Quote from: Jimbo on April 17, 2016, 11:02:29 AMThe turning point was when Randy Lerner turned up at Ellis's office with a shiny Cleveland Browns helmet. Only now do we understand the symbolism in that gesture. Not being funny, no-one can deny that Randy has proven to be a disaster, but which of the alternatives would you have gone for?Ray Ranson? The man who facilitated Ridsdale bankrupting Leeds so he could earn a few quid, then pitched up at Coventry and helped drive them almost to extinction?The 50 year old lawyer still living at home with his mother?Doug who'd run out of money that wasn't his own, and had recognised that he couldn't really hack it in the jungle of modern football anymore?
The turning point was when Randy Lerner turned up at Ellis's office with a shiny Cleveland Browns helmet. Only now do we understand the symbolism in that gesture.
I don't think there's been any turning points as such, more an accumulation of errors upon errors. Some too ridiculous to be true, but sadly they are
Quote from: oldhill_avfc on April 18, 2016, 10:38:35 AMQuote from: Phil from the upper holte on April 17, 2016, 08:19:13 AMI do think Leicester was a big turning point thoughNo it wasn't - the natural rules of statistical variation produced a performance that flattered a very poor team which was patently a relegation candidate from day 1.We'd played reasonably well for a side trying to settle in up to the Leicester game. The Leicester game was the catalyst for this season's progressively poorer form.
Quote from: Phil from the upper holte on April 17, 2016, 08:19:13 AMI do think Leicester was a big turning point thoughNo it wasn't - the natural rules of statistical variation produced a performance that flattered a very poor team which was patently a relegation candidate from day 1.
I do think Leicester was a big turning point though
2012-13Chelsea 0-8The 0-15 over three matches in late 2012Bradford CityMillwallThis sequence set the tone for the acceptance of, and apathy towards, abject failure and performances.
Quote from: Villa in Denmark on April 18, 2016, 09:23:16 AMQuote from: Jimbo on April 17, 2016, 11:02:29 AMThe turning point was when Randy Lerner turned up at Ellis's office with a shiny Cleveland Browns helmet. Only now do we understand the symbolism in that gesture. Not being funny, no-one can deny that Randy has proven to be a disaster, but which of the alternatives would you have gone for?Ray Ranson? The man who facilitated Ridsdale bankrupting Leeds so he could earn a few quid, then pitched up at Coventry and helped drive them almost to extinction?The 50 year old lawyer still living at home with his mother?Doug who'd run out of money that wasn't his own, and had recognised that he couldn't really hack it in the jungle of modern football anymore?Gillette and Hicks.Michael 'Broadband' Neville.Sven.
Someone mentioned this on a similar thread more eloquently than I am about to but having Acorns on the shirt strikes me as representing something of an alarm bell with the benefit of glorious hindsight. It's all well and good basking in the glow of the moral high ground it afforded us at the time and Randy Lerner was widely feted for not accepting whatever sponsorship deals were on the table on the grounds that they were not what he thought the club was worth. However, the money on offer might have proved the difference between signings like Davies and Beye and Shorey and signing an entire new back four 12 months later.
Signing Emile Heskey. On the 22 January, 2009, we were in the top 4 on 44 points from 22 games. We were handily placed, only 3 points behind Man U and Liverpool in joint 1st, a point behind Chelsea in 2nd, and 3 points ahead of Arsenal.
Quote from: rougegorge on April 18, 2016, 01:18:18 PM2012-13Chelsea 0-8The 0-15 over three matches in late 2012Bradford CityMillwallThis sequence set the tone for the acceptance of, and apathy towards, abject failure and performances.Lambert should have been booted into oblivion after that result. I never wanted a manager more sacked than him after that. Had we done so I doubt the rest would have transpired.