Kozak is certainly a piece in the puzzle. His movement is excellent and he offers something different from a entente in that regard, as although he is huge, he isn't a battering ram. We clearly lack an intelligent attacking midfielder, but if we could pick one up in the summer, I am glad we at least got Kozak.The decision makes even more sense when you look at how poor Weimann has been.
Vlaar, Clark and Delph have noticeably improved.Lowton, benteke, Weimann, Westwood, sylla , have all failed to reproduce last seasons form.
Quote from: Ads on December 31, 2013, 12:07:07 PMKozak is certainly a piece in the puzzle. His movement is excellent and he offers something different from a entente in that regard, as although he is huge, he isn't a battering ram. We clearly lack an intelligent attacking midfielder, but if we could pick one up in the summer, I am glad we at least got Kozak.The decision makes even more sense when you look at how poor Weimann has been.Aren't you the one who always goes on about his celebrations? Are you sure you're judging him based on his performances for us?Kozak is a squad player. I haven't seen anything from him to suggest he'd be more than that.
My take is on Lener is simple. I think the takeover at Man City completely changed his outloook on owning Villa.When he bought us I genuinely thought investing £100 million into the playing staff would give us a realistic chance of reaching the Champions League, and thus drastically increase our revenue. This was stage 1 of any "plan" but it was very much an "all or nothing" approach that, as we all know, ended in nothing. Subsequently the likes of Man Utd, Chelsea, Arsenal, Liverpool and Spurts have all had to spend more and more just to keep up with City and, when we weren't able to do so, Randy realised it was sheer folly to blow millions in order to keep us in and around the Europa League places. In addition to this he would have seen the likes of Swansea and Wigan winning silverware whilst not spending "silly money" and decided Villa should be able to follow suit.In hindsight, had we picked-up a Laudrup or Martinez (or maybe even a Lambert) as soon as MON left we may be much further ahead than we are, say where Everton are now. The damage done by the Houllier and McLeish years however, has set the club-back drastically and given Lambert an incredibly big task of improving the side whilst cutting-back on the wage-bill.
Gerard Houllier could have been an excellent manager at Aston Villa but should never have been taken on because of his past medical history. I think Lambert desperately needs help,even if he wouldnt welcome it. As a Director of Football Gerard Houllier could be the answer.
Quote from: Ron Manager on December 31, 2013, 01:03:46 PMGerard Houllier could have been an excellent manager at Aston Villa but should never have been taken on because of his past medical history. I think Lambert desperately needs help,even if he wouldnt welcome it. As a Director of Football Gerard Houllier could be the answer.Decent point that
Quote from: RussellC on December 31, 2013, 09:38:16 AMMy take is on Lener is simple. I think the takeover at Man City completely changed his outloook on owning Villa.When he bought us I genuinely thought investing £100 million into the playing staff would give us a realistic chance of reaching the Champions League, and thus drastically increase our revenue. This was stage 1 of any "plan" but it was very much an "all or nothing" approach that, as we all know, ended in nothing. Subsequently the likes of Man Utd, Chelsea, Arsenal, Liverpool and Spurts have all had to spend more and more just to keep up with City and, when we weren't able to do so, Randy realised it was sheer folly to blow millions in order to keep us in and around the Europa League places. In addition to this he would have seen the likes of Swansea and Wigan winning silverware whilst not spending "silly money" and decided Villa should be able to follow suit.In hindsight, had we picked-up a Laudrup or Martinez (or maybe even a Lambert) as soon as MON left we may be much further ahead than we are, say where Everton are now. The damage done by the Houllier and McLeish years however, has set the club-back drastically and given Lambert an incredibly big task of improving the side whilst cutting-back on the wage-bill.RussellC, this pretty much sums up my thinking on our time since Randy arrived too.
Quote from: mike on December 31, 2013, 12:03:13 PMI can see both sides of this argument but we are playing with fire because if we are relegated the whole vision/plan is flushed down the toilet. That's just it. The work being done now should mean that if the worse did happen we won't do a Leeds/Forest/Wednesday. That's not to say we're planning for relegation - we're just running the club in a responsible way which means we don't implode if something horrible happens.
I can see both sides of this argument but we are playing with fire because if we are relegated the whole vision/plan is flushed down the toilet.