He has more financial backing that any other Villa manager in history, and yet he opted for the likes of Harewood, Heskey and co. The unimaginative dullard. Nowhere near as good a manager as Sir Brian was for us, or even JG, for that matter.
My issue with MON was the timing of his departure. If he had left at the end of the previous season most people would of held him in high esteem and wished him good luck. Whatever his disagreement with Lerner it's the fans that he let down by his walk out
The assumption is made that he left so close to the new season in order to maximize the damage to AVFC but that's not something I choose to believe. Why not entertain the opposite angle and consider he spent the summer arguing his corner with the chairman until having to concede the relationship was no longer tenable? Neither argument can be supported with any genuine proof and given Lerner doesn't have the common courtesy to ever speak with the club's supporters why on earth would you want to reject the suggestion that he was at fault rather than a man who'd taken 2 years out of football to support his cancer ridden wife? He concedes his timing was poor but the idea that it was deliberate sabotage I believe is a step too far.
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. 100% agree
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.
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: Wes Derby Villan on December 20, 2015, 02:32:36 PMMy issue with MON was the timing of his departure. If he had left at the end of the previous season most people would of held him in high esteem and wished him good luck. Whatever his disagreement with Lerner it's the fans that he let down by his walk outThis. He must have known Lerner was pulling the plug well before a couple of days before the season started. He hadn't bought a player all summer. If he'd resigned earlier and given a new manager time to bed in we'd have had a chance to settle. Instead he gave us no time to identify a replacement, and consequently no time to add to the squad. We've been in terminal decline since.
Darren Bent paid for his transfer in spades by keeping us up twice. We didn't buy Jenas.
Quote from: PeterWithesShin on December 21, 2015, 01:34:07 PMDarren Bent paid for his transfer in spades by keeping us up twice. We didn't buy Jenas. He did. His goals were great, then he went for nothing. James Milner and co nearly got us into the top 4 and a trophy. We paid Jenas a fortune for nothing.My only point being that we've done a decent enough job of wasting money without big bad MON