Quote from: themossman on December 20, 2015, 11:26:09 PMQuote from: LeeB on December 20, 2015, 10:34:32 PMQuote from: ktvillan on December 20, 2015, 10:26:14 PMQuote from: Chris Harte on December 20, 2015, 10:24:16 PMWhile the timing of O'Neill's departure was spiteful, we shouldn't be blaming that on our current problems. It was in 2010. The correct appointments since would have made the situation recoverable. FWIW I think Houllier would have proved to be the correct appointment had his health not let him down. Me too. The real disaster was the lunacy of replacing him with TSM. Soild downhill ever since.Houllier was the wrong appointment because of his health issues. It didn't suddenly crop up.If we'd have got someone with a similar profile abroad, and not insisted on bloody "premier league experience", we might have had a bloody chance.Correct. It was a gamble, on our future competitiveness as a premier league team. The more I think about it the more gambles there have been under this regime. That houllier's health will hold, that the fans will accept mcleish, that deals can be done in the last year of a player's contract. Solskjær would have been a punt. Replacing your prize assets with unproven French players has been a disastrous punt. Sherwood, garde. This era has been characterised by a perverse will to take the left field option and it's fucked us.Edit - of course, to bring it back to MON, it all started with a gamble, with the front loaded investment and lack of proper accountability when he was first in place. This all makes the safe stewardship stuff sound pretty hollow.If there was accountability from the start then O'Neil would never of been our manager. This situation we find ourselves in isn't 1 persons fault it was started by O'Neil massive over spend on limited players then his perfectly timed departure to cause maximum impact. Then the calamity of managerial appointments following that have brought us to where we are today, Lerner and O'Neil are both to blame.
Quote from: LeeB on December 20, 2015, 10:34:32 PMQuote from: ktvillan on December 20, 2015, 10:26:14 PMQuote from: Chris Harte on December 20, 2015, 10:24:16 PMWhile the timing of O'Neill's departure was spiteful, we shouldn't be blaming that on our current problems. It was in 2010. The correct appointments since would have made the situation recoverable. FWIW I think Houllier would have proved to be the correct appointment had his health not let him down. Me too. The real disaster was the lunacy of replacing him with TSM. Soild downhill ever since.Houllier was the wrong appointment because of his health issues. It didn't suddenly crop up.If we'd have got someone with a similar profile abroad, and not insisted on bloody "premier league experience", we might have had a bloody chance.Correct. It was a gamble, on our future competitiveness as a premier league team. The more I think about it the more gambles there have been under this regime. That houllier's health will hold, that the fans will accept mcleish, that deals can be done in the last year of a player's contract. Solskjær would have been a punt. Replacing your prize assets with unproven French players has been a disastrous punt. Sherwood, garde. This era has been characterised by a perverse will to take the left field option and it's fucked us.Edit - of course, to bring it back to MON, it all started with a gamble, with the front loaded investment and lack of proper accountability when he was first in place. This all makes the safe stewardship stuff sound pretty hollow.
Quote from: ktvillan on December 20, 2015, 10:26:14 PMQuote from: Chris Harte on December 20, 2015, 10:24:16 PMWhile the timing of O'Neill's departure was spiteful, we shouldn't be blaming that on our current problems. It was in 2010. The correct appointments since would have made the situation recoverable. FWIW I think Houllier would have proved to be the correct appointment had his health not let him down. Me too. The real disaster was the lunacy of replacing him with TSM. Soild downhill ever since.Houllier was the wrong appointment because of his health issues. It didn't suddenly crop up.If we'd have got someone with a similar profile abroad, and not insisted on bloody "premier league experience", we might have had a bloody chance.
Quote from: Chris Harte on December 20, 2015, 10:24:16 PMWhile the timing of O'Neill's departure was spiteful, we shouldn't be blaming that on our current problems. It was in 2010. The correct appointments since would have made the situation recoverable. FWIW I think Houllier would have proved to be the correct appointment had his health not let him down. Me too. The real disaster was the lunacy of replacing him with TSM. Soild downhill ever since.
While the timing of O'Neill's departure was spiteful, we shouldn't be blaming that on our current problems. It was in 2010. The correct appointments since would have made the situation recoverable. FWIW I think Houllier would have proved to be the correct appointment had his health not let him down.
Quote from: four fornicholl on December 20, 2015, 11:42:22 PMive said it loads of times but I really cant blame lernerhe is, imo,being very badly advisedFor me it's not just about lack of investment. I think the players might get a bit of a boost (or kick up the arse) to actually see the owner in his seat a laRoman Abramovich. It can't be great to look up to the directors box and see a block of empty seats. 2 years since he showed his face in B6.
ive said it loads of times but I really cant blame lernerhe is, imo,being very badly advised
Quote from: stuart445 on December 21, 2015, 12:14:14 AMQuote from: themossman on December 20, 2015, 11:26:09 PMQuote from: LeeB on December 20, 2015, 10:34:32 PMQuote from: ktvillan on December 20, 2015, 10:26:14 PMQuote from: Chris Harte on December 20, 2015, 10:24:16 PMWhile the timing of O'Neill's departure was spiteful, we shouldn't be blaming that on our current problems. It was in 2010. The correct appointments since would have made the situation recoverable. FWIW I think Houllier would have proved to be the correct appointment had his health not let him down. Me too. The real disaster was the lunacy of replacing him with TSM. Soild downhill ever since.Houllier was the wrong appointment because of his health issues. It didn't suddenly crop up.If we'd have got someone with a similar profile abroad, and not insisted on bloody "premier league experience", we might have had a bloody chance.Correct. It was a gamble, on our future competitiveness as a premier league team. The more I think about it the more gambles there have been under this regime. That houllier's health will hold, that the fans will accept mcleish, that deals can be done in the last year of a player's contract. Solskjær would have been a punt. Replacing your prize assets with unproven French players has been a disastrous punt. Sherwood, garde. This era has been characterised by a perverse will to take the left field option and it's fucked us.Edit - of course, to bring it back to MON, it all started with a gamble, with the front loaded investment and lack of proper accountability when he was first in place. This all makes the safe stewardship stuff sound pretty hollow.If there was accountability from the start then O'Neil would never of been our manager. This situation we find ourselves in isn't 1 persons fault it was started by O'Neil massive over spend on limited players then his perfectly timed departure to cause maximum impact. Then the calamity of managerial appointments following that have brought us to where we are today, Lerner and O'Neil are both to blame.Not so sure about that Stuart. It was a big appointment at the time and I for one was delighted about it.
Quote from: tomd2103 on December 21, 2015, 12:18:01 AMQuote from: stuart445 on December 21, 2015, 12:14:14 AMQuote from: themossman on December 20, 2015, 11:26:09 PMQuote from: LeeB on December 20, 2015, 10:34:32 PMQuote from: ktvillan on December 20, 2015, 10:26:14 PMQuote from: Chris Harte on December 20, 2015, 10:24:16 PMWhile the timing of O'Neill's departure was spiteful, we shouldn't be blaming that on our current problems. It was in 2010. The correct appointments since would have made the situation recoverable. FWIW I think Houllier would have proved to be the correct appointment had his health not let him down. Me too. The real disaster was the lunacy of replacing him with TSM. Soild downhill ever since.Houllier was the wrong appointment because of his health issues. It didn't suddenly crop up.If we'd have got someone with a similar profile abroad, and not insisted on bloody "premier league experience", we might have had a bloody chance.Correct. It was a gamble, on our future competitiveness as a premier league team. The more I think about it the more gambles there have been under this regime. That houllier's health will hold, that the fans will accept mcleish, that deals can be done in the last year of a player's contract. Solskjær would have been a punt. Replacing your prize assets with unproven French players has been a disastrous punt. Sherwood, garde. This era has been characterised by a perverse will to take the left field option and it's fucked us.Edit - of course, to bring it back to MON, it all started with a gamble, with the front loaded investment and lack of proper accountability when he was first in place. This all makes the safe stewardship stuff sound pretty hollow.If there was accountability from the start then O'Neil would never of been our manager. This situation we find ourselves in isn't 1 persons fault it was started by O'Neil massive over spend on limited players then his perfectly timed departure to cause maximum impact. Then the calamity of managerial appointments following that have brought us to where we are today, Lerner and O'Neil are both to blame.Not so sure about that Stuart. It was a big appointment at the time and I for one was delighted about it. Seeing as at the first hint of accountability O'Neil ran away I think you find I'm right.
It's not necessarily the amounts spent it's the way it's been spent that's the issue. It's been the issue to differing degrees since Randy first opened his chequebook.
Quote from: OzVilla on December 20, 2015, 11:18:36 PMIt's not necessarily the amounts spent it's the way it's been spent that's the issue. It's been the issue to differing degrees since Randy first opened his chequebook.That's it exactly. With Randy Lerner came a glorious opportunity to embark on a long-term plan, to invest in the infrastructure of the club and build some solid foundations that would see us make steady progress. That was the key to success. Instead what we've had is a fatally short-sighted, short-termist approach to everything, beginning with Lerner handing great wodges of his fortune to completely the wrong man. Two hundred and fifty million quid may not even have bought a title winning squad, but it should have been ample to buy the knowledge and expertise required to run a club capable of challenging for trophies for years. Lerner didn't have to know anything about football, he just needed to employ people who did. He failed to do that. I despair to think that after so many years of Ellis strangling us with his miserly approach we finally got what we wanted, what we needed, what any club needs to compete these days in the money-driven world of the Premier League: we got our sugar daddy: we got his millions: and then O'Neill wasted the lot on a glut of Sidwells and Shoreys. And for what? Sixth place finishes? Even O'Leary managed that, with a fraction of O'Neills' funding. And that was our chance, folks. That was our future and O'Neill blew it. Anyone who thinks he's is in no way culpable for this mess five years down the line is as short-sighted as he is. His reckless spending crippled us, his behaviour clearly damaged Lerner, and our current predicament is the result. Lerner is to blame for trusting him, for not knowing that he was a very limited football manager, and for the car crash we've witnessed since, but it's not his fault that O'Neill is a spiteful, self-serving litigious bastard.
Quote from: The Edge on December 20, 2015, 11:53:25 PMQuote from: four fornicholl on December 20, 2015, 11:42:22 PMive said it loads of times but I really cant blame lernerhe is, imo,being very badly advisedFor me it's not just about lack of investment. I think the players might get a bit of a boost (or kick up the arse) to actually see the owner in his seat a laRoman Abramovich. It can't be great to look up to the directors box and see a block of empty seats. 2 years since he showed his face in B6.was Gardes first game really 2 years ago? I must have been looking the other way. Can someone tell me did we stay up? if not have we managed to gain promotion at the first attempt?
Quote from: Chinchilla Bathhouse on December 21, 2015, 12:56:52 AMQuote from: OzVilla on December 20, 2015, 11:18:36 PMIt's not necessarily the amounts spent it's the way it's been spent that's the issue. It's been the issue to differing degrees since Randy first opened his chequebook.That's it exactly. With Randy Lerner came a glorious opportunity to embark on a long-term plan, to invest in the infrastructure of the club and build some solid foundations that would see us make steady progress. That was the key to success. Instead what we've had is a fatally short-sighted, short-termist approach to everything, beginning with Lerner handing great wodges of his fortune to completely the wrong man. Two hundred and fifty million quid may not even have bought a title winning squad, but it should have been ample to buy the knowledge and expertise required to run a club capable of challenging for trophies for years. Lerner didn't have to know anything about football, he just needed to employ people who did. He failed to do that. I despair to think that after so many years of Ellis strangling us with his miserly approach we finally got what we wanted, what we needed, what any club needs to compete these days in the money-driven world of the Premier League: we got our sugar daddy: we got his millions: and then O'Neill wasted the lot on a glut of Sidwells and Shoreys. And for what? Sixth place finishes? Even O'Leary managed that, with a fraction of O'Neills' funding. And that was our chance, folks. That was our future and O'Neill blew it. Anyone who thinks he's is in no way culpable for this mess five years down the line is as short-sighted as he is. His reckless spending crippled us, his behaviour clearly damaged Lerner, and our current predicament is the result. Lerner is to blame for trusting him, for not knowing that he was a very limited football manager, and for the car crash we've witnessed since, but it's not his fault that O'Neill is a spiteful, self-serving litigious bastard. I'd agree with that.