Anyway half way through the flight walked past and found Ron and Lady Atkinson sound asleep however an hour before landing Ron, with good memory, came over and sat in the empty seat next to me and we chatted about the Villa for 20 minutes. His thoughts on current situation are actually no different from those expressed on these pages. He does think with Remi we will be straight back😊
Quote from: oldhill_avfc on February 29, 2016, 01:57:47 PMQuote from: hoyle87 on February 29, 2016, 01:42:15 PMQuote from: oldhill_avfc on February 29, 2016, 01:31:44 PMQuote from: brian green on February 29, 2016, 08:09:32 AMThe big crunch is going to come when Remi meets Hollis in the summer and presents his list of demands if he is to stay. That meeting will define the future of the club for years to come. It is absolutely essential that the insane budgetary constraints of last January are not repeated but I have serious doubts about the reason why Lerner has put Hollis in place. I fear that Hollis will serve his master and Remi will leave us.A lesser manager may well kick and claw a way back via the play offs I have no doubt but without Garde the concept of long term planning and secure reestablishment in the Premiership will go with him. Our ambition will be to be like West Bromwich Albion.I'm not so sure.There is a massive opportunity at Villa, and Hollis has the chance of lifetime to cover himself in glory.I had the good fortune (it almost chokes me to say this) to watch Spurs at WHL with wife who's al lifelong Spurs supporter but loves football generally and is therefore a Villa season ticket holder.When you see where they are and heading compared to where we are and heading, you can see the massive opportunity for us with the right boardroom management. WHL is a small dump. They need to build a new stadium and rent Wembley for a year, whereas we already have everything we need built or could easily be added to.The major difference since MON left us is that Levy has continued to develop Spurs and we've been mismanaged to unbelievably negligent levels.I'm optimistic that although it might take time, with the right chairman and board there's a massive opportunity ahead.Nice to see some positivity. However the difference with Spurs even whilst they've been in 36,000 seater WHL is that their matchday income still dwarfed ours even when we were getting 40k or close to. As Chico has alluded to STs and ticket prices are a lot higher, and they attract a lot more corporate clients.Of course their revenues are higher. And that's largely down to the corporate deals, rather than ticket sales.But surely the opportunity/challenge of making the biggest team in the Midlands at least on a par with the 3rd biggest team in London is not unreasonable.Not sure if these represent the latest stats, but Spurs' matchday revenue is £35m, compared to £13m at Villa. And there's an almost unlimited supply of rich Hertfordshire residents will be queuing for tickets to the new stadiumhttp://www.theguardian.com/football/2015/apr/29/premier-league-finances-club-by-club
Quote from: hoyle87 on February 29, 2016, 01:42:15 PMQuote from: oldhill_avfc on February 29, 2016, 01:31:44 PMQuote from: brian green on February 29, 2016, 08:09:32 AMThe big crunch is going to come when Remi meets Hollis in the summer and presents his list of demands if he is to stay. That meeting will define the future of the club for years to come. It is absolutely essential that the insane budgetary constraints of last January are not repeated but I have serious doubts about the reason why Lerner has put Hollis in place. I fear that Hollis will serve his master and Remi will leave us.A lesser manager may well kick and claw a way back via the play offs I have no doubt but without Garde the concept of long term planning and secure reestablishment in the Premiership will go with him. Our ambition will be to be like West Bromwich Albion.I'm not so sure.There is a massive opportunity at Villa, and Hollis has the chance of lifetime to cover himself in glory.I had the good fortune (it almost chokes me to say this) to watch Spurs at WHL with wife who's al lifelong Spurs supporter but loves football generally and is therefore a Villa season ticket holder.When you see where they are and heading compared to where we are and heading, you can see the massive opportunity for us with the right boardroom management. WHL is a small dump. They need to build a new stadium and rent Wembley for a year, whereas we already have everything we need built or could easily be added to.The major difference since MON left us is that Levy has continued to develop Spurs and we've been mismanaged to unbelievably negligent levels.I'm optimistic that although it might take time, with the right chairman and board there's a massive opportunity ahead.Nice to see some positivity. However the difference with Spurs even whilst they've been in 36,000 seater WHL is that their matchday income still dwarfed ours even when we were getting 40k or close to. As Chico has alluded to STs and ticket prices are a lot higher, and they attract a lot more corporate clients.Of course their revenues are higher. And that's largely down to the corporate deals, rather than ticket sales.But surely the opportunity/challenge of making the biggest team in the Midlands at least on a par with the 3rd biggest team in London is not unreasonable.
Quote from: oldhill_avfc on February 29, 2016, 01:31:44 PMQuote from: brian green on February 29, 2016, 08:09:32 AMThe big crunch is going to come when Remi meets Hollis in the summer and presents his list of demands if he is to stay. That meeting will define the future of the club for years to come. It is absolutely essential that the insane budgetary constraints of last January are not repeated but I have serious doubts about the reason why Lerner has put Hollis in place. I fear that Hollis will serve his master and Remi will leave us.A lesser manager may well kick and claw a way back via the play offs I have no doubt but without Garde the concept of long term planning and secure reestablishment in the Premiership will go with him. Our ambition will be to be like West Bromwich Albion.I'm not so sure.There is a massive opportunity at Villa, and Hollis has the chance of lifetime to cover himself in glory.I had the good fortune (it almost chokes me to say this) to watch Spurs at WHL with wife who's al lifelong Spurs supporter but loves football generally and is therefore a Villa season ticket holder.When you see where they are and heading compared to where we are and heading, you can see the massive opportunity for us with the right boardroom management. WHL is a small dump. They need to build a new stadium and rent Wembley for a year, whereas we already have everything we need built or could easily be added to.The major difference since MON left us is that Levy has continued to develop Spurs and we've been mismanaged to unbelievably negligent levels.I'm optimistic that although it might take time, with the right chairman and board there's a massive opportunity ahead.Nice to see some positivity. However the difference with Spurs even whilst they've been in 36,000 seater WHL is that their matchday income still dwarfed ours even when we were getting 40k or close to. As Chico has alluded to STs and ticket prices are a lot higher, and they attract a lot more corporate clients.
Quote from: brian green on February 29, 2016, 08:09:32 AMThe big crunch is going to come when Remi meets Hollis in the summer and presents his list of demands if he is to stay. That meeting will define the future of the club for years to come. It is absolutely essential that the insane budgetary constraints of last January are not repeated but I have serious doubts about the reason why Lerner has put Hollis in place. I fear that Hollis will serve his master and Remi will leave us.A lesser manager may well kick and claw a way back via the play offs I have no doubt but without Garde the concept of long term planning and secure reestablishment in the Premiership will go with him. Our ambition will be to be like West Bromwich Albion.I'm not so sure.There is a massive opportunity at Villa, and Hollis has the chance of lifetime to cover himself in glory.I had the good fortune (it almost chokes me to say this) to watch Spurs at WHL with wife who's al lifelong Spurs supporter but loves football generally and is therefore a Villa season ticket holder.When you see where they are and heading compared to where we are and heading, you can see the massive opportunity for us with the right boardroom management. WHL is a small dump. They need to build a new stadium and rent Wembley for a year, whereas we already have everything we need built or could easily be added to.The major difference since MON left us is that Levy has continued to develop Spurs and we've been mismanaged to unbelievably negligent levels.I'm optimistic that although it might take time, with the right chairman and board there's a massive opportunity ahead.
The big crunch is going to come when Remi meets Hollis in the summer and presents his list of demands if he is to stay. That meeting will define the future of the club for years to come. It is absolutely essential that the insane budgetary constraints of last January are not repeated but I have serious doubts about the reason why Lerner has put Hollis in place. I fear that Hollis will serve his master and Remi will leave us.A lesser manager may well kick and claw a way back via the play offs I have no doubt but without Garde the concept of long term planning and secure reestablishment in the Premiership will go with him. Our ambition will be to be like West Bromwich Albion.
i'm reluctantly coming to the conclusion that Garde and the Villa isn't a tight fit.