by Schards#2 »
19 Apr 2012 11:04
Jesus wept
2008/2009 - threw away automatic promotion and played some of the dullest football I've ever seen. We failed to win at home after 4th Jan and, such was the enthusiasm, that we could only pull 19,000 odd for a play off semi which, as everyone anticipated, we lost with a wimper.
2009/2010 - Didn't win at home until November and sacked the manager in December whilst in relegation touble. Subsequently recovered well largely due to the emergance of Sigurdsson.
2010/2011 - sold Sigurdsson and bumped around mid table until going on an inspired run from late Feb largely to the emergance of Long
2011/2012 - sold Long and were poor up to December where we found some form. In january new owners are unveiled and, instead of selling our best players we buy our new best player. Win 15 of 17 games to ensure promotion.
Without the arrival of TSI I think it is extremely unlikely we would be anywhere near promotion and may well not have Brian as manager. The cloth cutting that neccesitated the selling of our best players every year would, in the long term, only the drag the club in one direction. If you don't believe me, listen to Brian as he mentions this quite often.
I'm sure from Ian Royal's armchair all these games over the 4 years have been scintillating, in reality, many have been dull and forgettable and at times (notably 2008 and the early part of this year) our creativity was at a minimum with games passing by with barely a shot on target. As if by magic, new owners, the end of cloth cutting and new investment in a striker brought a sea change in results but i'm sure it was just a coincidence.
As I've said a few time on here, I don't really blame the players or Brian for our problems when we've been struggling, it's due to the cloth cutting, and I don't blame JM for the cloth cutting as, unless he's prepared to underwrite a blank cheque, it's a necessary evil. But to pretend it's been a thrill a minute ride since we've been relegated is laughable.
Without the TSI episode, it would still be, to coin a phrase, "hard to see progress for the forseeable future". But it happened and, as a result, it no longer is.