after 6 weeks of forgetting this lot its back to reality and another season of Blues
My profound disappointment with yesterday was made all the more painful by the hope that the Cambridge game provided. We beat Cambridge without breaking sweat, but the team contained Lyden, Toner, Green, Bennett, Okore and Hepburn-Murphy. They were enough to freshen the side and play with pace and enthusiasm. When we had played an hour yesterday, the team started to look unfit, the tempo of the game dropped and there was only ever going to be another defeat to endure.What really bothers me is that RDM is going down exactly the same path as Garde and Black and putting his trust in the hands of the likes of Hutton, Sissoko, Bacuna, Westwood and Gestede. As I posted a couple of days ago, they are failures and they do what now comes naturally to them. They fail. The young players may not be world beaters but at least they want to win.
so, I might be getting this wrong but are you saying that already, RDM is another failure?
I have not changed my mind at all. You took my metaphor of shouting at them to represent strong, forceful management, literally and have used it as a stick to beat me with. You will probably disagree for the sake of stringing out an argument I do not seek but I will spell it out.Did Westwood play as badly for Crewe as he plays for Villa? No. Did Hutton play for Spurs as badly as he plays for Villa? Veretout for Nantes? Gueye for Lille? Kozak for Lazio? Traore for Barcelona? Amavi for Nice? Richards for Manchester City? Lescott for Manchester City? Sinclair for Swansea? The list goes on and the answer is a resounding No.So what is the common denominator? It is Aston Villa and it's managers, right through from O'Neill to Garde and straws in the wind that hint at Matteo. Managers who have allowed players to deteriorate. Even Garde who I liked very much, bottled it and allowed Agbonlahor back into the nest of vipers just as it appeared to be scattering.Forceful management might have brought about an end to defeatism. My opinion is that Pearson could have done it. Based on last last Saturday's capitulation RDM seems not to have done.If the failed players are clearly unable or unwilling to change their ways so the only alternative is to give fresh players their chance. I was at Worcester and Cambridge and it looked to be working. I was at the Boro game and the same old losing mentality proved that it is still alive and well.If you want to highlight any of this highlight the words about the common denominator of failing players is Aston Villa managers.