Pearson just looks like he wants to lamp murphy in that press conference. Understandable, inexperierienced manager getting knocked down a peg or two, by experienced and well regarded local reporter. I'd be the same. Whoever comes in just needs to focus on results.
Quote from: ClaretAndBlueBlood on April 14, 2016, 12:56:29 PMQuote from: Villa in Denmark on April 14, 2016, 12:25:59 PMQuote from: ClaretAndBlueBlood on April 14, 2016, 11:32:58 AMQuote from: Chinchilla Bathhouse on April 14, 2016, 11:21:51 AMQuote from: ClaretAndBlueBlood on April 14, 2016, 10:54:15 AMQuote from: Chinchilla Bathhouse on April 14, 2016, 10:42:39 AMQuote from: The_ads on April 14, 2016, 09:54:36 AM....and what would you prefer? A nice comfortable clean cut manager like Southgate who will nod and smile and say the nice things and charm the press or someone who actually has experience of turning round the fortunes of football clubs? Albeit by upsetting Pat MurphyIt's not just Pat Murphy though, is it? Pearson offends lots of people. He's also not the only manager out there who has experience of turning round the fortunes of football clubs, although he may be the only one who does it less often than he gets himself fired for being a liability. I really don't understand this clamour for a bully; Keane, Karsa and Culverhouse proved demonstrably that it doesn't work with these players - the latter pair of idiots even got fired for their behaviour. How is Pearson legally going to be more extreme than they were, then? Would it even work? I'd have thought the very last thing we need in our basket case of a dressing room is a volatile loon throwing his weight around. I think we need someone with a calm head (which Pearson doesn't appear to possess) who copes well under pressure (which Pearson apparently can't) and will be here to see through a long term plan (which Pearson has never done). It's not just an either/or between a Southgate and a Pearson, there is a lot of middle ground there. As others have said, a bit of charisma would be welcome. That's charisma, not aggression. Pearson seems to bring almost guaranteed disgrace and embarrassment sooner or later; haven't we had enough of that this season? they didn't get fired for bullyingDidn't they? I thought there were allegations of bullying, Karsa was suspended and both were subsequently fired after an internal investigation. Apologies if I'm wrong. Still doesn't mean a bully is what we need. they were fired for not doing their jobs, which Lambert was unaware of. He only kept his job because he agreed to them being firedWell the individual investigations that led to their dismissals were both instigated following allegations of bullying. There was plenty of discussion on here at the time about how it might have affected the younger players.Guardian article on dismissalDaily Mail article on suspensionCulverhouse's Wikipedia page which he'd presumably have altered if it wasn't true, as if it's untrue it's libellous.Unless of course you have incontrovertible evidence to the contrary, are privy to the clubs legal dealings or represented one of Karsa, Culverhouse or the club.newspapers don't always print the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. And anyone can edit Wikipediainternal investigation and off-field matters would appear to be correct, the bullying aspect less soand yes, I remember well all of the discussions on here at the time. Bullying, or aggressive coaching methods, might actually be better than the truthIf you don't mind me asking, if you're disregarding the newspapers and the internet, where do you have your information from? Is it actually from a reliable source or just your opinion? Genuine question.
Quote from: Villa in Denmark on April 14, 2016, 12:25:59 PMQuote from: ClaretAndBlueBlood on April 14, 2016, 11:32:58 AMQuote from: Chinchilla Bathhouse on April 14, 2016, 11:21:51 AMQuote from: ClaretAndBlueBlood on April 14, 2016, 10:54:15 AMQuote from: Chinchilla Bathhouse on April 14, 2016, 10:42:39 AMQuote from: The_ads on April 14, 2016, 09:54:36 AM....and what would you prefer? A nice comfortable clean cut manager like Southgate who will nod and smile and say the nice things and charm the press or someone who actually has experience of turning round the fortunes of football clubs? Albeit by upsetting Pat MurphyIt's not just Pat Murphy though, is it? Pearson offends lots of people. He's also not the only manager out there who has experience of turning round the fortunes of football clubs, although he may be the only one who does it less often than he gets himself fired for being a liability. I really don't understand this clamour for a bully; Keane, Karsa and Culverhouse proved demonstrably that it doesn't work with these players - the latter pair of idiots even got fired for their behaviour. How is Pearson legally going to be more extreme than they were, then? Would it even work? I'd have thought the very last thing we need in our basket case of a dressing room is a volatile loon throwing his weight around. I think we need someone with a calm head (which Pearson doesn't appear to possess) who copes well under pressure (which Pearson apparently can't) and will be here to see through a long term plan (which Pearson has never done). It's not just an either/or between a Southgate and a Pearson, there is a lot of middle ground there. As others have said, a bit of charisma would be welcome. That's charisma, not aggression. Pearson seems to bring almost guaranteed disgrace and embarrassment sooner or later; haven't we had enough of that this season? they didn't get fired for bullyingDidn't they? I thought there were allegations of bullying, Karsa was suspended and both were subsequently fired after an internal investigation. Apologies if I'm wrong. Still doesn't mean a bully is what we need. they were fired for not doing their jobs, which Lambert was unaware of. He only kept his job because he agreed to them being firedWell the individual investigations that led to their dismissals were both instigated following allegations of bullying. There was plenty of discussion on here at the time about how it might have affected the younger players.Guardian article on dismissalDaily Mail article on suspensionCulverhouse's Wikipedia page which he'd presumably have altered if it wasn't true, as if it's untrue it's libellous.Unless of course you have incontrovertible evidence to the contrary, are privy to the clubs legal dealings or represented one of Karsa, Culverhouse or the club.newspapers don't always print the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. And anyone can edit Wikipediainternal investigation and off-field matters would appear to be correct, the bullying aspect less soand yes, I remember well all of the discussions on here at the time. Bullying, or aggressive coaching methods, might actually be better than the truth
Quote from: ClaretAndBlueBlood on April 14, 2016, 11:32:58 AMQuote from: Chinchilla Bathhouse on April 14, 2016, 11:21:51 AMQuote from: ClaretAndBlueBlood on April 14, 2016, 10:54:15 AMQuote from: Chinchilla Bathhouse on April 14, 2016, 10:42:39 AMQuote from: The_ads on April 14, 2016, 09:54:36 AM....and what would you prefer? A nice comfortable clean cut manager like Southgate who will nod and smile and say the nice things and charm the press or someone who actually has experience of turning round the fortunes of football clubs? Albeit by upsetting Pat MurphyIt's not just Pat Murphy though, is it? Pearson offends lots of people. He's also not the only manager out there who has experience of turning round the fortunes of football clubs, although he may be the only one who does it less often than he gets himself fired for being a liability. I really don't understand this clamour for a bully; Keane, Karsa and Culverhouse proved demonstrably that it doesn't work with these players - the latter pair of idiots even got fired for their behaviour. How is Pearson legally going to be more extreme than they were, then? Would it even work? I'd have thought the very last thing we need in our basket case of a dressing room is a volatile loon throwing his weight around. I think we need someone with a calm head (which Pearson doesn't appear to possess) who copes well under pressure (which Pearson apparently can't) and will be here to see through a long term plan (which Pearson has never done). It's not just an either/or between a Southgate and a Pearson, there is a lot of middle ground there. As others have said, a bit of charisma would be welcome. That's charisma, not aggression. Pearson seems to bring almost guaranteed disgrace and embarrassment sooner or later; haven't we had enough of that this season? they didn't get fired for bullyingDidn't they? I thought there were allegations of bullying, Karsa was suspended and both were subsequently fired after an internal investigation. Apologies if I'm wrong. Still doesn't mean a bully is what we need. they were fired for not doing their jobs, which Lambert was unaware of. He only kept his job because he agreed to them being firedWell the individual investigations that led to their dismissals were both instigated following allegations of bullying. There was plenty of discussion on here at the time about how it might have affected the younger players.Guardian article on dismissalDaily Mail article on suspensionCulverhouse's Wikipedia page which he'd presumably have altered if it wasn't true, as if it's untrue it's libellous.Unless of course you have incontrovertible evidence to the contrary, are privy to the clubs legal dealings or represented one of Karsa, Culverhouse or the club.
Quote from: Chinchilla Bathhouse on April 14, 2016, 11:21:51 AMQuote from: ClaretAndBlueBlood on April 14, 2016, 10:54:15 AMQuote from: Chinchilla Bathhouse on April 14, 2016, 10:42:39 AMQuote from: The_ads on April 14, 2016, 09:54:36 AM....and what would you prefer? A nice comfortable clean cut manager like Southgate who will nod and smile and say the nice things and charm the press or someone who actually has experience of turning round the fortunes of football clubs? Albeit by upsetting Pat MurphyIt's not just Pat Murphy though, is it? Pearson offends lots of people. He's also not the only manager out there who has experience of turning round the fortunes of football clubs, although he may be the only one who does it less often than he gets himself fired for being a liability. I really don't understand this clamour for a bully; Keane, Karsa and Culverhouse proved demonstrably that it doesn't work with these players - the latter pair of idiots even got fired for their behaviour. How is Pearson legally going to be more extreme than they were, then? Would it even work? I'd have thought the very last thing we need in our basket case of a dressing room is a volatile loon throwing his weight around. I think we need someone with a calm head (which Pearson doesn't appear to possess) who copes well under pressure (which Pearson apparently can't) and will be here to see through a long term plan (which Pearson has never done). It's not just an either/or between a Southgate and a Pearson, there is a lot of middle ground there. As others have said, a bit of charisma would be welcome. That's charisma, not aggression. Pearson seems to bring almost guaranteed disgrace and embarrassment sooner or later; haven't we had enough of that this season? they didn't get fired for bullyingDidn't they? I thought there were allegations of bullying, Karsa was suspended and both were subsequently fired after an internal investigation. Apologies if I'm wrong. Still doesn't mean a bully is what we need. they were fired for not doing their jobs, which Lambert was unaware of. He only kept his job because he agreed to them being fired
Quote from: ClaretAndBlueBlood on April 14, 2016, 10:54:15 AMQuote from: Chinchilla Bathhouse on April 14, 2016, 10:42:39 AMQuote from: The_ads on April 14, 2016, 09:54:36 AM....and what would you prefer? A nice comfortable clean cut manager like Southgate who will nod and smile and say the nice things and charm the press or someone who actually has experience of turning round the fortunes of football clubs? Albeit by upsetting Pat MurphyIt's not just Pat Murphy though, is it? Pearson offends lots of people. He's also not the only manager out there who has experience of turning round the fortunes of football clubs, although he may be the only one who does it less often than he gets himself fired for being a liability. I really don't understand this clamour for a bully; Keane, Karsa and Culverhouse proved demonstrably that it doesn't work with these players - the latter pair of idiots even got fired for their behaviour. How is Pearson legally going to be more extreme than they were, then? Would it even work? I'd have thought the very last thing we need in our basket case of a dressing room is a volatile loon throwing his weight around. I think we need someone with a calm head (which Pearson doesn't appear to possess) who copes well under pressure (which Pearson apparently can't) and will be here to see through a long term plan (which Pearson has never done). It's not just an either/or between a Southgate and a Pearson, there is a lot of middle ground there. As others have said, a bit of charisma would be welcome. That's charisma, not aggression. Pearson seems to bring almost guaranteed disgrace and embarrassment sooner or later; haven't we had enough of that this season? they didn't get fired for bullyingDidn't they? I thought there were allegations of bullying, Karsa was suspended and both were subsequently fired after an internal investigation. Apologies if I'm wrong. Still doesn't mean a bully is what we need.
Quote from: Chinchilla Bathhouse on April 14, 2016, 10:42:39 AMQuote from: The_ads on April 14, 2016, 09:54:36 AM....and what would you prefer? A nice comfortable clean cut manager like Southgate who will nod and smile and say the nice things and charm the press or someone who actually has experience of turning round the fortunes of football clubs? Albeit by upsetting Pat MurphyIt's not just Pat Murphy though, is it? Pearson offends lots of people. He's also not the only manager out there who has experience of turning round the fortunes of football clubs, although he may be the only one who does it less often than he gets himself fired for being a liability. I really don't understand this clamour for a bully; Keane, Karsa and Culverhouse proved demonstrably that it doesn't work with these players - the latter pair of idiots even got fired for their behaviour. How is Pearson legally going to be more extreme than they were, then? Would it even work? I'd have thought the very last thing we need in our basket case of a dressing room is a volatile loon throwing his weight around. I think we need someone with a calm head (which Pearson doesn't appear to possess) who copes well under pressure (which Pearson apparently can't) and will be here to see through a long term plan (which Pearson has never done). It's not just an either/or between a Southgate and a Pearson, there is a lot of middle ground there. As others have said, a bit of charisma would be welcome. That's charisma, not aggression. Pearson seems to bring almost guaranteed disgrace and embarrassment sooner or later; haven't we had enough of that this season? they didn't get fired for bullying
Quote from: The_ads on April 14, 2016, 09:54:36 AM....and what would you prefer? A nice comfortable clean cut manager like Southgate who will nod and smile and say the nice things and charm the press or someone who actually has experience of turning round the fortunes of football clubs? Albeit by upsetting Pat MurphyIt's not just Pat Murphy though, is it? Pearson offends lots of people. He's also not the only manager out there who has experience of turning round the fortunes of football clubs, although he may be the only one who does it less often than he gets himself fired for being a liability. I really don't understand this clamour for a bully; Keane, Karsa and Culverhouse proved demonstrably that it doesn't work with these players - the latter pair of idiots even got fired for their behaviour. How is Pearson legally going to be more extreme than they were, then? Would it even work? I'd have thought the very last thing we need in our basket case of a dressing room is a volatile loon throwing his weight around. I think we need someone with a calm head (which Pearson doesn't appear to possess) who copes well under pressure (which Pearson apparently can't) and will be here to see through a long term plan (which Pearson has never done). It's not just an either/or between a Southgate and a Pearson, there is a lot of middle ground there. As others have said, a bit of charisma would be welcome. That's charisma, not aggression. Pearson seems to bring almost guaranteed disgrace and embarrassment sooner or later; haven't we had enough of that this season?
....and what would you prefer? A nice comfortable clean cut manager like Southgate who will nod and smile and say the nice things and charm the press or someone who actually has experience of turning round the fortunes of football clubs? Albeit by upsetting Pat Murphy
Although certainly not my first choice I would take him in a heartbeat if the serious alternatives are:BruceMcCarthyPulis
Simeone's a weird man who uses his own rage very deliberately and always has. Pearson isn't 'using' anything - he just loses it.
Quote from: robbo1874 on April 14, 2016, 12:46:08 PMPearson just looks like he wants to lamp murphy in that press conference. Understandable, inexperierienced manager getting knocked down a peg or two, by experienced and well regarded local reporter. I'd be the same. Whoever comes in just needs to focus on results.Inexperienced? Pearson's first manager role was nearly 20 years ago. He's hardly been without a job from 2007 until Leicester sacked him.
Ferguson would probably have pulled Murphy's tongue out with his bare hands and beaten him to death with it.
Fuck off and die wasn't a good choice of words. But had he just told him to fuck off, after sustained abuse I can absolutely see why he snapped and said something. To me it doesn't show that he can't take pressure. It shows that one person after a lot of very personal abuse got to him to provoke that reaction. The bigger question is why didn't the stewards step in sooner? If I had my kid there, or even from a personal level I wouldn't want to hear one twat go on like that. This is football and I know things can get the better of us but there has to be limit to even that.
Quote from: SheffieldVillain on April 14, 2016, 12:59:38 PMQuote from: ClaretAndBlueBlood on April 14, 2016, 12:56:29 PMQuote from: Villa in Denmark on April 14, 2016, 12:25:59 PMQuote from: ClaretAndBlueBlood on April 14, 2016, 11:32:58 AMQuote from: Chinchilla Bathhouse on April 14, 2016, 11:21:51 AMQuote from: ClaretAndBlueBlood on April 14, 2016, 10:54:15 AMQuote from: Chinchilla Bathhouse on April 14, 2016, 10:42:39 AMQuote from: The_ads on April 14, 2016, 09:54:36 AM....and what would you prefer? A nice comfortable clean cut manager like Southgate who will nod and smile and say the nice things and charm the press or someone who actually has experience of turning round the fortunes of football clubs? Albeit by upsetting Pat MurphyIt's not just Pat Murphy though, is it? Pearson offends lots of people. He's also not the only manager out there who has experience of turning round the fortunes of football clubs, although he may be the only one who does it less often than he gets himself fired for being a liability. I really don't understand this clamour for a bully; Keane, Karsa and Culverhouse proved demonstrably that it doesn't work with these players - the latter pair of idiots even got fired for their behaviour. How is Pearson legally going to be more extreme than they were, then? Would it even work? I'd have thought the very last thing we need in our basket case of a dressing room is a volatile loon throwing his weight around. I think we need someone with a calm head (which Pearson doesn't appear to possess) who copes well under pressure (which Pearson apparently can't) and will be here to see through a long term plan (which Pearson has never done). It's not just an either/or between a Southgate and a Pearson, there is a lot of middle ground there. As others have said, a bit of charisma would be welcome. That's charisma, not aggression. Pearson seems to bring almost guaranteed disgrace and embarrassment sooner or later; haven't we had enough of that this season? they didn't get fired for bullyingDidn't they? I thought there were allegations of bullying, Karsa was suspended and both were subsequently fired after an internal investigation. Apologies if I'm wrong. Still doesn't mean a bully is what we need. they were fired for not doing their jobs, which Lambert was unaware of. He only kept his job because he agreed to them being firedWell the individual investigations that led to their dismissals were both instigated following allegations of bullying. There was plenty of discussion on here at the time about how it might have affected the younger players.Guardian article on dismissalDaily Mail article on suspensionCulverhouse's Wikipedia page which he'd presumably have altered if it wasn't true, as if it's untrue it's libellous.Unless of course you have incontrovertible evidence to the contrary, are privy to the clubs legal dealings or represented one of Karsa, Culverhouse or the club.newspapers don't always print the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. And anyone can edit Wikipediainternal investigation and off-field matters would appear to be correct, the bullying aspect less soand yes, I remember well all of the discussions on here at the time. Bullying, or aggressive coaching methods, might actually be better than the truthIf you don't mind me asking, if you're disregarding the newspapers and the internet, where do you have your information from? Is it actually from a reliable source or just your opinion? Genuine question.someone I consider a reliable source, works at BH