Quote from: The_ads on April 04, 2016, 08:21:35 PMMost promoted clubs struggle and Pearsons Leicester was no differentWatford. Bournemouth. Only a few years before, Southampton, West Ham.
Most promoted clubs struggle and Pearsons Leicester was no different
Just an thought about Pearson and "the great escape." Their turnaround in form started after he'd been sacked and then reinstated after his ABH on James McArther.After that they lost to us in the cup and only lost 3 more league matches. Away to Arsenal, away to Spurs and home to Chelsea. Maybe the players responded to the thought of getting rid of the passive aggressive twunt more than anything he played in with?And as others have said, we've had Culverhouse and Karsa sacked for bullying and had Keane give up/get fed up after his book deal was sufficiently publicised with absolutely no effect.Does anyone really thing having that psuedo hardman knocking around Bodymoor Heath is going to change anything? As satisfying as it might be to envisage absolute wasters like Agbonlahor and Richards getting a good going over by someone who knows what they're doing, when you're done you've got broken knuckles and they're still wasters, and it's never going to happen anyway, so in the absence of physical violence what could Pearson bring that we haven't already tried, or that a more reasoned coach could bring.My abiding memory of Leicester last season was that Schmeichel saved them from the tearing of new arseholes on several occasions and made what would otherwise have been comfortable defeats much closer. I can't remember anything specifically different from them being shit and the run that saved them other than maybe working a bit harder, which they've carried into this season, and playing with some confidence. No doubt someone who pays more attention will put me straight.
Their consensus, with a journo called Rory ( from the Times?) was that Pearson is the man.
Quote from: Pat McMahon on April 04, 2016, 11:50:37 PMTheir consensus, with a journo called Rory ( from the Times?) was that Pearson is the man.Rory Smith. He is very good IMO. I certainly think we need a manager from either end of the spectrum that stretches from a despot to a cultivated methodical rebuilder. Nothing in between.
If he is the man, he will need a bloody good coaching team behind him and the new head of football operations will need to be a very level headed guy. Big Ron clearly thinks he is the man, as do a lot of people in the game. Maybe he will work out ok, but I can't say the idea thrills me.