I'm with VID on what he says. Whilst the spending is not what it was during Lerner's early years, it's not as if managers have been forced to build a team on free transfers and loans. I think we can all agree that some of the players that have come in haven't been good enough though.
Quote from: Clampy on January 07, 2016, 08:52:05 AMI'm with VID on what he says. Whilst the spending is not what it was during Lerner's early years, it's not as if managers have been forced to build a team on free transfers and loans. I think we can all agree that some of the players that have come in haven't been good enough though.Most of the damage was done in that period when we were signing the likes of Luna, Bennett, Westwood, Bacuna, Tonev, Bowery, Lowton, Sylla - were all those in Lambert's first season? Near enough I reckon.The problem wasn't so much that we signed these players - signing them with a view to developing them wouldn't have been the worst idea - it was that we signed these players and most of them found themselves playing week in, week out, when they were patently not good enough at that time - combined with some home grown players who certainly weren't good enough.
It also raises a less discussed problem we appear to have, namely the performance in the field of those who watch and evaluate our potential signings. All those listed by Paulie above plus a string of others have been seen as inferior after a few games for us. Some, like Westwood have not actually been good enough but have commanded a starting place because the others make them look better than they actually are.The great unspoken failure at Villa is the failure of the quality of players we buy. Those whose job it is to be the eyes and ears of the club in the world miss the Vardys and spot the Tonev's.
Quote from: Clampy on January 07, 2016, 08:52:05 AMI'm with VID on what he says. Whilst the spending is not what it was during Lerner's early years, it's not as if managers have been forced to build a team on free transfers and loans. I think we can all agree that some of the players that have come in haven't been good enough though.Quoting you here Clampy but could just as easily have been Cheltenham or VID. To me this all sounds like a 'technicality' style argument. 'Technically' each manager since MON had a bit of money to spend, about what £15m per year. OK, fair enough that might work if the squad did not need serious investment on account of sales/retirement of key players. However, the team that finished sixth three years in a row lost players like Barry, Young, Milner and, eventually Barry's initial replacement in terms of a player purchase, Downing bought with the money Barry' sale brought in. Conservative estimate, those sales brought in a profit of about £35m. After Milner's sale hurt us Bent was then signed to keep us up when we got into trouble and he did but when we stayed up we sold his supply line! We bought the enigmatic N'Zogbia to do the job of Young and Downing and he has proved one of the worst signings in our history. That season we also had the Petrov diagnosis which essentially meant our most influential player had to retire. Who did we buy in the following summer? El Ahmadi and Westwood with Vlaar in as our replacement for James Collins and new captain. Again, can we consider those signings an improvement/adequate replacements? The point being, we had a budget alright but to replace the quality we lost it was inadequate and left us shopping in inferior leagues like the Dutch and lower leagues. In my view KEA and Vlaar were as much punts as Westwood, Lowton etc. To fill those gaps in the squad we should have been spending at least double what we paid for Vlaar, Westwood, KEA. West Ham got James Collins and he is still a key player for them. Vlaar is now where?Then, after a season fighting relegation we bought some of the worst players I have ever seen play for villa: Tonev being the embodiment of what we ended up with. Again, after just about staying up surely we needed better quality and therefore a bigger budget? Blaming Lambert here doesn't cut it. I am sure he, like any manager, would have chased better players if he had the money. Then we saw the arrival of Kieran Richardson, Joe Cole, Senderos in the following summer. Ample investment for a team that had finished on 38 points?Last summer we sold the two players instrumental in us staying up, recouped £40m and lost Cleverley. SUre we bought some good players to improve the quality at left back, centre midfield and wide forward but does anybody seriously believe Gestede was an adequate replacement for Benteke's goals? Goals that kept us up three years in a row? When you sell the kind of talent we have since 2010 you need to replace it properly. I always use the analogy of Dwight York's sale funding Merson and Dublin. Our decline began with taking Ireland for Milner -when we had no manager so go figure- and subsequent managers having to replace quality premier league players like Downing, Young, Petrov, and last year Benteke with a limited budget. Our midfield was decimated in 2010-2011 and never adequately replaced. It is the story of our decline.
I agree with the general consensus above. Lambert's three summers had three different approaches - mainly lower divisions, mainly lesser European leagues, mainly grizzled old pros. A mix of the three throughout might have seen his approach work, but instead you had players such as Westwood, Lowton and possibly Bennett, plus our home-growns, thrown in as regulars and playing when they were clearly in need of being dropped. The same has happened now with Guzan.