Quote from: Risso on November 15, 2014, 11:52:33 AMQuote from: passport1 on November 15, 2014, 11:36:21 AMI guess some on here hated top six finishes, getting to Wembley, playing in Europe and being a club that actually mattered.That must account for the MON vitriol. That's a bit like your wife or husband maxing out the credit card, remortgaging the house and spending the kids' birthday money on foreign holidays. Still, at least Magaluf was nice.You forgot to mention she was a really crap shag.
Quote from: passport1 on November 15, 2014, 11:36:21 AMI guess some on here hated top six finishes, getting to Wembley, playing in Europe and being a club that actually mattered.That must account for the MON vitriol. That's a bit like your wife or husband maxing out the credit card, remortgaging the house and spending the kids' birthday money on foreign holidays. Still, at least Magaluf was nice.
I guess some on here hated top six finishes, getting to Wembley, playing in Europe and being a club that actually mattered.That must account for the MON vitriol.
Quote from: Richard E on November 16, 2014, 09:28:47 PMQuote from: Chris Jameson on November 16, 2014, 09:05:21 PMHang on a minute, what happened to the clique? Is it a party line now?Yes, were you not at the covert planning meeting on Thursday?What? I was never in the clique in the first place, is that what you're telling me?
Quote from: Chris Jameson on November 16, 2014, 09:05:21 PMHang on a minute, what happened to the clique? Is it a party line now?Yes, were you not at the covert planning meeting on Thursday?
Hang on a minute, what happened to the clique? Is it a party line now?
Quote from: SoccerHQ on November 16, 2014, 07:39:15 PMQuote from: supertom on November 16, 2014, 02:28:33 PMQuote from: Monty on November 16, 2014, 02:01:18 PM'Thoroughly decent'? And, again, 'held in high regard' - by whom? By Robbie Savage and Steve Claridge?He is remarkable in one way. There aren't many managers who are so good at one thing and so bad at another. MON is, or at least was, quite amazing at motivating players, creating a club mentality or even a siege mentality, and inspiring loyalty in players and individual performances of a level higher than they often should be. However, he was a good candidate, even while with us, for the title of League's Least Progressive Tactician, along with training methods, player diets, squad use etc. He would have been a brilliant manager in the 1970s, but he was an inadequate one in the 2000s.In regards to our training and fitness I think O Neills injury records compared to each of our managers since speaks volumes. Also whilst his rotating policies should have been better. We kept a high tempo for 90 minutes far better under O Neill than the last couple of managers. I think there's some fallacy that O Neill had this lazy bunch of booze guzzling, fag smoking wasters at his disposal who couldn't last the season. I don't care how fit you are if you don't rotate your squad a bit, or make substitutions, even the fittest squad would struggle by March-April as we annually did. But in my view, on the seasons on a whole under O Neill our squad looked in much better nick than it does now. Players didn't drop like flies. And they always gave 110%Compare Gabby now to back then. Fitness, attitude but mostly work-rate. It's like a different player. If I had a squad of players I wanted fit for Prem competition and to be looked after. I'd be asking O Neill to do it long before I'd ask Houllier, Lambert, or TSM1.He really should've learnt from 08/09 in regards squad rotation.I still think of the two seasons 09/10 was our best opportunity to finish top 4 (clearly it had to be with the money Man. City were spending) and yet in March 2010 we had results like Villa 2 Wolves 2, Villa 1 Sunderland 1 and Chelsea 7 Villa 1 which knackered our GD compared to Spurs anfd Man., City.We didn't change the team enough. It wasn't impossible to win with below par 11s, christ early on in the season we won at Anfield with Shorey and Beye as our full backs.That reminds me, Habib fecking Beye. What was the point of signing him when Luke Young was already at the club and in the end he just decided to play Cuellar at RB for the whole season, what a waste of a signing.He did some good things for the club I'm not going to deny, 6th was about par for what we were spending but we did mess up some great opportunites.I always look at that game with Man City toward the end of O Neill's final season. It just set the course and path for two sides to go in wildly different directions. We were ahead of them at the time. 1-0 up and fairly good value for it. They won the game 3-1, finished the season ahead of us, got Milner that summer and the rest is (painful) history. To think within a year we went from competing with the likes of City, Spurs, Liverpool to push the established top 3 of that time, to squeeky bumming it in relegation scraps. I think often not using very energetic players like Sidwell or Coker enough to freshen things up was to his detriment. They may not have been brilliant but to rest a Barry or Petrov etc, in that middle and try and inject some energy in the spring decline. Some players didn't get enough of a look in either. Routledge, who's proved useful at this level since with a bit of faith in him, and wee Shaun. It's not just that he bought a few duffers. He bought useful squad fillers and didn't use them and they ultimately became duffers. But as we know, O Neill never learned from mistakes and never had a plan B. And what we've been left with in the last two appointments is two poor mans answer to O Neill.
Quote from: supertom on November 16, 2014, 02:28:33 PMQuote from: Monty on November 16, 2014, 02:01:18 PM'Thoroughly decent'? And, again, 'held in high regard' - by whom? By Robbie Savage and Steve Claridge?He is remarkable in one way. There aren't many managers who are so good at one thing and so bad at another. MON is, or at least was, quite amazing at motivating players, creating a club mentality or even a siege mentality, and inspiring loyalty in players and individual performances of a level higher than they often should be. However, he was a good candidate, even while with us, for the title of League's Least Progressive Tactician, along with training methods, player diets, squad use etc. He would have been a brilliant manager in the 1970s, but he was an inadequate one in the 2000s.In regards to our training and fitness I think O Neills injury records compared to each of our managers since speaks volumes. Also whilst his rotating policies should have been better. We kept a high tempo for 90 minutes far better under O Neill than the last couple of managers. I think there's some fallacy that O Neill had this lazy bunch of booze guzzling, fag smoking wasters at his disposal who couldn't last the season. I don't care how fit you are if you don't rotate your squad a bit, or make substitutions, even the fittest squad would struggle by March-April as we annually did. But in my view, on the seasons on a whole under O Neill our squad looked in much better nick than it does now. Players didn't drop like flies. And they always gave 110%Compare Gabby now to back then. Fitness, attitude but mostly work-rate. It's like a different player. If I had a squad of players I wanted fit for Prem competition and to be looked after. I'd be asking O Neill to do it long before I'd ask Houllier, Lambert, or TSM1.He really should've learnt from 08/09 in regards squad rotation.I still think of the two seasons 09/10 was our best opportunity to finish top 4 (clearly it had to be with the money Man. City were spending) and yet in March 2010 we had results like Villa 2 Wolves 2, Villa 1 Sunderland 1 and Chelsea 7 Villa 1 which knackered our GD compared to Spurs anfd Man., City.We didn't change the team enough. It wasn't impossible to win with below par 11s, christ early on in the season we won at Anfield with Shorey and Beye as our full backs.That reminds me, Habib fecking Beye. What was the point of signing him when Luke Young was already at the club and in the end he just decided to play Cuellar at RB for the whole season, what a waste of a signing.He did some good things for the club I'm not going to deny, 6th was about par for what we were spending but we did mess up some great opportunites.
Quote from: Monty on November 16, 2014, 02:01:18 PM'Thoroughly decent'? And, again, 'held in high regard' - by whom? By Robbie Savage and Steve Claridge?He is remarkable in one way. There aren't many managers who are so good at one thing and so bad at another. MON is, or at least was, quite amazing at motivating players, creating a club mentality or even a siege mentality, and inspiring loyalty in players and individual performances of a level higher than they often should be. However, he was a good candidate, even while with us, for the title of League's Least Progressive Tactician, along with training methods, player diets, squad use etc. He would have been a brilliant manager in the 1970s, but he was an inadequate one in the 2000s.In regards to our training and fitness I think O Neills injury records compared to each of our managers since speaks volumes. Also whilst his rotating policies should have been better. We kept a high tempo for 90 minutes far better under O Neill than the last couple of managers. I think there's some fallacy that O Neill had this lazy bunch of booze guzzling, fag smoking wasters at his disposal who couldn't last the season. I don't care how fit you are if you don't rotate your squad a bit, or make substitutions, even the fittest squad would struggle by March-April as we annually did. But in my view, on the seasons on a whole under O Neill our squad looked in much better nick than it does now. Players didn't drop like flies. And they always gave 110%Compare Gabby now to back then. Fitness, attitude but mostly work-rate. It's like a different player. If I had a squad of players I wanted fit for Prem competition and to be looked after. I'd be asking O Neill to do it long before I'd ask Houllier, Lambert, or TSM1.
'Thoroughly decent'? And, again, 'held in high regard' - by whom? By Robbie Savage and Steve Claridge?He is remarkable in one way. There aren't many managers who are so good at one thing and so bad at another. MON is, or at least was, quite amazing at motivating players, creating a club mentality or even a siege mentality, and inspiring loyalty in players and individual performances of a level higher than they often should be. However, he was a good candidate, even while with us, for the title of League's Least Progressive Tactician, along with training methods, player diets, squad use etc. He would have been a brilliant manager in the 1970s, but he was an inadequate one in the 2000s.
Nobody has said that the O'Neill years were bad. What HAS been said is that with the resources he had available he should have done better, and his legacy continues to cause problems.
Quote from: dave.woodhall on November 16, 2014, 12:35:32 PMNobody has said that the O'Neill years were bad. What HAS been said is that with the resources he had available he should have done better, and his legacy continues to cause problems.Exactly my thoughts...with the addition that the way and timing of him leaving wiped out every drop of good faith that he built up. The act of a gutless man.
Quote from: Gareth on November 16, 2014, 11:25:10 PMQuote from: dave.woodhall on November 16, 2014, 12:35:32 PMNobody has said that the O'Neill years were bad. What HAS been said is that with the resources he had available he should have done better, and his legacy continues to cause problems.Exactly my thoughts...with the addition that the way and timing of him leaving wiped out every drop of good faith that he built up. The act of a gutless man.Or one that was constructively dismissed
Quote from: Gareth on November 16, 2014, 11:25:10 PMQuote from: dave.woodhall on November 16, 2014, 12:35:32 PMNobody has said that the O'Neill years were bad. What HAS been said is that with the resources he had available he should have done better, and his legacy continues to cause problems.Exactly my thoughts...with the addition that the way and timing of him leaving wiped out every drop of good faith that he built up. The act of a gutless man.I think it was Tom Ross who said that everything he did was for the benefit of Team O'Neill. What I do know is that he left us without a single senior coach, four days before the season started.
There was a little more to it than that.
Quote from: passport1 on November 16, 2014, 11:39:18 PMThere was a little more to it than that.This better be good, because either you are privy to some earth shattering revelation or you know absolutely nothing at all and find yourself in dark corner. Good luck.