Quote from: PaulWinch again on September 29, 2015, 02:16:40 PMThere is a real acceptance of defeat within the club. There you have boiled it down perfectly.There is no pressure. When you're a millionaire - which managers and players tend to be these days - you need pressure to spur you on. But the likes of Gabby can coast on the pitch, and each manager will have a ready-made excuse, because every season is all about staying in the league.
There is a real acceptance of defeat within the club.
He was at Man Utd, a club that won't accept defeat.
One of the problems over the 5 years is that we haven't had a core of 4 or 5 solid experienced players to hold the team together.
One of the biggest blows I felt was when Barry slapped in a transfer request. That was more or less at the high point of the halcyon days under the bespectacled pube head and the new Lernarian period, yet our club captain decided he wanted out and it set a tone . Barry very roundly put the club in its place as a gig well below the big boys even when we were up and amongst them .
Quote from: TheMalandro on September 27, 2015, 04:34:17 PMQuote from: pauliewalnuts on September 27, 2015, 04:08:40 PMIsn't the important point not whether it is as bad as anything in the last five years or not, but that it is still woefully short of what is acceptable?And that's at a time where our expectations are so low, it should be pretty much impossible to fail to satisfy them.Whilst I agree the points total is disappointing, we have only played seven games.One we won, so that's six to chew over.Man Utd what's their squad worth, over 200 million? We narrowly lost. Palace we probably deserved a point. Sunderland we really should have beaten.Leicester, should have beaten. Baggies match was not great admittedly. Liverpool, another team full of stars, despite their problems.Sherwood has made mistakes, the players have too. I'm optimistic and quite looking forward to the rest of the season, I may be a mug, may have low expectations but it won't be as bad as Mcleish or Lambert.Whether it's good enough for Aston Villa is another argument.Well said that man!
Quote from: pauliewalnuts on September 27, 2015, 04:08:40 PMIsn't the important point not whether it is as bad as anything in the last five years or not, but that it is still woefully short of what is acceptable?And that's at a time where our expectations are so low, it should be pretty much impossible to fail to satisfy them.Whilst I agree the points total is disappointing, we have only played seven games.One we won, so that's six to chew over.Man Utd what's their squad worth, over 200 million? We narrowly lost. Palace we probably deserved a point. Sunderland we really should have beaten.Leicester, should have beaten. Baggies match was not great admittedly. Liverpool, another team full of stars, despite their problems.Sherwood has made mistakes, the players have too. I'm optimistic and quite looking forward to the rest of the season, I may be a mug, may have low expectations but it won't be as bad as Mcleish or Lambert.Whether it's good enough for Aston Villa is another argument.
Isn't the important point not whether it is as bad as anything in the last five years or not, but that it is still woefully short of what is acceptable?And that's at a time where our expectations are so low, it should be pretty much impossible to fail to satisfy them.
There is a thesis to be written entitled The underlying problem at Aston Villa Football Club. The truth is that, aside from a glorious trajectory from the mid 70s to the early 80s (and that had its blips along the way) and the odd season here or there, the club has underperformed when measured against its potential since the 1930s. Yes, for the first time in my supporting life the club has consistently underperformed for a number of seasons on the trot, but that also happened in the late 50s and even more spectacularly in the mid/late 60s. I don't know what that history tells us, other than perhaps there is a something deeper in the collective psyche of those that own, run, play for or support the club. A lack of ruthlessness perhaps. A contentment with just being top dog in the city or wider region. An acceptance that, like it or not, just as the city is something of a national joke, then the club has to play its part in the ridicule. Possibly it is none of those things. But to lay all the blame for the current malaise at the door of Lerner or Fox or Sherwood or Agbonlahor I think misses the bigger picture.
Paulie Walnuts reference putting this guy in place regardless of his title will see hopefully an improvement, but again that will take time, it is the same with our scouting system, we actually look like we issue them a passport now, not a rail card.As to us playing our part, I think for the older supporter we have seen cycles like this a number of times before, but have that hope and the memories of when we came good, but as I stated after the cup final at Wembley, I was in the hotel bar feeling miserable and stated , balls that would have made the full set, I would had seen us win and a young lad about 19 stated, lucky you, I've seen us win fuck all in my time of supporting them, so the younger Villa supporters really have nothing to hold onto or compare to and such probably allows for a lower estimation of where we sit in the grand scheme of things, allowing for a lowering of expectations that have been pushed out by the club over the last 5 years especially.
Completely agree OMVF. For the last 5 years or more where there should have been a captain on the pitch bollocking and driving and marshalling our players we have had a vacuum. The role of captain has been relentlessly devalued up to the point of nothing but calling the coin toss.