QuoteFor me the Houllier era was an example of how impatient and spoilt the fanbase can be. Going over old ground - but Houllier lost us the day he arrived. He gave the impression he thought we should be honoured that he'd stooped so low to take the job. He be-littled us from the off.FFS we know are place in the footballing scheme of things. But we don't need anyone, least of all the manager, ramming it home continually in the press just how insignificant we are.
For me the Houllier era was an example of how impatient and spoilt the fanbase can be.
I remember walk out of the Reebok having just watched Houllier surrender a 2-1 lead and lose 3-2 . I thought as I walked out, bollocks to this Houllier shit I'm done with this bullshit football. Luckily he was gone soon after
I can't stand the 'blame the fans' stuff, I think any fan would be pretty disappointed after 4 dreadful years in succession.
There is no revisionism on my part on Houllier. Had he remained at the club, he would have had the ability to bring in the types of players a top 6 side needs in the PL. They were not only high potential players e.g Fofana at Lyon who came close to joining, but also those that had experience and international standing. We were playing better football at the time of his illness and that wasn't because he was away. If it was then we are saying Gary McAllister was behind it and should have been given the job. Houllier played his part and laid some of the groundwork which McAllister executed.The whole post MON situation was a gong show at the club. It was a mess so there was no way Houllier was ever going clean it up that quickly. If he hadn't become ill, and if he had received the right level of financial backing which I think he'd have got or else he wouldn't have joined, I firmly believe that within the space of 18-24 months we'd have every bit as solid a squad as Everton have today. Houllier might not have been our cup of tea in the media and I didn't like the comments he made at Liverpool, but really, given what had happened he was always going to have an emotional attachment to them. But in my opinion, he came with an established record in domestic and european football with significant contacts within the game, and would have had us operating at the upper end of the table within a reasonable amount of time.
The results are there for all to see, as are the players at our disposal at the time, even taking injuries into account. What I don't understand is this "he got us playing better football" line. Did he really? To me, aimlessly squaring the football between the edge of your own penalty area and the halfway line before losing it isn't much better than hoofball.
Quote from: silhillvilla on May 23, 2014, 01:12:59 PMI remember walk out of the Reebok having just watched Houllier surrender a 2-1 lead and lose 3-2 . I thought as I walked out, bollocks to this Houllier shit I'm done with this bullshit football. Luckily he was gone soon after To be replaced by TSM.