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. The captain is the manager's voice on the field. When the language being used by the manager is foreign, incoherent or non existent a voice of authority in the thick of the fight is even more necessary. Add to that the current arrogance and the at-my-discretion attitude of referees and more than ever you need a captain to calmly and respectfully get on the referee's case to demand a level playing field. The big bee I still have buzzing in my bonnet is the kicking our most gifted players are getting. This utterly abominable concept of taking one for the team legitimising the non-football of people like Pulis. We need a hard, strong captain more than ever but seem to be blind to the need.
To play devil's advocate, Randy's name wasn't being mentioned when we signed 5 players inside a week.
Quote from: Clampy on September 30, 2015, 02:55:42 PMTo play devil's advocate, Randy's name wasn't being mentioned when we signed 5 players inside a week. True, but he had the cash from players that had left. If he had invested and we have kept those players, then maybe he would get mentioned for the right reason. He is damned either way though. I just wish he gave the impression of taking an interest, rather than just turning up for the cup final.
Quote from: DB on September 30, 2015, 04:01:52 PMQuote from: Clampy on September 30, 2015, 02:55:42 PMTo play devil's advocate, Randy's name wasn't being mentioned when we signed 5 players inside a week. True, but he had the cash from players that had left. If he had invested and we have kept those players, then maybe he would get mentioned for the right reason. He is damned either way though. I just wish he gave the impression of taking an interest, rather than just turning up for the cup final.And only then to crawl around the arse of the future King while the team he's supposed to be chairman of were getting royally dicked on the field.
Quote from: silhillvilla on September 29, 2015, 11:10:45 PMOne 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 . Or was it simply that he'd been here for over 10 years and fancied a new challenge?
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: LTA on September 30, 2015, 04:36:15 PMQuote from: DB on September 30, 2015, 04:01:52 PMQuote from: Clampy on September 30, 2015, 02:55:42 PMTo play devil's advocate, Randy's name wasn't being mentioned when we signed 5 players inside a week. True, but he had the cash from players that had left. If he had invested and we have kept those players, then maybe he would get mentioned for the right reason. He is damned either way though. I just wish he gave the impression of taking an interest, rather than just turning up for the cup final.And only then to crawl around the arse of the future King while the team he's supposed to be chairman of were getting royally dicked on the field.What was he supposed to do - ignore him?
A couple of more problems we have are (i) very poor at defending from the front (ii) too many players that have to take two touches (and that is being kind) before passing the ball.Defending from the front rarely involves tackling or charging around like a mad man. All it takes is understanding how the opposition bring the ball out from the back and positioning to cut the angles for passes and then applying pressure so that the opposition player makes a poor pass.One thing you notice about foreign players is usually how comfortable they look playing short one touch passes in triangles when in tight positions. I even think back to Makoun and Sylla (who were not brilliant by a long way) when they first came in and how they could play one touch football. I have seen the same between Gueye, Amavi and Veretout in the early games. Sanchez looks very good when he plays this way and it is only when he starts holding on to the ball too long that things go wrong. The key to this, however, is movement by the player receiving the pass. Contrast this to how Westwood plays who always seems to receive a pass, repositions himself with a couple of touches before looking for the next pass, by which time any gaps have closed up.