There is always the Ginger Mourinho if we were ambitious enough to try and prize him away.
Quote from: pauliewalnuts on October 12, 2015, 04:09:41 PMPearson is absolutely hat-stand. No thanks.Moyes would make more sense. At Man United he was bound to fail, following who he did. Rodgers would be a better option, if given the brief to create a set up like the one he worked with at Swansea.Although to differing degrees, none of those really grab me. I'd rather we tried something a bit more different and went for someone like Prandelli.I agree with all of that until the last bit. I think we are too fragile at the moment to take that sort of gamble.
Pearson is absolutely hat-stand. No thanks.Moyes would make more sense. At Man United he was bound to fail, following who he did. Rodgers would be a better option, if given the brief to create a set up like the one he worked with at Swansea.Although to differing degrees, none of those really grab me. I'd rather we tried something a bit more different and went for someone like Prandelli.
I do wonder what people want. I mean, people don't want a relegation battle but want to be entertained. Those two don't come together overnight. Short term is to have a few seasons where we're not dicking around the bottom six. Once we actually establish ourselves as a midtable club again we might be in a position to start progressing other facets. Priority number one is survival in any form it takes. The dull Moyes thing is BS. They were a relegation candidate when he took over and he oversaw a squad that were established in the top 6 and could upset any of the big boys on their day. I would take that over anything I've seen since the MON era.
Quote from: Chris Smith on October 12, 2015, 04:21:34 PMQuote from: pauliewalnuts on October 12, 2015, 04:09:41 PMPearson is absolutely hat-stand. No thanks.Moyes would make more sense. At Man United he was bound to fail, following who he did. Rodgers would be a better option, if given the brief to create a set up like the one he worked with at Swansea.Although to differing degrees, none of those really grab me. I'd rather we tried something a bit more different and went for someone like Prandelli.I agree with all of that until the last bit. I think we are too fragile at the moment to take that sort of gamble.What do you mean by "too fragile", Chris. The way I see it we have the best squad we've had in years, not perfect but there's plenty of talent there. We just desperately need somebody to organise them. I don't see the huge risk in bringing in an experienced manager providing he's good enough. Limiting ourselves to 'Premier League experience' leaves us giving another crap manager a massive contribution to his retirement fund.
Rodgers reminds me of the type of journeyman boxer who gets a shot at a vacant title and in the fight of his life wins. He gets beaten in his first defence by the only top-class opponent he's ever faced but from then on he gets all sorts of fights for minor titles and then against up and comers because he's a former champion.
Quote from: dave.woodhall on October 12, 2015, 06:57:27 PMRodgers reminds me of the type of journeyman boxer who gets a shot at a vacant title and in the fight of his life wins. He gets beaten in his first defence by the only top-class opponent he's ever faced but from then on he gets all sorts of fights for minor titles and then against up and comers because he's a former champion. Lloyd Honeyghan?
Quote from: Nastylee on October 12, 2015, 01:56:47 PMI do wonder what people want. I mean, people don't want a relegation battle but want to be entertained. Those two don't come together overnight. Short term is to have a few seasons where we're not dicking around the bottom six. Once we actually establish ourselves as a midtable club again we might be in a position to start progressing other facets. Priority number one is survival in any form it takes. The dull Moyes thing is BS. They were a relegation candidate when he took over and he oversaw a squad that were established in the top 6 and could upset any of the big boys on their day. I would take that over anything I've seen since the MON era.I remember Moyes having a decent side, with the likes of Baines and Pienaar combining well on the left. Sides with gumption that went to the likes of City and United and gave them plenty of it. In contrast to MON, he left a very steady ship to Martinez and did the right thing by Everton with regards to the handover. Even got United to spunk a silly amount of cash on Fellaini.....Turning up our nose at Moyes would be ridiculous.Pearson is a nonsense suggestion though, Id be on for giving Sherwood more time than bringing in that clown.
Quote from: Rudy Can't Fail on October 12, 2015, 07:02:09 PMQuote from: Chris Smith on October 12, 2015, 04:21:34 PMQuote from: pauliewalnuts on October 12, 2015, 04:09:41 PMPearson is absolutely hat-stand. No thanks.Moyes would make more sense. At Man United he was bound to fail, following who he did. Rodgers would be a better option, if given the brief to create a set up like the one he worked with at Swansea.Although to differing degrees, none of those really grab me. I'd rather we tried something a bit more different and went for someone like Prandelli.I agree with all of that until the last bit. I think we are too fragile at the moment to take that sort of gamble.What do you mean by "too fragile", Chris. The way I see it we have the best squad we've had in years, not perfect but there's plenty of talent there. We just desperately need somebody to organise them. I don't see the huge risk in bringing in an experienced manager providing he's good enough. Limiting ourselves to 'Premier League experience' leaves us giving another crap manager a massive contribution to his retirement fund.I'd be in broad agreement with that. But the time to make a bold appointment from a different league is early in the summer, to give them some input into player recruitment and to give him the pre season to bed in those new ideas.What we would be dealing with someone coming in now is someone firefighting (again). Lack of Prem experience in that scenario doesn't automatically mean they would fail. But it makes it harder to succeed.
Quote from: brontebilly on October 12, 2015, 07:04:00 PMQuote from: Nastylee on October 12, 2015, 01:56:47 PMI do wonder what people want. I mean, people don't want a relegation battle but want to be entertained. Those two don't come together overnight. Short term is to have a few seasons where we're not dicking around the bottom six. Once we actually establish ourselves as a midtable club again we might be in a position to start progressing other facets. Priority number one is survival in any form it takes. The dull Moyes thing is BS. They were a relegation candidate when he took over and he oversaw a squad that were established in the top 6 and could upset any of the big boys on their day. I would take that over anything I've seen since the MON era.I remember Moyes having a decent side, with the likes of Baines and Pienaar combining well on the left. Sides with gumption that went to the likes of City and United and gave them plenty of it. In contrast to MON, he left a very steady ship to Martinez and did the right thing by Everton with regards to the handover. Even got United to spunk a silly amount of cash on Fellaini.....Turning up our nose at Moyes would be ridiculous.Pearson is a nonsense suggestion though, Id be on for giving Sherwood more time than bringing in that clown.A nonsense suggestion? Last nine games of last season in the Premier League his record was Won 7 Drew 1 Lost I . A clown? I don't think so. That record shows he must have some understanding of the game.A lot more than Sherwood has shown!