by strap » 02 Dec 2010 09:37
by Gordons Cumming » 02 Dec 2010 10:01
by super darren caskey » 02 Dec 2010 10:54
by Harpers So Solid Crew » 02 Dec 2010 10:54
Gordons Cumming I saw Mr Mad close up on Saturday and he's really starting to look old.
20 years would be very optimistic, Strap.
However, maybe one of his daughters..........?
by Vision » 02 Dec 2010 11:08
strap I have been a constant doom-monger when it comes to Mr Mad over the years. He is a businessman first, second and third, and will only do something if at the end of the day is in his own best interests. He is not altrusitic in the truest sense of the word, despite his many laudable charitable activities.
However, I readily agree that he has completely reshaped RFC, and 20 years after he started his tenure, the club is totally unrecognisable - in every aspect - from the one he took over in 1990. I'm not sure I agree with the brown-nosers who say the club wouldn't be in existence without his intervention, (it's impossible to prove as we can never know who else might have stepped up had Mr Mad bailed out after 5, 10 or whatever years), but it is clear that we are where we are today because of his vision, hard work and the LOANS he has made to RFC. Frankly the club will probably be better run in the future if he was to stay for another 20 years, rather than sold to a buyer of unknown quality. We would still have the perennial gnashing of teeth following the regular sale of star players, to be replaced by journeymen, but we would be stable, with a committed group of staff/players etc, and at leaast we would be able to see a decent standard of football.
So heartiest congratulations to Mr Mad on reaching such a significant milestone. Long may it continue - as long as the bullshit is reigned in! We see straight through the claptrap Mr Mad, we are not fools! (Well a few of us aren't anyway!)
by Snowball » 02 Dec 2010 11:36
under the tinHampshire Royal It would be nice and simple (and great) if spending loads of money guaranteed success. Unfortunately it doesn't.
That statement is not strictlytrue. It's certainly not an absolute. Only the most seriously deluded Chelsea fans can't see the correlation beetween that clubs ascendency, and the Abramovitch money. United may have a good pedigree of growing their own, but still, historically, have splashed the cash on the Greenoffs, the Andy Coles, the Roy Keanes, the Berbatovs, and the Rooneys, etc., and none of them came cheap. I think Arsenal were the first club to pay £100 000 for a player, (Alan Ball, I think). Walcott cost how much? Conversely, Liverpool have spent relatively heavily over the last few years, and have witnessed, (by their standards) a decline. I could talk about how much Jack Hayward lavished on Wolves, with virtually no effect. Newcastle turned spending into an artform.
I can remember Tommy Burns "magnificent seven". £3/4M worth of crap.
I think that the lesson is that it is not about how much money is spent, but how wisely it is spent. This is why I believe that the most important signing any club can make is that of its manager.
by Svlad Cjelli » 02 Dec 2010 11:42
by ShinPad » 02 Dec 2010 11:55
by The Rouge » 02 Dec 2010 12:02
Gordons Cumming I saw Mr Mad close up on Saturday and he's really starting to look old.
20 years would be very optimistic, Strap.
by andrew1957 » 02 Dec 2010 12:43
strap I have been a constant doom-monger when it comes to Mr Mad over the years. He is a businessman first, second and third, and will only do something if at the end of the day is in his own best interests. He is not altrusitic in the truest sense of the word, despite his many laudable charitable activities.
However, I readily agree that he has completely reshaped RFC, and 20 years after he started his tenure, the club is totally unrecognisable - in every aspect - from the one he took over in 1990. I'm not sure I agree with the brown-nosers who say the club wouldn't be in existence without his intervention, (it's impossible to prove as we can never know who else might have stepped up had Mr Mad bailed out after 5, 10 or whatever years), but it is clear that we are where we are today because of his vision, hard work and the LOANS he has made to RFC. Frankly the club will probably be better run in the future if he was to stay for another 20 years, rather than sold to a buyer of unknown quality. We would still have the perennial gnashing of teeth following the regular sale of star players, to be replaced by journeymen, but we would be stable, with a committed group of staff/players etc, and at least we would be able to see a decent standard of football.
So heartiest congratulations to Mr Mad on reaching such a significant milestone. Long may it continue - as long as the bullshit is reigned in! We see straight through the claptrap Mr Mad, we are not fools! (Well a few of us aren't anyway!)
by Hoop Blah » 02 Dec 2010 13:32
Snowball The reality, certainly in the Premiership is that there is a near-perfect correlation between money spent and final position. The money effect on playing power has been increasing since the Premiership started and the lack of competition has also increased.
A recent book (a statto's dream) is "Pay as you Play" by Paul Tomkins, details clubs' spending and points accrued. Premiership points cost between 1 and 2 million pounds each point. Steve Coppel's Reading stands up well on money-spent and £s per point, but these doing-it-cheap clubs are extremely rare and getting rarer.
There are also three separate segments where points cost more. The top 4 (5-6) where points cost up to 2 Million each, the middle (where clubs like Allardyce's sometimes punch above their weight) and the strugglers, spending less, using younger players, and rarely surviving.
Wenger, when you actually CHECK, bought his Premiership wins, and Chelsea, Man Utd, Liverpool have always bought success. (The reverse isn't always true, of course. You can spend, buy poorly and NOT win, but NOT spending means NOT winning.)
In the CCC it's not so extreme but it's near-miraculous to make the top two without being one of the top 2-3-4 spenders.
Outside the top 2-3-4 however, clubs are much of a muchness, and it's in this bracket that "nous", finding under-priced players, turning players round, excellent strategy and tactics etc can get a club spending say 8th-15th can sneak into the play-offs and in through the back door to the Premiership.
I am UTTERLY, TOTALLY fine with the idea that we don't have, so won't spend, the kinds of sums to be "Top-Two Expectant"... As long as we are mid-table spenders and have a reasonable chance of making the play-offs, that's fine, even at a risk of slipping and flirting with relegation. Better to have a club long-term that keeps itself just about in the mix without risking melt-down.
by bcubed » 02 Dec 2010 13:51
Snowball The reality, certainly in the Premiership is that there is a near-perfect correlation between money spent and final position. The money effect on playing power has been increasing since the Premiership started and the lack of competition has also increased.
A recent book (a statto's dream) is "Pay as you Play" by Paul Tomkins, details clubs' spending and points accrued. Premiership points cost between 1 and 2 million pounds each point. Steve Coppel's Reading stands up well on money-spent and £s per point, but these doing-it-cheap clubs are extremely rare and getting rarer.
There are also three separate segments where points cost more. The top 4 (5-6) where points cost up to 2 Million each, the middle (where clubs like Allardyce's sometimes punch above their weight) and the strugglers, spending less, using younger players, and rarely surviving.
Wenger, when you actually CHECK, bought his Premiership wins, and Chelsea, Man Utd, Liverpool have always bought success. (The reverse isn't always true, of course. You can spend, buy poorly and NOT win, but NOT spending means NOT winning.)
In the CCC it's not so extreme but it's near-miraculous to make the top two without being one of the top 2-3-4 spenders.
Outside the top 2-3-4 however, clubs are much of a muchness, and it's in this bracket that "nous", finding under-priced players, turning players round, excellent strategy and tactics etc can get a club spending say 8th-15th can sneak into the play-offs and in through the back door to the Premiership.
I am UTTERLY, TOTALLY fine with the idea that we don't have, so won't spend, the kinds of sums to be "Top-Two Expectant"... As long as we are mid-table spenders and have a reasonable chance of making the play-offs, that's fine, even at a risk of slipping and flirting with relegation. Better to have a club long-term that keeps itself just about in the mix without risking melt-down.
by Tinrib » 02 Dec 2010 15:06
The RougeGordons Cumming I saw Mr Mad close up on Saturday and he's really starting to look old.
20 years would be very optimistic, Strap.
I shook his hand at Watford 2 years ago. He had the cold, limp grip of an impending death.
by Snowball » 02 Dec 2010 18:18
bcubed
I find it had to think that anyone could have done as well as Reading in their first Premiership season with such little investment.
Who has a better £s per point rating?
by Sarah Star » 02 Dec 2010 21:04
TinribThe RougeGordons Cumming I saw Mr Mad close up on Saturday and he's really starting to look old.
20 years would be very optimistic, Strap.
I shook his hand at Watford 2 years ago. He had the cold, limp grip of an impending death.
Interesting thought that - If Sir John did keel over after munching his half time Balti Pie - to never return - what would happen to our club...?
Maybe a question for STAR to investigate
by Vision » 03 Dec 2010 08:16
Snowballbcubed
I find it had to think that anyone could have done as well as Reading in their first Premiership season with such little investment.
Who has a better £s per point rating?
On his first round of assessment the author only rated clubs that lasted three seasons. When he dropped the criteria to two seasons RFC/Coppel's rating was second to two separate seasons by Big Sam. (The sums involved are equalised for football-inflation, and all at today's money.
Lyall did very well with Ipswich. The top ten are Lyall, Allardyce, Coppell, Dave Jones, Curbishley, Dowie, Bassett, Kinnear, Smith, Ball, and in 11th, Jewell.
At today's prices, Coppel spent £788,392 PER POINT
by Terminal Boardom » 03 Dec 2010 09:53
1871 Royal Thank you for saving the football club that we all love.
by brendywendy » 03 Dec 2010 10:14
Harpers So Solid Crew Ticks the report card,
could have done better
Would be great if all clubs were run like RFC, but they are not, so have doubts about the longer term success of the strategy.
If so many are so happy, why do so many look ahead to a new owner, is it because we long to be better than we are, which is always the aim.
by brendywendy » 03 Dec 2010 10:15
Maguire Booo get your chequebook out you money man
We'd have been better off with Maxwell
by brendywendy » 03 Dec 2010 10:19
andrew1957strap I have been a constant doom-monger when it comes to Mr Mad over the years. He is a businessman first, second and third, and will only do something if at the end of the day is in his own best interests. He is not altrusitic in the truest sense of the word, despite his many laudable charitable activities.
However, I readily agree that he has completely reshaped RFC, and 20 years after he started his tenure, the club is totally unrecognisable - in every aspect - from the one he took over in 1990. I'm not sure I agree with the brown-nosers who say the club wouldn't be in existence without his intervention, (it's impossible to prove as we can never know who else might have stepped up had Mr Mad bailed out after 5, 10 or whatever years), but it is clear that we are where we are today because of his vision, hard work and the LOANS he has made to RFC. Frankly the club will probably be better run in the future if he was to stay for another 20 years, rather than sold to a buyer of unknown quality. We would still have the perennial gnashing of teeth following the regular sale of star players, to be replaced by journeymen, but we would be stable, with a committed group of staff/players etc, and at least we would be able to see a decent standard of football.
So heartiest congratulations to Mr Mad on reaching such a significant milestone. Long may it continue - as long as the bullshit is reigned in! We see straight through the claptrap Mr Mad, we are not fools! (Well a few of us aren't anyway!)
I think Strap is about right. I have little doubt that RFC is a much bigger and better club today than it would have been if he had not taken over, so we should all be thankful for that.
However, I think his objective "was" achieved when we got the PL. Now he is quite happy having a mid table Championship side that is self sustaining. My main problem with this is that in all truth I doubt it is possible to survive in this division for a long time without ambition. The Championship is getting a tougher division every year and if he goes on selling our best players indefinitely then sooner or later the Academy and the talent scouts will have and bad run and we will end up with a substandard squad that will get relegated. Without investment from JM, with falling crowds and with a big stadium to fund, I think our future in Div 1 would be quite bleak.
Without ambition each year that goes by increases that risk so I think he has had his 20 years and achieved all his objectives and now is the time to "seriously" look for a new owner with ambition to achieve PL success. Whether there is anyone out there though is another matter entirely.
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