 2006-7 one he inherited and couldn't really add to very much. That had a spine of a team already, including the likes of Gabby, Barry, Angel, Mellberg, Laursen, Bouma - decent players.You'd have to be on some sort of mind-bending narcotics to really think that the current squad is collectively anywhere near as good as that handful of players alone, let alone their squad mates.I don't mean this to sound like having a pop at you, because I am not, but if I wanted to cheer fiscal prudence and financial performance, I'd start watching share prices every Saturday afternoon instead.I say all this as a Lambert supporter, but I genuinely can not believe the level of delusion amongst some of our fans re our current squad. It's a squad of players who'd - with two or three exceptions at most - would be of interest to almost nobody else in the PL. Massively mediocre stuff, lots of players with a huge amount to prove.I hope they do and will continue to give them a chance, but I genuinely couldn't give a toss if they're young and hungry, I want them to be good.
Its my opinion that our decline started the moment MON handed over his team sheet in Moscow minus eight first teamers.At the time, there was a strong chance that we could get that Champions League spot, with Arsenal and Liverpool vulnerable, Spurs only just appointing Redknapp, and Man City yet to flex their financial muscles. It was a golden chance, but ducking out of Europe in such a limp fashion demotivated the squad, and drove a wedge between manager and fans which was never healed. Yes we were sixth again the following season and had the two Wembley trips, but for me it papered over the cracks - the football we saw that season - with a few exceptions - was not great to watch really (the home matches with West Ham and Wolves were diabolical).After that last game of the season against Blackburn, I expected it to be announced that MON was going to leave, leaving us in a position to spend the Summer searching for a replacement who could build on what he'd done. Instead, he bailed out on us at almost the eleventh hour, so we had to rush in an appointment.We ended up with Houllier, who was never the right fit for the job. We wanted to begin driving the wages down, but were forced the abondon this by signing Bent to try and keep us up.We then appointed TSM, who had no chance to doing anything here - mainly because of his management style and where he was coming from. Neither Houllier or TSM were ever long-term options for us like PL could be, but even when Lambert arrived, he said it was never going to be a quick fix and most of us knew that. You can't turn around a three year decline in the space of a few months without serious money being invested - something we just don't have now.Not one person can be blamed for all of this, as its a combination of poor decisions by the board and the last three managers. At the moment, I'm still in the Lambert in camp, but the jury is still very much out on whether he is the right man to take us forward again. We've learned over the last few seasons that simply changing the manager isn't enough - especially when the replacement has a totally different style of playing to that of the guy who has moved on.