by CanaryCanary » 10 Nov 2012 22:59
by Mondieu » 10 Nov 2012 23:02
by MmmMonsterMunch » 10 Nov 2012 23:05
by MmmMonsterMunch » 10 Nov 2012 23:09
by RoyalBlue » 10 Nov 2012 23:11
MmmMonsterMunch Try telling that to people on here having a coronary because we're not tearing the league up.
- We've lost 3 games away - Liverpool, Chelsea & West Brom. Two of those by 1 goal & the other we got stitched by the ref.
- We've lost once at home to Spurs. All the other games we've got a result in. We also got diddled by the ref in the Newcastle game & were wrongly denied our 1st win minutes from time.
- We've scored quite a lot of goals & given our all generally.
- We got up here by what can only be described as an act of God or should I say act of Brian.
Now many of the very same are calling for his head. Go figure.
Anyway best of luck for the season apart from when we meet you again at Carrow Road.
by AthleticoSpizz » 10 Nov 2012 23:11
by bcubed » 10 Nov 2012 23:15
by CanaryCanary » 10 Nov 2012 23:18
MmmMonsterMunch FTR Canary - the club has always been run this way. When the new owners came in, they made it absolutely clear things would carry on in the same vein yet many still see fit to spit feathers because we've not spent loads of money.
They never said they were going to!
by MmmMonsterMunch » 10 Nov 2012 23:19
RoyalBlueMmmMonsterMunch Try telling that to people on here having a coronary because we're not tearing the league up.
- We've lost 3 games away - Liverpool, Chelsea & West Brom. Two of those by 1 goal & the other we got stitched by the ref.
- We've lost once at home to Spurs. All the other games we've got a result in. We also got diddled by the ref in the Newcastle game & were wrongly denied our 1st win minutes from time.
- We've scored quite a lot of goals & given our all generally.
- We got up here by what can only be described as an act of God or should I say act of Brian.
Now many of the very same are calling for his head. Go figure.
Anyway best of luck for the season apart from when we meet you again at Carrow Road.
All very good but how convenient to fail to mention that, despite everything you have said, we only have 6 points from 10 games, sit in the bottom three and have some really tough games coming up.
As for draws at home being results..........
by SCIAG » 10 Nov 2012 23:22
CanaryCanary
Now I want to talk about Reading. I've seen a lot of criticism of McDermott, but blimey, isn't he doing the best that he could be expected to do considering the fact that he was given nothing to spend? Reading have spent nothing, nada, zilch. You are now playing in the best league in the world, I believe I'm correct in saying that he's been restricted to free agents and a couple of signings from the championship. There are probably five or six Championship teams operating on bigger budgets this season.
We were deemed to have underinvested last summer and were faves to finish 20th despite spending a lot more than Reading. That said, we were favorites for relegation again this season, not quite sure how that works.
A lot of pundits were predicting good things for Reading this year, but most fans were not when it became apparent that you weren't prepared to spend any money. The optimism of the pundits obviously came about having seen Swansea and Norwich thrive last season while still playing the brand of football that they developed in the Championship, and figured that because Reading played good football too you would be fine.
The reality is that Norwich and Swansea spent a good £10m to £12m in their first summer, I'm not sure about Swansea but we spent a further £6m in January on Johnny Howson and Ryan Bennett, and this summer we've probably gone and spent another £10m, I'd like to think that there is another £6m for Hughton to buy the striker that we desperately need in January.
Those numbers are chicken feed in this league. If Reading go down this season it won't be because McDermott has mispent money and got things wrong, it will be because he hasn't been backed in the transfer market. We made exactly the same mistake in 2004/2005 when we spent peanuts in the summer, and then went and bought Dean Ashton in January (five months too late).
I'm not here to preach, but I doubt that there are any managers who could be doing any better this season considering the circumstances. It reminds me of Warnock who went through the same thing last summer. Given nothing to spend, and then Hughes gets £25m in January and takes the credit for finishing 17th.
I'd understand you wanting rid of him if you'd spent money in Southamption proportions. Why haven't you backed your man with money? (genuine question), could it be that it was considered too much of a risk? Are your club intending to yo-yo? And if you do go down with the intention to yo-yo, who else would you want in charge? You already have a man who has shown that he can get out of the championship.
by MmmMonsterMunch » 10 Nov 2012 23:22
CanaryCanaryMmmMonsterMunch FTR Canary - the club has always been run this way. When the new owners came in, they made it absolutely clear things would carry on in the same vein yet many still see fit to spit feathers because we've not spent loads of money.
They never said they were going to!
It's a difficult balance to get right, but I do think that Reading needed to spend a bit more. Doesn't always work out though, just need to look at Southampton and QPR this season, but both Norwich and Swansea stayed up having bought a good four or five quality players and a few more to bulk up the squad.
In the past it has been said that a yo-yo or two isn't a bad thing, as you end up going back up stronger, but with the TV money being worth £60m next season rather than £40m.... I think that it's only going to get harder and harder for promoted teams to compete.
It would be a disaster for you to sack McDermott and then get relegated I think. It would be less of a disaster if you went down with McDermott with a healthy balance sheet with the willingness to keep players, add to your squad, and attempt to get straight back up.
West Brom absolutely mastered this and it paid off for them in the end, but 'coming back up' is easier said than done.... The Championship is a ridiculously competitive league, and when we went down last time in 2005 we found that going down with the intention to yo-yo didn't work out....
I want to stop talking about an impending relegation though, because there is a lot of football left to be played, you aren't getting thrashed, and it only takes a lucky win and a few decisions going your way to turn a season around. You have been the 3rd worst team in the league up to this point, and you only need to be the 4th worst to stay up.
by Caskeys Lovechild » 10 Nov 2012 23:23
by Archie's penalty » 10 Nov 2012 23:28
CanaryCanary Hi guys,
I come in peace (never had any reason to either dislike or like reading, unless you can think of one, plus I can't stand QPR and if you can contribute towards their relegation in any way this season then that will be reason to like you).
I stumbled across this board out of interest to see whether Reading fans saw a dire performance like Norwich fans, or whether it was seen as a positive result and performance. If it makes you feel any better that's the second ridiculously awful game of football that I've had to watch in a week.... we had Stoke at home last Saturday.
It's unusual that I choose to sign up to a board to chip in, but in this case I felt that I had something to add to the debate which might make you feel a bit better. Getting men behind the ball and allowing the opposition team to have a fair bit of possession in the right parts of the pitch is Hughton's gameplan and invariably it results in the awful football that you watched today. After shipping in 9 goals in two games, plus the 5 that we shipped at home to Fulham at the start of the season, he has just gone right back to basics and adopted a Stoke like system at times. I don't think that your wasteful possession today was anything to do with a poor performance from your players but rather not having a clue how to play against our system.
You just played a team that is unbeaten in four games, we've won three of those games against Spurs, Arsenal, and Stoke, and we have seen a lot of the ugly football that you witnessed today. Ultimately though, you got a point from a team that had just won three of their last four games, only conceding two goals in the process.
We aren't scoring goals for fun like we did last year, and when we attack attack attack we end up on the wrong side of a hiding. Last season we'd have attacked all game, both teams would have been able to get the ball down and play, and we probably would have seen one of the two teams leave the ground having won 3-2.
I don't think that you should be so down on your performance to be honest, we are extremely difficult to break down at the minute. We are at real danger of developing a reputation as one of those teams who play bad football but pick up lots of points at this rate, and if that happens in due course I'll start to get embarrassed, but for now we are doing what we are having to do to get away from the drop zone. I don't want to talk about Norwich too much, because I'll bore you, but we personally hope that Hughton can add a striker or two in the summer and that this will see us playing passing some nice positive passing football again.
Now I want to talk about Reading. I've seen a lot of criticism of McDermott, but blimey, isn't he doing the best that he could be expected to do considering the fact that he was given nothing to spend? Reading have spent nothing, nada, zilch. You are now playing in the best league in the world, I believe I'm correct in saying that he's been restricted to free agents and a couple of signings from the championship. There are probably five or six Championship teams operating on bigger budgets this season.
We were deemed to have underinvested last summer and were faves to finish 20th despite spending a lot more than Reading. That said, we were favorites for relegation again this season, not quite sure how that works.
A lot of pundits were predicting good things for Reading this year, but most fans were not when it became apparent that you weren't prepared to spend any money. The optimism of the pundits obviously came about having seen Swansea and Norwich thrive last season while still playing the brand of football that they developed in the Championship, and figured that because Reading played good football too you would be fine.
The reality is that Norwich and Swansea spent a good £10m to £12m in their first summer, I'm not sure about Swansea but we spent a further £6m in January on Johnny Howson and Ryan Bennett, and this summer we've probably gone and spent another £10m, I'd like to think that there is another £6m for Hughton to buy the striker that we desperately need in January.
Those numbers are chicken feed in this league. If Reading go down this season it won't be because McDermott has mispent money and got things wrong, it will be because he hasn't been backed in the transfer market. We made exactly the same mistake in 2004/2005 when we spent peanuts in the summer, and then went and bought Dean Ashton in January (five months too late).
I'm not here to preach, but I doubt that there are any managers who could be doing any better this season considering the circumstances. It reminds me of Warnock who went through the same thing last summer. Given nothing to spend, and then Hughes gets £25m in January and takes the credit for finishing 17th.
I'd understand you wanting rid of him if you'd spent money in Southamption proportions. Why haven't you backed your man with money? (genuine question), could it be that it was considered too much of a risk? Are your club intending to yo-yo? And if you do go down with the intention to yo-yo, who else would you want in charge? You already have a man who has shown that he can get out of the championship.
Anyway, good luck with the season. Just my two pennies, just a bit surprised that Reading fans have so much expectation despite having largely a Championship quality squad (and no, that isn't a dig, that's a reality).
by CanaryCanary » 10 Nov 2012 23:52
CanaryCanary Swansea spent around £6.75m last summer and £1.75m of that was on Leroy LOLita (secondary pun not intended). Norwich's fees were mostly undisclosed, Morison and Pilkington were good buys but you also wasted a lot of money on James Vaughan. We spent about the same on Gunter and Mariappa, and also offered big wages to Guthrie and particularly Pogrebnyak. Quite frankly, none of Norwich or Swansea's signings had the pedigree that those two free agents had (I think most were comparable to Gunter and Mariappa, amongst the best Championship players in their position), and I don't think we'd be better off if we'd decided to throw a million or two at a player like Lita or Vaughan.
We had a bid accepted for Gylfi Sigurdsson, but Spurs offered him more money and are a much bigger club than us so y'know.
Part of the problem is that McDermott is seemingly refusing to play two of our best players, and we're suffering as a result. I said at the start of the season that in my eyes he has the job as long as he wanted it, but he's made some pretty big mistakes this season that have cost us points, like not changing tactics to defend a lead, which is making it harder to defend him.
by Soul Man » 11 Nov 2012 00:10
by CanaryCanary » 11 Nov 2012 00:27
Soul Man Interesting!! I still think we're down mate.
by CanaryCanary » 11 Nov 2012 00:55
Caskeys Lovechild I don't think we saw a positive game, but I suspect we saw it more positively than Norwich. We were definitely the better team, and should probably have nicked a goal somewhere along the line - Kebe's little run, a couple of crosses which should have been punished - but overall I thought a draw was probably fair.
I think if I was a Norwich fan, I'd be worried. Nothing to offer anywhere on the pitch really - Grant Holt looked fat and lazy today, and nobody tested our Goalkeeper at any point.
As for the transfer and investment situation - you're demonstrating some of the basic lack of understanding that alot of our fans do about transfer dealing. Let me make this simple for you. Football clubs do not "Buy" football players - they buy them OUT of existing contracts. If those contracts have lapsed, then there is no fee to pay. If the player has refused to sign a contract, there is no fee to pay. If the player is IN contract, then a compensation is paid, for the player breaking that contract.
Transfer fees are NOT reflective of the amount of investment in a team
Your assumption that we've "not spent any money" is completely wrong
whilst we've not spent money on buying players out of contracts, our wage bill is the highest it has ever been - and I'd much rather be paying wages, than fees
especially when you see figures like £7m being banded around for the like of Holt (who I wouldn't have anywhere near our team).
Buying players out of contracts is a stupid idea - especially if you can avoid it by home-growing, or understanding the characters available on the free/minimal fee market. I'm pretty sure this team will come good - and if it doesn't, the Championship does have the distinct advantage of not attracting the oxf*rd morons who don't have a clue how football works - which would be a welcome relief to the morons who think we should be challenging the top half of the table.
I still think we'll finish above Norwich at the end of the season though.
by CanaryCanary » 11 Nov 2012 19:06
by handbags_harris » 11 Nov 2012 21:49
by CanaryCanary » 11 Nov 2012 23:02
handbags_harris Anyway, more on Norwich - I can't say I really like any of the East Anglian clubs (nothing personal CC). Stems back from the quite horrendous results we had against them in the mid-90's and the awful luck or performances we got against them. I can think of a 3-0 at home in 96, Sheppard's last hurrah, as well as Keith Scott punching in an equaliser at Carrow Road, on top of that a 4-1, 5-2 and 4-0 against Ipswich. You can even throw in that 2-1 defeat in 2001 at Colchester and the penalty that nobody knows was given for, and then there's the refereeing assist in 2004. These reasons make wins against both just that little bit sweeter.
Anyway, I thought they were pretty sound defensively, surprisingly so given their record and the fact they play Bassong as a regular starter
As I said earlier their attacks focus around Holt - that hasn't changed in years, I remember they crumbled when Holt was sent off on Norwich's last visit here
Wes Hoolahan is the sort of player who I would find frustrating, fleet of foot but very slight and questionable quality where a final ball is concerned. I've never been a big fan of him personally.
Further back the midfield looked workmanlike
but the wings were shackled decently until the final 20, particularly the left side where firstly Kebe allowed Garrido far too much time to cross time and again, and the unconvincing Gunter finding himself woefully out of position on more than one occasion.
Once Norwich started getting the crosses in I worried because the men in the middle looking to receive seemed to find space every time. Of course Norwich looked more dangerous in the final 20, but only as a result of a more gung-ho approach from us in a futile attempt to win the game, gaps occurring which better players would have punished (no disrespect - I mean the likes of our opponents in the next three home games).
All in all, I thought the two sides were evenly matched
I personally think that is more of a worry for Norwich, who were always going to find this second season up a different animal
than it is a positive for Reading. As it stands we are bottom three material...
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