Yes Rodgers did fail at Reading, he followed the successful Steve Coppell era of Reading play 4-4-2 in the prem so he couldn't impose his own system as the players were drill in that.Last few years we must be one of the few prem clubs that don't really have a playing identity in that our performances are so poor on a consistant basis so I really don't see that being an issue.One thing I don't get is why managers get written off when people magnify their CV and find a bad spell at a club 5-6 years ago. If a manager on average manages 8 clubs during his career he will at some point find a club where it just dosen't work.It's different abroad, Wenger, Klopp and Benitez all have relegations on their CVs but they still got appointments. It's like when Martinez went down and people said he was no good...yes but it's Wigan, back in league one their natural home.
Moyes represents the safety that Pulis and Allardyce do, you know you are going to become forged out of steel and fight and scrap and win the right to go and play.
Quote from: Sexual Ealing on October 12, 2015, 11:46:30 PMQuote from: Louzie0Tim on October 12, 2015, 11:28:20 PMQuote from: Sexual Ealing on October 12, 2015, 11:17:49 PMParticularly the last point about Moyes. Why would anyone want a decade's career regression?He might have more money at his disposal than he had at Everton.I doubt it. He made some comparatively big buys for them if I recall correctly: Fellaini, Lescott, all the strikers that didn't work out (Johnson, Saha, Yakubu), Distin, Baines, Rodwell, Bilyaletdinov (sp.). I can't see Randolph forking out for similar equivalents nowadays.I don't think it's fair to describe Rodwell as an expensive purchase considering he joined them when he was seven!
Quote from: Louzie0Tim on October 12, 2015, 11:28:20 PMQuote from: Sexual Ealing on October 12, 2015, 11:17:49 PMParticularly the last point about Moyes. Why would anyone want a decade's career regression?He might have more money at his disposal than he had at Everton.I doubt it. He made some comparatively big buys for them if I recall correctly: Fellaini, Lescott, all the strikers that didn't work out (Johnson, Saha, Yakubu), Distin, Baines, Rodwell, Bilyaletdinov (sp.). I can't see Randolph forking out for similar equivalents nowadays.
Quote from: Sexual Ealing on October 12, 2015, 11:17:49 PMParticularly the last point about Moyes. Why would anyone want a decade's career regression?He might have more money at his disposal than he had at Everton.
Particularly the last point about Moyes. Why would anyone want a decade's career regression?
Quote from: ozzjim on October 13, 2015, 12:06:36 AMMoyes represents the safety that Pulis and Allardyce do, you know you are going to become forged out of steel and fight and scrap and win the right to go and play.Moyes represents safety in that he's a steady and reliable hand, but I think it's harsh to put him in the same bracket as Pulis and Allardyce. Everton fans may moan (they always bloody do), but they played some decent football under Moyes. Not earth-shattering, but at least it looked like football, and Moyes signed some good footballers, as opposed to the assortment of heavyweight boxers, bouncers and bricklayers that those other two populate their squads with. I just think we need someone with the balls, the grit and the talent to take control of a huge rudderless ship and turn it around - which Moyes has demonstrably done. Doesn't have to be him, someone young and dynamic is fine, as long as it's someone who has the managerial ability to match (or preferably outweigh) their massive ego. The last thing I want is another self-serving rent-a-quote manager, if all we're looking for is someone who can do good bantz with Gary Lineker then we might as well appoint Willie frigging Thorne. Our recent history of lurching from one bonkers managerial appointment to the next with no apparent eye for continuity has left us entrenched in this hellish cycle where the pressure grows with every failure; now every managerial choice is more crucial than the last, the stakes are higher, desperation increases, the wrong decision is made, and we go again (sorry), and again, and again, and eventually we're so far down the list we end up in the bottom three with the blagger's blagger at the helm. At some point we have to stop pissing about with these short-sighted punts and make a reasoned, informed, intelligent and thoughtful appointment of someone who can get us moving in the right direction and build for the future.
To be fair to Moyes his Everton teams movement in the 3-3 at Villa Park was miles ahead of ours, they played some lovely stuff that day.
Quote from: LukeJames on October 13, 2015, 01:56:10 AMTo be fair to Moyes his Everton teams movement in the 3-3 at Villa Park was miles ahead of ours, they played some lovely stuff that day.They pissed all over us in Lambert's second game in charge as well.
Quote from: passitsideways on October 13, 2015, 05:45:55 AMQuote from: LukeJames on October 13, 2015, 01:56:10 AMTo be fair to Moyes his Everton teams movement in the 3-3 at Villa Park was miles ahead of ours, they played some lovely stuff that day.They pissed all over us in Lambert's second game in charge as well.Indeed. So much so they seemed to feel sorry for us and played in 1st gear in the 2nd half. Thought they were going to offer us a player or 2 at one stage.
If we do replace the manager, one thing I am certain about is that we must go for somebody with experience and that has managed at a high level. We must reduce the risk of a new manager not succeeding as much as possible.The last three managers would have to have stepped up a level to get Villa to an acceptable level. A new manager must be somebody that has managed clubs at the upper end of their league. The only two from British football that fit that bill are Rodgers and Moyes but we should be looking outside of British managers as well.The money will be there but does the club have 'ambition' to sell that will make it attractive.