Absolutely, we had to rebuild a whole squad. It seemed a lot of money but in comparison it was also a lot of players for that amount. Not just a few at £30 - £40 million plus on singular players as others already in this league try and do.
Quote from: garyfouroaks on July 27, 2020, 09:45:02 AMQuote from: AV82EC on July 27, 2020, 09:34:10 AMA whole league Table higher than when he took over.And one point, a draw, from being back down there again, despite spending £140m in the summer with the highest net PL spend, more than Man U, Liverpool, Arsenal etc.And how many of them had to buy almost an entire new squad? Had about three players who were good enough two months before the season started? Or had season-ending injuries to two major players in the same game?
Quote from: AV82EC on July 27, 2020, 09:34:10 AMA whole league Table higher than when he took over.And one point, a draw, from being back down there again, despite spending £140m in the summer with the highest net PL spend, more than Man U, Liverpool, Arsenal etc.
A whole league Table higher than when he took over.
And one point, a draw, from being back down there again, despite spending £140m in the summer with the highest net PL spend, more than Man U, Liverpool, Arsenal etc.
Quote from: Drummond on July 27, 2020, 08:21:57 AMI'm honestly dumbfounded that people still want to sack him. Why?In business it is commonplace to hire managers and experts to do a job, a job they do well, and then recruit someone else for the next job.Ironically, were Smith to go now, his stock would be far higher than if he was sacked for a second dismal PL campaign later on.
I'm honestly dumbfounded that people still want to sack him.
Rob Dorsett on SSN has just been on to say his job is 100% safe. And that we will not be selling Jack unless someone comes in with a stupid offer. Says the owners want better next season though. I think it is right to keep Dean. Far too much upheaval in too short a space of time if he was to leave. Seems to have fixed the defence. Keep Jack, go and find two more effective, pacey wingers and a top class forward and I think we can progress again next year.
From The Grauniad:"Dean SmithTeams who get promoted through the play-offs are expected to struggle, especially if they lose half their squad straight away. Dean Smith had to adapt to the top flight while blending in over a dozen new arrivals, promising talents recruited at an average price of around £9.5m each, which is small beer in the Premier League saloon. Then, halfway through the campaign, he had to cope with the loss of the spine of his team, with goalkeeper Tom Heaton and main striker Wesley suffering long-term injuries and John McGinn sidelined for several months. Smith showed his skills by successfully changing his approach and tightening up a defence that had been leaky, and he helped newcomers such as Douglas Luiz and Trezeguet to grow into very good Premier League players. Before the season ended it was clear that Villa would be wise to keep Smith irrespective of whether they stayed up or went down."
Dean Smith has 100% earned another crack.However, there needs to be progress next season. We need to be winning more games and grinding out more draws.We lost 21 games this season, that needs to be down to less than 16 next season minimum - say 11 wins and 11 draws, what Newcastle did to finish 13th this season. Progress next year would be finishing north of 14th, never being in a relegation scrap and always feeling that we were taking the points we had earned.
Yes we had to rebuild a whole squad and of course there were inevitable purchases, we effectively needed a whole new defence and certainly a striker (in fact, we should have bought two). But we also replaced a lot of squad players with squad players and loaned out a number of young prospects which on balance didn't make a lot of sense. We essentially spent a fair amount of money on players that didn't significantly improve on those we consciously let go, with the exception of Luiz.