Quote from: dave.woodhall on June 18, 2014, 01:00:21 PMOne summer of Houllier and things could have been so different.Looking back it seems Houllier's illness was a convenience. They were unwilling to fund his plans so getting rid of him and bringing in a bloke willing to do as he was told made the cuts easier and gave them a convenient scapegoat.
One summer of Houllier and things could have been so different.
Quote from: Toronto Villa on June 18, 2014, 01:13:08 PMQuote from: dave.woodhall on June 18, 2014, 01:00:21 PMOne summer of Houllier and things could have been so different.Agree entirely, and even if he couldn't much longer the next bloke should have been of the same type. Disastrously it wasn't. Who knows, very hypothetically speaking but had Houllier gone another year and stepped away, the next bloke in could very well have been Martinez given the timing of everything. How very, very different things would have looked.The irony is, at the time when Martinez was mentioned, a lot of us - most of us, in fact - were extremely underwhelmed. In our defence, if you'd told us who was going to get the job at the time of that Martinez link, I genuinely don't think a single person on here would have believed it.
Quote from: dave.woodhall on June 18, 2014, 01:00:21 PMOne summer of Houllier and things could have been so different.Agree entirely, and even if he couldn't much longer the next bloke should have been of the same type. Disastrously it wasn't. Who knows, very hypothetically speaking but had Houllier gone another year and stepped away, the next bloke in could very well have been Martinez given the timing of everything. How very, very different things would have looked.
I don't really know if we'd actually need Lescott now. Having signed Senderos, and with Okore coming back and assuming Vlaar stays, maybe we've got enough there.
Quote from: RussellC on June 18, 2014, 01:11:22 PMI'll never forget (or forgive) him for playing Heskey and hutton as wingers away at Spurs and then looking to shut-up-shop at 2-0 down.This will sound like hyperbole, but I genuinely believe it, the way he set us up so negatively at Spurs made me more embarrassed to be a Villa fan than I have ever been before. I've seen plenty of shit Villa sides and terrible results, but the way we didn't even pretend we were going to try in that match was just humiliating.
I'll never forget (or forgive) him for playing Heskey and hutton as wingers away at Spurs and then looking to shut-up-shop at 2-0 down.
I'd love to know what was going through Randy's mind after Martinez opted to stay at Wigan. I know he's not exactly football-savvy, but I still can't believe what he went and did.
Quote from: pauliewalnuts on June 18, 2014, 01:15:07 PMQuote from: RussellC on June 18, 2014, 01:11:22 PMI'll never forget (or forgive) him for playing Heskey and hutton as wingers away at Spurs and then looking to shut-up-shop at 2-0 down.This will sound like hyperbole, but I genuinely believe it, the way he set us up so negatively at Spurs made me more embarrassed to be a Villa fan than I have ever been before. I've seen plenty of shit Villa sides and terrible results, but the way we didn't even pretend we were going to try in that match was just humiliating.I completely agree. I was late into the ground that night, and had been for a pint with a Spurs supporting mate beforehand, so had no idea of the line-up until they came out. I remember it getting to about 15 minutes in before it fully sunk in exactly how we were set-up.The thing that struck me most was that Kyle Walker was rampaging forward (past Heskey) for them at right-back, and Younes Kaboul was winning absolutely every ball that we launched forward towards Gabby. It seemed to me like the most obvious thing in the world to switch them over but it never happened. Unfortunately that game will live long in the memory for me.
Quote from: SamTheMouse on June 18, 2014, 02:37:00 PMI'd love to know what was going through Randy's mind after Martinez opted to stay at Wigan. I know he's not exactly football-savvy, but I still can't believe what he went and did.Regardless of it being a poor football decision when supporters were so vocally (and artistically) against it it became a terrible business decision. It was made even more bizarre by the fact that the club were apparently scared-off holding talks with Steve McLaren because of supporter reaction, but then went ahead and appointment Mcleish regardless!
I'd love to know what was going through Randy's mind after Martinez opted to stay at Wigan. I know he's not exactly football-savvy, but I still can't believe what he went and did.It's like popping down the off licence for a bottle of Nuits-Saint-Georges, then on being told they're out of stock, buying a six-pack of lime-flavoured Bacardi Breezers. And a packet of scratchings.The only explanation is that our he must have been doing meth or something that weekend.
Quote from: RussellC on June 18, 2014, 02:43:47 PMQuote from: SamTheMouse on June 18, 2014, 02:37:00 PMI'd love to know what was going through Randy's mind after Martinez opted to stay at Wigan. I know he's not exactly football-savvy, but I still can't believe what he went and did.Regardless of it being a poor football decision when supporters were so vocally (and artistically) against it it became a terrible business decision. It was made even more bizarre by the fact that the club were apparently scared-off holding talks with Steve McLaren because of supporter reaction, but then went ahead and appointment Mcleish regardless!That's a bit of an urban myth as well. It's closer to say he talked himself out of the job.