The problem for me is this: for what or whom exactly do we currently exist? It may seem harsh, but middling along while playing endlessly tedious football with the odd existential relegation crisis doesn't do much for the fans. Of course there are reasons much more important than entertainment or success to support a football club (let's face it, if there weren't, not many of us would support Villa), but it doesn't make us happy that we support this club.Under MON, a lot of us put up with the often plodding football because it looked like the results were finally there. Looking back, of course, the limited style of play was an important cause and symptom of everything to do with MON's limitations. However, the point is that truly competing for things is the minimum extent to which the results have to be good before bad football becomes acceptable to fans. Results are everything, after all.However, if we're not competing, if circumstances find us in that bottom twelve of the Premier League, then fine, no problem, that's easy enough to put up with - it's the fact that our football is so extraordinarily uncheerable which gets us down. Swansea might be below us in the league, but they have a baseline to their style of play which is competent and might lead, not by accident, to genuine entertainment. It looks like they're trying something. Our football is a bit cowardly and quite undercooked, if reasonably well-intentioned.The tactical problem with Lambert as I've said before isn't necessarily long-ball, it's just impatient, it's all about getting it to the front as quickly as possible. So, when there's space in the midfield, they pass the ball along the floor through the middle and to Benteke, but when there isn't that space they boof it, as the quickest way to go 'back-to-front'. It's not designed to be long-ball - that usually means things like crossing wingers for your big guy to win headers, and so on - it's designed to play goo stuff in the final third with tricky, intricate players, but either the ball doesn't get to them because we just toss it away via a Big Boof, or it does get to them but they're so over-eager to make the chance NOW that they choose the wrong option at the wrong time and lose it. The upshot is consistently failing to break 35% of the ball over the course of a match.Good intentions, inexpertly applied and inadequately understood, yielding bad results. Honestly, from players to boardroom is there a more accurate way of summarising the whole club at the moment.
So glad most of these posters where not around the season we went into the 3rd div. but what we did then we need to do now.And that is fill villa park to the rafters moan before the game moan at half time and moan at the end ,but for 90 minutes get behind the team like we know we can .fuck lambert fuck randy Lerner this is our club always has been and always will. If anything this team no matter how poor needs our backing I will be doing my 300 mile round trip to cheer them on for 90 minutes lets hope another 39,999 can do the same.Villa till I die
However, if we're not competing, if circumstances find us in that bottom twelve of the Premier League, then fine, no problem, that's easy enough to put up with - it's the fact that our football is so extraordinarily uncheerable which gets us down.
'financial position at the end of MON's tenure'AH, there's our Trotsky being rolled out again! Bad MON, he has been gone for the past four years, huge signings followed him (Bent, Makoun, N'Zogbia), he was let do what he did by Lerner& Faulkner yet it is still he who gets all the blame.What is the common denominator?
Quote from: Irish villain on February 02, 2014, 02:12:18 PM'financial position at the end of MON's tenure'AH, there's our Trotsky being rolled out again! Bad MON, he has been gone for the past four years, huge signings followed him (Bent, Makoun, N'Zogbia), he was let do what he did by Lerner& Faulkner yet it is still he who gets all the blame.What is the common denominator?I don't think I said all the blame lay at MON's door. In fact, I'm certain that in the past on here I've said the blame lay as much, if not more, at Faulkner's door. He's the CEO and had responsibility for the budget the manager (an employee) was given to work with.So what's your point?
Quote from: Ad@m on February 02, 2014, 02:16:25 PMQuote from: Irish villain on February 02, 2014, 02:12:18 PM'financial position at the end of MON's tenure'AH, there's our Trotsky being rolled out again! Bad MON, he has been gone for the past four years, huge signings followed him (Bent, Makoun, N'Zogbia), he was let do what he did by Lerner& Faulkner yet it is still he who gets all the blame.What is the common denominator?I don't think I said all the blame lay at MON's door. In fact, I'm certain that in the past on here I've said the blame lay as much, if not more, at Faulkner's door. He's the CEO and had responsibility for the budget the manager (an employee) was given to work with.So what's your point?He wasn't CEO for most of O'Neill's time.
Quote from: dave.woodhall on February 02, 2014, 02:23:04 PMQuote from: Ad@m on February 02, 2014, 02:16:25 PMQuote from: Irish villain on February 02, 2014, 02:12:18 PM'financial position at the end of MON's tenure'AH, there's our Trotsky being rolled out again! Bad MON, he has been gone for the past four years, huge signings followed him (Bent, Makoun, N'Zogbia), he was let do what he did by Lerner& Faulkner yet it is still he who gets all the blame.What is the common denominator?I don't think I said all the blame lay at MON's door. In fact, I'm certain that in the past on here I've said the blame lay as much, if not more, at Faulkner's door. He's the CEO and had responsibility for the budget the manager (an employee) was given to work with.So what's your point?He wasn't CEO for most of O'Neill's time. Fair point - he doesn't deserve any flack for MON's spending. Incidentally, do you know who was CEO between Fitzgerald and Faulkner?