by Percy's Rocket » 15 Jan 2009 19:16
by glass half full » 15 Jan 2009 19:22
handbags_harris Some of the suggestions on here would make me question whether I wanted to come back to the Madejski if they were manager of RFC.
Neil Warnock? Successful manager, wouldn't want him here though. His mould is totally against the ethos that this club is trying to instil.
Lawrie Sanchez? No f*ckin way.
Roy Keane? Don't think so. Think he'd struggle at this club. Not right for RFC after Coppell.
Paul Jewell? Decentish manager when given time, but I think the guy's a bit of a tit to be honest.
Brendan Rodgers? Let's wait and see what he does at Watford shall we before thinking he's the best thing since sliced bread.
Simon Grayson? No sorry. He would probably do a 'Mcghee' or 'Pardew' on us.
Parky? No. Let sleeping dogs lie.
Pardew? No. Burnt his bridges here under a cloud, and also hasn't exactly excelled since he left.
Glen Hoddle? No. Has had hardly any true managerial success since he left Swindon 16 years ago.
Paul Ince? Woefully inadequate at Blackburn, had a decent record at MK Dons when given money to spend in a cash-strapped league, but no for me.
Parky? No. Given time at Colchester and made an excellent fist of it and then left under a cloud. Has done nothing at Championship level since, although it remains to be seen what he does with Charlton.
Sammy Lee? Just LOL @ that suggestion
My own suggestion would be for an already established manager with credentials at at least Championship level, and a decent temperament, one that now fits the ethos that RFC has built up to carry on where Coppell will leave us. I think the only currently available managers who have that are Alan Curbishley and Joe Royle (the latter I think wouldn't be successful, he's had his day). Would they come to Reading though?
Of course, new young managers to be given time are Brendan Rodgers, Roberto di Matteo, maybe Paul Ince if he gets another chance somewhere, Simon Grayson maybe, Owen Coyle, and Nigel Clough. If any of those are successful at their current clubs, they should be lined up for Coppell's replacement. I personally hope di Matteo does well, (despite who he manages) as he'll be perfect for RFC if he does IMO.
by PEARCEY » 15 Jan 2009 19:22
by glass half full » 15 Jan 2009 19:25
glass half fullhandbags_harris Some of the suggestions on here would make me question whether I wanted to come back to the Madejski if they were manager of RFC.
Neil Warnock? Successful manager, wouldn't want him here though. His mould is totally against the ethos that this club is trying to instil.
Lawrie Sanchez? No f*ckin way.
Roy Keane? Don't think so. Think he'd struggle at this club. Not right for RFC after Coppell.
Paul Jewell? Decentish manager when given time, but I think the guy's a bit of a tit to be honest.
Brendan Rodgers? Let's wait and see what he does at Watford shall we before thinking he's the best thing since sliced bread.
Simon Grayson? He would probably do a 'McGhee' or 'Pardew' on us
Simon Grayson? No sorry. He would probably do a 'Mcghee' or 'Pardew' on us.
Parky? No. Let sleeping dogs lie.
Pardew? No. Burnt his bridges here under a cloud, and also hasn't exactly excelled since he left.
Glen Hoddle? No. Has had hardly any true managerial success since he left Swindon 16 years ago.
Paul Ince? Woefully inadequate at Blackburn, had a decent record at MK Dons when given money to spend in a cash-strapped league, but no for me.
Parky? No. Given time at Colchester and made an excellent fist of it and then left under a cloud. Has done nothing at Championship level since, although it remains to be seen what he does with Charlton.
Sammy Lee? Just LOL @ that suggestion
My own suggestion would be for an already established manager with credentials at at least Championship level, and a decent temperament, one that now fits the ethos that RFC has built up to carry on where Coppell will leave us. I think the only currently available managers who have that are Alan Curbishley and Joe Royle (the latter I think wouldn't be successful, he's had his day). Would they come to Reading though?
Of course, new young managers to be given time are Brendan Rodgers, Roberto di Matteo, maybe Paul Ince if he gets another chance somewhere, Simon Grayson maybe, Owen Coyle, and Nigel Clough. If any of those are successful at their current clubs, they should be lined up for Coppell's replacement. I personally hope di Matteo does well, (despite who he manages) as he'll be perfect for RFC if he does IMO.
by IMAMATEOFJOVSKY » 25 Jan 2009 17:57
by Millsy » 25 Jan 2009 18:01
by Platypuss » 25 Jan 2009 18:13
by Gordons Cumming » 25 Jan 2009 18:25
by Elliott » 25 Jan 2009 19:06
IMAMATEOFJOVSKY Should Coppell decide that he wants to call a close to his management tenure at Reading when the season ends - and hopefully with us in the premier league, I would be more than happy if Roberto Martinez was installed as the new manager -
I think that he could carry on the great work that has been done by Coppell, and his eye for a "good player" much like Coppell, would put us in good stead!
However dont think Swansea would let him go - and we need an ambitious manager in the ascendancy, not an experienced manager on the wain
2 world wars, 1 world cup Fantastic thread.
Platypuss Be fair, it's almost 2 weeks since someone started a thread on the subject.
Gordons Cumming Can't have people repeating subjects too quickly.
Not allowed.
by Rex » 25 Jan 2009 20:04
by SteveRoyal » 25 Jan 2009 21:00
royalexile There's too much greed on this thread
by Ark Royal » 26 Jan 2009 21:35
CMRoyal Gareth Southgate. Failing that, Brendan Rodgers, or Roberto Martinez.
by holsgrove breaks a leg » 26 Jan 2009 22:18
by Snowball » 26 Jan 2009 23:24
by readingbedding » 26 Jan 2009 23:41
by Snowball » 26 Jan 2009 23:44
readingbedding Teams should do away with training sessions then, if they only know how to play one way.
Phuck tactics, they're shite.
by Snowball » 26 Jan 2009 23:45
by Doyler » 27 Jan 2009 00:26
by Pseud O'Nym » 27 Jan 2009 01:22
by readingbedding » 27 Jan 2009 09:56
Snowballreadingbedding Teams should do away with training sessions then, if they only know how to play one way.
Phuck tactics, they're shite.
Not sure what you're implying, but a high-possession team is more about
great first-touch etc, rather than hard-running.
It's just a horses-for-courses thing. eg: some players suit Arsenal/Swansea style, some don't.
Doesn't necessarily mean they superior or inferior players, just different
You gonna teach, Savage, S Hunt, Kevin Davies etc to be delicate and elegant?
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