Great use of quote functionality there.
The thing that worries me is that it doesn't just look ineffective or uninspiring, it just looks more than a little bit bat-shit mental.Sherwood showed a few times at Spurs that he acts somewhat strangely under pressure (not quite as strangely as, say, Nigel Pearson, but pretty strange nonetheless), so I am expecting we'll see a fair bit of this.It is the mentalness of the whole set up that concerns me.Let's be totally honest, we all know what is going to happen, don't we? It'll get worse and worse and he'll get the sack, possibly too late to save us.Let's just cut out the months and months of shitness and bin him now. It has been a mistake.
The Villa job does seem to beat a lot of managers. Tim is already looking a lot older and more haggard than he did last season.
The result against Liverpool in the semi was as much down to Rodger's setting his team up incorrectly as it was a success by Sherwood..fucking up in that semi is on the list of reasons Rodgers got the bullet.
Wouldn't say it was a mistake. He didn't relegate us after all which was the easiest thing to do seeing as when he pitched up we couldn't even score a frigging goal.
Sherwood is making same errors he made at Spurs ..poor tactics and doesn't know his best team Here is a Spurs fan summing up of his flaws ..an seems he has learned nothing http://www.spursfanatic.com/blog/5-consistent-tactical-errors-tim-sherwood/
“I fret, worry, all of that,” says Sherwood. "But I was having sleepless nights last season when it was going well. It’s part and parcel of the job. I live this job 24-7. I’ve got a family at home and they realise this is me for now.“If I was a fan I would 100% be frustrated, but I have to tell them that they should try being a manager and putting it right.“I had a manager in the opposite dugout (Mark Hughes) who hasn’t had it his own way at every club but he’s come through and stuck to his beliefs. That’s exactly what Tim Sherwood will be doing.”It was a 2-1 home defeat against Stoke in February when Sherwood made his debut as manager. There’s been an FA Cup final on the way - but in Sherwood’s 21 league games Villa have got only 20 points.He admits he doesn’t know his best team and some players he signed in a major revamp have yet to come to terms with their new jobs.“I don’t think it is a lack of effort, everyone gives everything, I just think there’s not a spark,” says Sherwood.“I keep changing the systems and formations in search of that spark.“ But the games are ticking off and we need to start winning. I can turn it around. I know I can and I will.“This is a work in progress, but I don’t expect the fans to be patient.“I don’t want to insult their intelligence. They’re coming here to have a day out. They bring their families and they want to be entertained and want to win matches.“It could get worse before it gets better.“I need to find a team that can go to Stamford Bridge and not be scared, put up a fight and be brave on the pitch.“I am learning about these players. They train hard and they are good lads but we need some men to come out of the woodwork.”
If he doesn’t find answers soon, Sherwood could be the man who finally takes Villa down after 28 years in the top flight of English football and unbroken Premier League membership.“I’d rather be in the bottom three now, with eight games gone and a new squad bedding in, than with eight games to go,” says Sherwood.But then he warns: “We will be in the bottom three with eight games to go if we don’t pick up points now and that’s why the clock is ticking.”