Quote from: supertom on November 27, 2014, 01:13:06 PMI really do question Bents attitude and motivation these days, and most definitely his fitness. However I think a large part of him seeming so sombre about playing football is down to Lamberts treatment of him. Bent could certainly do more and should be fitter, but if he is half assing it for this manager, I don't entirely blame him. That said Benty kept us up for two seasons, in just half a season of each. I think he proved valuable all told. But for his goals in Houlliers run in and McLeish first half season, we'd have been absolutely done for. And if you recall in McLeish's season there was a stat that came out saying Bent had the fewest touches of any Premier League regular in the league. Yet he still hit 9 league goals in 22 games that season. I like Bent, and part of me still wants him to come back in a month and finally hit form again, but it's a shame to see someone at just 30, playing like he's a 38 year old desperately clinging on to the last few months of league football he'll play in League 2. He should still be in his pomp. The funny thing is though. Get Pulis in by January, and Bent back from his loan looking sharper and fitter, and I think he'd possibly start hammering in goals, because he'd be getting service. The last bit - not going to happen, he's broken, I doubt he'll find another club once his contract finishes.The bit about not playing for this manager - he was the same at Fulham last season so it's not just down to Lambert.The reality is he picked up 2-3 injuries fairly close together and all pretty nasty and between them they've taken his pace and with it he's lost the desire needed to be a top player. If he really wanted to he could get himself the fittest he's ever been and adapt his game and get a few more years at the top but I just don't see it in him.
I really do question Bents attitude and motivation these days, and most definitely his fitness. However I think a large part of him seeming so sombre about playing football is down to Lamberts treatment of him. Bent could certainly do more and should be fitter, but if he is half assing it for this manager, I don't entirely blame him. That said Benty kept us up for two seasons, in just half a season of each. I think he proved valuable all told. But for his goals in Houlliers run in and McLeish first half season, we'd have been absolutely done for. And if you recall in McLeish's season there was a stat that came out saying Bent had the fewest touches of any Premier League regular in the league. Yet he still hit 9 league goals in 22 games that season. I like Bent, and part of me still wants him to come back in a month and finally hit form again, but it's a shame to see someone at just 30, playing like he's a 38 year old desperately clinging on to the last few months of league football he'll play in League 2. He should still be in his pomp. The funny thing is though. Get Pulis in by January, and Bent back from his loan looking sharper and fitter, and I think he'd possibly start hammering in goals, because he'd be getting service.
Darren Bent says he joined Championship side Brighton on loan from Aston Villa "because there are only so many slaps in the face you can take".The 30-year-old striker joined Villa from Sunderland for an initial £18m in January 2011, but since Paul Lambert became manager in 2012 he has made just 13 Premier League appearances for them.Bent, who has 13 England caps, spent last season on loan at Fulham."I just want to play and I'd reached my boiling point," he told BBC Sussex."It was hard not playing in Paul's first season, but this was worse. The team was struggling, not scoring goals and you still don't get a chance. There are only so many slaps in the face you can take."Lambert's side have managed just six goals in 12 Premier League games this season, and sit 16th, with a league-low 24 shots on target.Sami Hyypia's Brighton have problems of their own, having struggled to recover from the sale of Leonardo Ulloa, who scored 26 times in 58 games for them, and are languishing in 20th in the Championship.Their top-scorer this term is centre-half Lewis Dunk on five.This week, summer signing Chris O'Grady was loaned to Sheffield United after failing to find the net in 11 matches, while Craig Mackail-Smith returned to former club Peterborough United."Anyone who knows me knows I just want to work hard all week and play on Saturday," added Bent."I want to slot in at Brighton and do everything I can to help them improve. I'm just desperate to play football because it's been far too long."
This notion that Bent 'just needs service' inadvertently sums up why he is, in fact, useless. This is a player who requires the entire team to be set up to give him the ball how and where he likes it, and he does nothing else for anyone else. The stats bear this out - whenever Bent has scored more for a club, the team overall has scored fewer (check his seasons at Spurs).
The team was struggling, not scoring goals and you still don't get a chance. There are only so many slaps in the face you can take.
That's not what he's saying there though is it? He's saying he's hungy (though he'd be pretty full by the look of him) and just wants to play.
We all know by now that Lambert makes it up as he goes along. He is winging it currently with the claim that our style of play is based on pace. That gives him the excuse to say Bent is not quick enough to fit in with his current master plan. When Benteke comes back we also know what comes next. Twenty two carat Route One. It is absolutely inevitable with a midfield devoid of creativity and imagination.
Darren Bent's late landmark earns Aston Villa draw with West BromAston Villa 1 West Brom 1Premier LeagueAston Villa Darren Bent 80West Brom Shane Long 51Stuart James at Villa Park The Guardian, Sunday 30 September 2012 18.15 BSTOn a day when Darren Bent endured the disappointment of being dropped in front of the England manager, the Aston Villa striker provided the best possible riposte as he came off the substitutes' bench to score 10 minutes from time and deny West Bromwich Albion the victory that would have lifted them to third in the table.All the frustration that Bent had been bottling up on the sidelines, where he had a face like thunder at times as he watched the two strikers picked ahead of him huff and puff without success, came to the surface as he celebrated the 150th league goal of his career.Having also lost the captaincy earlier in the month, it was easy to understand why Bent was so fired up as he set off in the direction of the dugout before being mobbed by team-mates.It was a big call for Paul Lambert to leave out the club's record signing, especially as Bent scored against Southampton last weekend, and it looked as though the Villa manager's decision would backfire when Shane Long, returning to the ground where he was on the receiving end of a dreadful tackle from Alan Hutton last season, put Albion ahead in the 51st minute. There was a sense that Villa were beginning to run out of ideas when Lambert replaced Christian Benteke with Bent in the 69th minute. Neither Benteke nor Gabriel Agbonlahor, who kept his place after scoring twice against Manchester City in midweek, looked particularly threatening, and it was easy to imagine Bent relishing the chance to prove Lambert wrong.His eyes must have lit up when Albion failed to deal with Barry Bannan's corner and the loose ball dropped invitingly for him to sweep a left-footed volley beyond Ben Foster with what was only his third touch of the game, to give Villa the point they deserved.Roy Hodgson, the England manager, was still in the ground at that point. "It was fantastic," said Bent, who was omitted from the England squad last month. "Obviously it would have been nice to play from the start of the game but I managed to get the goal so it gets us a point."Asked whether his goal was the perfect response to being placed on the bench, Bent replied: "Yeah, maybe. It's obviously been a difficult couple of weeks, losing the captaincy first off then finding out I wasn't playing today. But at the same time I thought the boys played fantastically well and battled all through the game, and we deserved a point."Lambert, who showed his ruthless edge when he dropped Shay Given after the second game of the season, insisted there was no ill-feeling between him and Bent. "He's got nothing to prove to me, Darren, because I know what he can do," Lambert said. "As I've said before, I'll need everybody at the football club."Although Albion started brightly and could have gone ahead when Long headed wide in profligate fashion, Villa looked the more accomplished side in the first half. Ben Foster, poor in midweek against Liverpool, tipped Brett Holman's 30-yard half-volley over the bar and produced an even better save to deny the same player later in the half, when the Australian's angled shot took a wicked deflection. "I said there were no worries about Ben Foster," said Steve Clarke, Albion's head coach, who had to reorganise after Chris Brunt pulled his hamstring and Billy Jones picked up a knee injury.Long's goal arrived after Zoltan Gera's perfectly weighted pass released Morrison in the inside right channel. Played onside by Matthew Lowton, Morrison delivered a low centre that Long tapped in at the far post after Ron Vlaar had tried and failed to sweep the ball behind.In a frantic finish, Romelu Lukaku twice came close to restoring Albion's lead, only to be denied by the post and Brad Guzan's reflexes – while at the other end Bent's whipped effort flashed inches over. By that point, though, the striker had already made his mark. "His goal was brilliant, it was a world-class finish – that's what he does," Lambert said. "I explained that the captaincy thing was to let him do what he did there, which is to concentrate on scoring."