Quote from: Newby on May 25, 2014, 11:00:54 AMIn hindsight, I wish Randy had kept his trap shut and not said anything. All we have now is doom and gloom with many thinking we have no money to spend and that we are stuck with Paul Lambert as Manager. I think I would prefer to know when the club is sold. Whatever Lambert does spend is wasted because the guy can't coach for shit.But his last two clubs (who weren't losing £50million a year and requiring high levels of investment to be cut) improved season by season under Lambert. He took Norwich from League 1, through the Championship, into the Premier League and got them 12th in consecutive seasons. Was that then a fluke? Or do you not think that maybe there is a bit more to this current state at Aston Villa than saying "he can't coach for shit". (Not that he was the coach anyway – his coaches did that, and I think Lambert might actually be the manager).
In hindsight, I wish Randy had kept his trap shut and not said anything. All we have now is doom and gloom with many thinking we have no money to spend and that we are stuck with Paul Lambert as Manager. I think I would prefer to know when the club is sold. Whatever Lambert does spend is wasted because the guy can't coach for shit.
It was a car crash before he arrived
Quote from: Rolta on May 25, 2014, 11:10:07 AMQuote from: Newby on May 25, 2014, 11:00:54 AMIn hindsight, I wish Randy had kept his trap shut and not said anything. All we have now is doom and gloom with many thinking we have no money to spend and that we are stuck with Paul Lambert as Manager. I think I would prefer to know when the club is sold. Whatever Lambert does spend is wasted because the guy can't coach for shit.But his last two clubs (who weren't losing £50million a year and requiring high levels of investment to be cut) improved season by season under Lambert. He took Norwich from League 1, through the Championship, into the Premier League and got them 12th in consecutive seasons. Was that then a fluke? Or do you not think that maybe there is a bit more to this current state at Aston Villa than saying "he can't coach for shit". (Not that he was the coach anyway – his coaches did that, and I think Lambert might actually be the manager). I still think he should have done better than he has. He didn't seem to have the ability to build on good results. We should have kicked on from Chelsea win but instead we went alarmingly backwards, so far backwards even Vlaar admitted that had we had another couple of games to play, we'd have been in trouble. He did an amazing job at Norwich and he had players of lesser quality than he's got here. Benteke's injury was a blow but we were going on losing runs even when he was playing.
There are parameters in place at every club. Every single club. Whilst I will apologise for the tongue comment, it does baffle me that some people seem to feel sorry for Lambert for doing such a poor job. In the meantime, whilst we seem to have no choice, we just take it and have to accept it.
Quote from: mrastonvilla on May 25, 2014, 11:59:37 AMIt was a car crash before he arrivedFair point.I do think there has been a bit of step up from what was expected of him at Norwich and now, and I am not sure he has quite grasp the difference. In terms of how he sets his teams up, and the message he sends the players in interviews (an important part of management) he does seem to still be working at the Norwich level, and it just doesn't seem to be working.
Quote from: Newby on May 25, 2014, 11:45:59 AMThere are parameters in place at every club. Every single club. Whilst I will apologise for the tongue comment, it does baffle me that some people seem to feel sorry for Lambert for doing such a poor job. In the meantime, whilst we seem to have no choice, we just take it and have to accept it.Seriously though – I'm not saying anyone has to feel sorry for him. I don't. I also don't think he's done a poor job if you look at the club as a whole. Like someone else said, the club was in a mess before he came, only now, thanks to Lambert, we're not losing all that money. It's not about choice or anything, it's seeing the situation at the club for what it is. My opinion: you come across as spoilt. I'd be sorry for saying it if you hadn't told me to take my tongue out of my arse (good one, by the way). I don't even know how you can be spoilt as a Villa fan, because in my experience supporting the club through the nineties and especially the last decade (bar the MON money money flurry and the FA cup final with Gregory – also helped along by stupid investment in aging players) there has on the most part only been bad seasons. I'm as into Villa as anyone, and I have hopes for us, but it doesn't just happen because I want it to happen. The club has to become well run for us to get anywhere. In reality we are not big enough to compete at the very top – in reality we are a mid-table team. I don't like how money has ruined football, but it has happened. And having said all that, I am still an optimist, and I hope when/if we do become well run (getting the finances in order is the first step – well done, Paul Lambert – I give credit where it is definitely due) we can emulate teams like Everton or Tottenham, and from there whatever. One step at a time though. I'd say to you to get your tongue out of your arse, but seeing your lack of logic I don't think you know where your tongue or your arse is.
Quote from: Rolta on May 25, 2014, 12:42:09 PMQuote from: Newby on May 25, 2014, 11:45:59 AMThere are parameters in place at every club. Every single club. Whilst I will apologise for the tongue comment, it does baffle me that some people seem to feel sorry for Lambert for doing such a poor job. In the meantime, whilst we seem to have no choice, we just take it and have to accept it.Seriously though – I'm not saying anyone has to feel sorry for him. I don't. I also don't think he's done a poor job if you look at the club as a whole. Like someone else said, the club was in a mess before he came, only now, thanks to Lambert, we're not losing all that money. It's not about choice or anything, it's seeing the situation at the club for what it is. My opinion: you come across as spoilt. I'd be sorry for saying it if you hadn't told me to take my tongue out of my arse (good one, by the way). I don't even know how you can be spoilt as a Villa fan, because in my experience supporting the club through the nineties and especially the last decade (bar the MON money money flurry and the FA cup final with Gregory – also helped along by stupid investment in aging players) there has on the most part only been bad seasons. I'm as into Villa as anyone, and I have hopes for us, but it doesn't just happen because I want it to happen. The club has to become well run for us to get anywhere. In reality we are not big enough to compete at the very top – in reality we are a mid-table team. I don't like how money has ruined football, but it has happened. And having said all that, I am still an optimist, and I hope when/if we do become well run (getting the finances in order is the first step – well done, Paul Lambert – I give credit where it is definitely due) we can emulate teams like Everton or Tottenham, and from there whatever. One step at a time though. I'd say to you to get your tongue out of your arse, but seeing your lack of logic I don't think you know where your tongue or your arse is. You make a very interesting point, but to be fair it is not through choice than Lambert has had little to spend it is because the club want it that way. It may have partly been the reason behind his appointment given what he did at Norwich with very little money.It is true than since the late 90s/early 00s we have mostly struggled to be anything other than a mid-table club, but then that is largely due to poor managers or the club being poorly run. The main point is that they should have not have let us drop so far since the MON days. I don't think anyone is expecting us to compete at the top level, but top eight or six shouldn't be beyond us, also we have become too negative when it comes to the cups. The odd good run, and threat to winning one of those combained with progress in the league I don't think should be too much to ask for.
Quote from: Gregorys Boy on May 25, 2014, 12:19:09 PMQuote from: mrastonvilla on May 25, 2014, 11:59:37 AMIt was a car crash before he arrivedFair point.I do think there has been a bit of step up from what was expected of him at Norwich and now, and I am not sure he has quite grasp the difference. In terms of how he sets his teams up, and the message he sends the players in interviews (an important part of management) he does seem to still be working at the Norwich level, and it just doesn't seem to be working.We are a bigger club than Norwich, but I think he's also got to be realistic about the players at his disposal. His more cautious tactics this year imply to me that he is aware as any of us of their limitations. You can't get average/young players to be any better than they are just because they're at a bigger club. It's pretty clear by what's happened that the job he got given by Lerner was to take this club and cut the wage bill, which is what he's done. The expectations of the fans are, in reality, disconnected from that and almost irrelevant. Having said that I think I'm starting to sound like I don't expect anything from us, but I do. I do, I just think the process the club have taken over the past few years in stabalising the club have been more painful than any of us could have realised. But again – looking at the money side of things and how we have the youngest squad in the premiership, I don't think what's happened at Villa is surprising. I don't think our more chaotic set of results is surprising at all. And as I said above, one step at a time, and I believe we can, with fixed finances, look forwards with (eventually) more hope.
Quote from: Gregorys Boy on May 25, 2014, 12:50:57 PMQuote from: Rolta on May 25, 2014, 12:42:09 PMQuote from: Newby on May 25, 2014, 11:45:59 AMThere are parameters in place at every club. Every single club. Whilst I will apologise for the tongue comment, it does baffle me that some people seem to feel sorry for Lambert for doing such a poor job. In the meantime, whilst we seem to have no choice, we just take it and have to accept it.Seriously though – I'm not saying anyone has to feel sorry for him. I don't. I also don't think he's done a poor job if you look at the club as a whole. Like someone else said, the club was in a mess before he came, only now, thanks to Lambert, we're not losing all that money. It's not about choice or anything, it's seeing the situation at the club for what it is. My opinion: you come across as spoilt. I'd be sorry for saying it if you hadn't told me to take my tongue out of my arse (good one, by the way). I don't even know how you can be spoilt as a Villa fan, because in my experience supporting the club through the nineties and especially the last decade (bar the MON money money flurry and the FA cup final with Gregory – also helped along by stupid investment in aging players) there has on the most part only been bad seasons. I'm as into Villa as anyone, and I have hopes for us, but it doesn't just happen because I want it to happen. The club has to become well run for us to get anywhere. In reality we are not big enough to compete at the very top – in reality we are a mid-table team. I don't like how money has ruined football, but it has happened. And having said all that, I am still an optimist, and I hope when/if we do become well run (getting the finances in order is the first step – well done, Paul Lambert – I give credit where it is definitely due) we can emulate teams like Everton or Tottenham, and from there whatever. One step at a time though. I'd say to you to get your tongue out of your arse, but seeing your lack of logic I don't think you know where your tongue or your arse is. You make a very interesting point, but to be fair it is not through choice than Lambert has had little to spend it is because the club want it that way. It may have partly been the reason behind his appointment given what he did at Norwich with very little money.It is true than since the late 90s/early 00s we have mostly struggled to be anything other than a mid-table club, but then that is largely due to poor managers or the club being poorly run. The main point is that they should have not have let us drop so far since the MON days. I don't think anyone is expecting us to compete at the top level, but top eight or six shouldn't be beyond us, also we have become too negative when it comes to the cups. The odd good run, and threat to winning one of those combained with progress in the league I don't think should be too much to ask for.So what I'm saying doesn't rule out us getting back to being in the top ten. But when we were losing £50million a year post MON, we were losing money (on overpaid players, many aging and uncommitted and many more not even making squads or playing) that's money we were throwing away for effectively no reason – the club wasn't getting any benefit from it. We couldn't even afford it and built debts of something like £200million. Imagine what we could have done with £200million spent the right way. Basically we were broken, and clubs in similar, if not precisely, our situation have dropped far far lower than we are now – they've dropped not just into the Championship, but into League One and League Two. We do seem to have stabalised under Lambert, and from here, because he has also stabalised the finances, we are now in a position to grow. We haven't been in that position since MON, because we've still been losing money. Factor in that we still have Bent, Hutton and Given (no matter if any of them are brought back into the team) we still have overpaid problem players. As they're mostly in the last years of their contracts that's another £10 or so million we don't have to throw away the season after this one. I think the level of austerity has its logic, even if it was risky. I'd even say it has on the most part paid off. I hope next season and the season after we can get new contracts signed for those who deserve them, get rid of the last of the over-paid, sign a bit more experience and generally fine tune the slow process of building a committed squad who have come to Villa for more than a pay check. For that to happen I believe we need stability. I also think Lambert hasn't had the funds to be judged fairly so far, and I don't see any reason to think Lambert has become a worse manager than he was at Norwich, when it is clear as day his financial limitations could realistically have ended up in relegation under plenty of other managers. I just think we're still in the turnaround period. Again, without Man City levels of money there is no quick fix. A lot of what happens will clearly rest on what happens with Lerner. Talking about the top 8-6, the clubs up there are investing. Look at Southampton – they spent £30odd million last summer, and they have surely one of the best youth academies in England – one that puts ours (currently) to shame. And when we were bad throughout, say, the 00's – Doug Ellis had us run well arguably (we weren't building £200million of debt on an out of control wagebill), but for most of the managers he never invested in the team. He wouldn't even pay Erik Bakke's loan fee from a Championship club. No investment, no top 8.
Yeah, I was very disappointed in last season. It's a fine line between where we ended up and how we looked to be finishing after beating Chelsea. We were 4 points from 12th, but unlike last season we finished this one without Benteke – if we had him fit, who knows.We spent £20million last year (but we bought low wage players, not £20million on experienced players on high wages – I can't see Tonev/Helenius/Bacuna being on much) but £10million of that was also injured for basically the whole season. That happens though. It's all part of it. Anyway, I do hope we get some experience and next season might be a little less painful.