Quote from: RussellC on September 28, 2015, 11:52:54 AMQuote from: Villa in Denmark on September 28, 2015, 11:44:34 AMThere's plenty of people out there who could be a good fit.So you're not prepared to allow the current Manager a reasonable amount of patience but want to spend a fortune to bring in a Foreign Manager with no Premiership experience at all? Following the pattern, we'd then give that Manager what, 20 games, before going through the process again if it wasn't working? What was it that Tom Fox said about flipping a coin again...?It all depends what you term a reasonable amount of patience. Say we pick up one point from the next three games, what then? I can't imagine many teams have stayed up after taking 5 points from their first ten games, so at what point do you call it quits? Of course, we might do much better than that and of course I hope he rams my words down my throat with at least 7 points. But my question is at what point if this poor run continues do you let him go? In my doomsday scenario above, it would still be mid October.
Quote from: Villa in Denmark on September 28, 2015, 11:44:34 AMThere's plenty of people out there who could be a good fit.So you're not prepared to allow the current Manager a reasonable amount of patience but want to spend a fortune to bring in a Foreign Manager with no Premiership experience at all? Following the pattern, we'd then give that Manager what, 20 games, before going through the process again if it wasn't working? What was it that Tom Fox said about flipping a coin again...?
There's plenty of people out there who could be a good fit.
The thing that grates me about this thread is that so few are prepared to entertain the idea that Sherwood might learn from his mistakes. Against Leicester he was rightfully criticised for his substitutions. Our excellent first-half performance has largely been forgotten because of the result. Against the Blose he made 2 game-changing ones that won us the game. Yet much of the focus is still on our poor first-half performance, rather than the result. See where I’m coming from?
Quote from: RussellC on September 28, 2015, 01:11:12 PMQuote from: olaftab on September 28, 2015, 01:07:11 PMQuote from: RussellC on September 28, 2015, 11:07:08 AMSo have we been stable for 3 seasons or fighting relegation? Because they're 2 different things in my book.Stability in football is described as not changing manager and allowing the appointed person time to sort things out. We did that by sticking with Lambert for 3 seasons.Fighting relegation is just the state of performance similar to fighting to get in the Champions League or actually trying to win the title. Stability produced very poor performance for us whereas for Arsenal, for example, it delivered consistent Champions League football. Chelsea however maintained a very high level of performance without having stability in their coaching staff. Crystal Palace have done much better than us by changing Managers.Sorry, but the idea that constantly fighting relegation equates to 'stability' is utter nonsense. The threat of relegation carries hugely negative financial implications, completely the opposite to consistently challenging for the Title or Champions League qualification. Surely you can see that?I think you've missed the point Russell. I don't think for one minute Olly is calling that kind of stability anything to be pleased about.
Quote from: olaftab on September 28, 2015, 01:07:11 PMQuote from: RussellC on September 28, 2015, 11:07:08 AMSo have we been stable for 3 seasons or fighting relegation? Because they're 2 different things in my book.Stability in football is described as not changing manager and allowing the appointed person time to sort things out. We did that by sticking with Lambert for 3 seasons.Fighting relegation is just the state of performance similar to fighting to get in the Champions League or actually trying to win the title. Stability produced very poor performance for us whereas for Arsenal, for example, it delivered consistent Champions League football. Chelsea however maintained a very high level of performance without having stability in their coaching staff. Crystal Palace have done much better than us by changing Managers.Sorry, but the idea that constantly fighting relegation equates to 'stability' is utter nonsense. The threat of relegation carries hugely negative financial implications, completely the opposite to consistently challenging for the Title or Champions League qualification. Surely you can see that?
Quote from: RussellC on September 28, 2015, 11:07:08 AMSo have we been stable for 3 seasons or fighting relegation? Because they're 2 different things in my book.Stability in football is described as not changing manager and allowing the appointed person time to sort things out. We did that by sticking with Lambert for 3 seasons.Fighting relegation is just the state of performance similar to fighting to get in the Champions League or actually trying to win the title. Stability produced very poor performance for us whereas for Arsenal, for example, it delivered consistent Champions League football. Chelsea however maintained a very high level of performance without having stability in their coaching staff. Crystal Palace have done much better than us by changing Managers.
So have we been stable for 3 seasons or fighting relegation? Because they're 2 different things in my book.
Quote from: Toronto Villa on September 28, 2015, 01:16:58 PMQuote from: RussellC on September 28, 2015, 01:11:12 PMQuote from: olaftab on September 28, 2015, 01:07:11 PMQuote from: RussellC on September 28, 2015, 11:07:08 AMSo have we been stable for 3 seasons or fighting relegation? Because they're 2 different things in my book.Stability in football is described as not changing manager and allowing the appointed person time to sort things out. We did that by sticking with Lambert for 3 seasons.Fighting relegation is just the state of performance similar to fighting to get in the Champions League or actually trying to win the title. Stability produced very poor performance for us whereas for Arsenal, for example, it delivered consistent Champions League football. Chelsea however maintained a very high level of performance without having stability in their coaching staff. Crystal Palace have done much better than us by changing Managers.Sorry, but the idea that constantly fighting relegation equates to 'stability' is utter nonsense. The threat of relegation carries hugely negative financial implications, completely the opposite to consistently challenging for the Title or Champions League qualification. Surely you can see that?I think you've missed the point Russell. I don't think for one minute Olly is calling that kind of stability anything to be pleased about.But it's not even stability. 'Consistent' maybe. (as in 'consistently unstable'), but then I'm not really sure what point is being made and I've therefore missed? Lambert's tenure was littered with instability. The bomb-squad, the coaching staff debacle, Benteke's transfer request, an owner who did, didn't, did want to sell the club. You're not really telling me that Sherwood walked into a 'stable' club or situation are you?
Quote from: Risso on September 28, 2015, 12:06:14 PMQuote from: RussellC on September 28, 2015, 11:52:54 AMQuote from: Villa in Denmark on September 28, 2015, 11:44:34 AMThere's plenty of people out there who could be a good fit.So you're not prepared to allow the current Manager a reasonable amount of patience but want to spend a fortune to bring in a Foreign Manager with no Premiership experience at all? Following the pattern, we'd then give that Manager what, 20 games, before going through the process again if it wasn't working? What was it that Tom Fox said about flipping a coin again...?It all depends what you term a reasonable amount of patience. Say we pick up one point from the next three games, what then? I can't imagine many teams have stayed up after taking 5 points from their first ten games, so at what point do you call it quits? Of course, we might do much better than that and of course I hope he rams my words down my throat with at least 7 points. But my question is at what point if this poor run continues do you let him go? In my doomsday scenario above, it would still be mid October.That's the tricky thing.My preference is to sack him now. Harsh, I know, but I just think he's so out of his depth he won't improve.Having said that, if we give him time, like you said, we have to be careful how much time that is. It is difficult to say something like "Christmas" when we don't know what will have happened. How would people feel having said give him till Christmas only for us to now lose our next few matches - as you said?Lambert got an absurd amount of time. The first two seasons were bad enough to get most managers sacked, the third was so awful it defies description, and look how long they left him in place. Far too long.That is what is key to me in this situation. I've had enough of managers who clearly can't hack it getting far too long in the job, while we just poke around the relegation places year after year. We should have better standards than this.If we want this doubt and ill feeling towards Sherwood to go away, there is only one person who can change that - Sherwood. He needs to get us winning games. Who knows, perhaps we'll put together back to back league wins again?
What about Albion? And Liverpool, for that matter? And Sunderland - that's Sunderland, one of the worst sides the top flight has seen in a long time, who we couldn't beat at home.
I think a good part of the reason that sherwood isn't getting the patience afforded to other managers is that he was a much more divisive appointment than, say, lambert at the time. For me at least, I want him gone because the very concerns that I had about him are coming to pass, with precious little signs of any improvement (in fact it's getting progressively worse).
I think the aim was to not chop and change with Lambert. Thats the aim of stability to ride through some of the ups and downs. Look at it a bit like a stock that you invest in. Even if it improves over time when looked at in years of growth it can still have ups and downs in between. In the case of Lambert the desire for stability in the manager position was driving our value down to ultimately relegation. Nobody wanted that and we sold just before we all lost our shirts.
That told me he was capable of what he hoped he was capable of. Unfortunately he simply hasn't built on it despite being afforded the liberty of bringing in his own players.
The signings have been pretty good, I don't think anyone would argue with that. But what's concerning is that he doesn't appear to know what he wants to do with them. Maybe one of the reasons they're taking so much time to gel is because they're getting confused messages.
Quote from: Toronto Villa on September 28, 2015, 01:40:25 PMThat told me he was capable of what he hoped he was capable of. Unfortunately he simply hasn't built on it despite being afforded the liberty of bringing in his own players.When I read things like this I genuinely think that some of our Supporters have just forgotten that we lost 4 of our best players in the summer. "Afforded the liberty of bringing in his own players"?? Come on - that's not serious is it?