I think we have an owner that will contribute some funding each year, although not a great deal. The reality, therefore, is to combine this with TV money and other commercial income and that is all we have to work with. I do believe that the club are working very hard to increase the commercial income and trying to promote the name of the club around the world e.g. I caught a little bit of a club produced weekly program me on Eurosport Asia. This all takes time unless you are winning trophies.It will help when we have cleared the decks of non-playing high earners so that this money can be spent raising the quality of the squad. In the meantime we have to struggle on the best we can by whatever means possible. Clearly, there are a number of the young players that are struggling for form, partly due to the whole team struggling, which is partly down to loss of key players to injury. I firmly believe that the club have to bring some experienced players in in January. As we do not want to spend a great deal of money on a short term quick fix, we should use the loan system. Investing GBP 5 million in loan salaries will buy us far more now and for the future than spending on buying players.Earlier somebody said that it all started going wrong in Moscow. I would say it all started going wrong when we signed Heskey. He did not fit in with the way we played and we changed to accommodate him. Managers used to like him because of his work rate but we could not afford to have a center forward that did not score goals due to lack of goals from midfield. We are in a similar position now in that we rely on the front three for goals. AW and GA without goals are a luxury we cannot afford, however much we like them as players. Similarly with somebody like Albrighton, it is of no use him looking busy, running down the wing and crossing if he is not looking where his players are before he crosses.I am all for steadying the ship until we can sail on full steam ahead. What we cannot afford is to ruin the good work to date by changing direction completely. However, I would not say no to a money-no-object Arab turning up at B6.
Having an old and glorious football club in your ownership and prioritizing getting value for money out of it is like marrying a woman because she will cook you nice dinners and keep the house clean. It is an arrangement totally devoid of love and passion.
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.
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.
Good balanced post Brian particularly your description of McLeish appointment. However it must be recognised that Doug always balanced the books first.
Quote from: mike on December 24, 2013, 10:12:42 PMI 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.And your point is?
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 am not in any way opposed to the balancing of the books. Doug did it and it needed doing. My point about Doug is that he loves football. The current owner is at best lukewarm about the game these days and it shows.My anguish about the balancing of the books is TO WHAT END? What is to be achieved at Villa Park in the future years of financial stability? Balancing the books has become the ultimate and only ambition of the club in my opinion. Why we should want to balance the books is the question which is never addressed.
Until our transfer policy changes do people honestly believe we can make significant progress and play exciting football just by sacking another manager? What will any new manager be able to do?
Again, I know some people hate stats. But they can tell a story:According to Opta, Villa's average possession this season stands at 42.18%, which is lower than last season (44.23%) and less than every Premier League club with the exception of Crystal Palace. They have made 6,013 passes and their passing accuracy is 73.92% – lower than last season in both cases (6,141 and 76.08% respectively) – and in both categories only Palace have a worse record.From open play Villa have delivered 200 crosses, which is 12 fewer than in 2012-13 and the joint lowest in the league along with Palace. As for the number of long balls, Villa have played a higher percentage (16.38%) than they did last season and more than any other team in the league. For those fans searching for some positives in all of this number-crunching Villa have registered five more shots on target this term.