I genuinely think he needs to take the opportunity in this break to improve the overall fitness of the squad. It was in one paper today that up to this weekend, we had covered the least ground of any top flight team this season. When you factor in the number of late goals we have conceded then there is obviously an issue. I think there will be some hard work at Bodymoor Heath over the next couple of weeks.
I genuinely think he needs to take the opportunity in this break to improve the overall fitness of the squad.
QuoteI genuinely think he needs to take the opportunity in this break to improve the overall fitness of the squad. You're not going to fix that in two weeks - thats a 6 month job that. 3 month's minimum before you start to see any real improvement.
Quote from: FranzBiberkopf on November 09, 2015, 10:08:27 AMQuoteI genuinely think he needs to take the opportunity in this break to improve the overall fitness of the squad. You're not going to fix that in two weeks - thats a 6 month job that. 3 month's minimum before you start to see any real improvement. Get the fat bastards running up and down the steps of the Holte
Cameron Jerome works like trojan by himself. He may not score many goals but he can hold the ball up and lay it off to those who can. A cracking team player.
Quote from: tomd2103 on November 08, 2015, 11:56:27 PMI genuinely think he needs to take the opportunity in this break to improve the overall fitness of the squad. It was in one paper today that up to this weekend, we had covered the least ground of any top flight team this season. When you factor in the number of late goals we have conceded then there is obviously an issue. I think there will be some hard work at Bodymoor Heath over the next couple of weeks.Apparently versus Man City, the workrate has improved already – outrunning them by 1.9km according to this article.
http://www.skysports.com/football/news/12799/10061270/aston-villa-0-0-manchester-city-positive-signs-for-remi-garde
Remi Garde and another way A monumental difference in performance and mood. From the chalk of Tim Sherwood’s white cliffs of Dover to Remi Garde’s French cheese.If the national stereotypes feel too strong, they are appropriate at least this once. Remi Garde took his first opportunity to bring back Aston Villa’s continental brigade back into the first team, and they performed admirably against the league leaders. Jordan Amavi, Idrissa Gana, Jordan Veretout, Carlos Sanchez, Carles Gil, Jordan Ayew. Even Charles N’Zogbia played a part!Villa may have offered little in attack, but they survived the Manchester City onslaught. It’s been a long time since Villa’s underbelly was anything other than squidgy soft. A run of seven consecutive Premier League defeats has, finally, come to an end.This was an instant improvement. Gone was the tactical vacuum of Sherwood’s dice-rolling defence and midfield, replaced by a coherent plan to stop the division’s most potent attacking midfield. How weird that those useless French players Sherwood shunned instantly improved the side in his absence.It’s not difficult to want Garde to do well, introduced against a backdrop of unfair mistrust. Think I’m overstating that mood? Here’s Charlie Wyett in The Sun on Thursday afternoon: ‘Now, Aston Villa will be joining Sunderland in the Championship after the ridiculous decision to appoint Remi Garde.’ He hadn’t even had a single match in charge.Villa’s new manager still has an immense task on his hands to keep the club in the Premier League, but let’s not pretend that he isn’t better equipped than his predecessor. Villa Park enjoyed their first evidence of the changing of the Garde.