by Snowball » 12 Dec 2012 18:42
by melonhead » 12 Dec 2012 18:45
(something
I said last season.)
by Maguire » 12 Dec 2012 18:51
by RobRoyal » 12 Dec 2012 19:02
Snowball a team which will surely now have a near-record low points total.
by melonhead » 12 Dec 2012 19:08
by Snowball » 12 Dec 2012 19:14
RobRoyalSnowball a team which will surely now have a near-record low points total.
Come on, that's not true.
by melonhead » 12 Dec 2012 19:16
WDDD
by Snowball » 12 Dec 2012 19:20
by The Beardy Man » 12 Dec 2012 19:47
Snowball I think some miss the point, about whether this manager is a cheap option,
or whether, short-term, another manager can turn things round.
Nor is it relevant what a player or manager has done for us in the past.
In the case of the manager of a team where confidence is shot, where in-fighting
has begun and appears to be increasing, where effort appears to be declining, where
choices seem ever-more odd, where some players, good-enough players are excluded,
where morale continues to fall, where results are slowly worsening, sometimes the
only way to create even the possibility of an upturn, is for someone to be sacrificed.
Usually that is the manager. Very occasionally it's a chairman or a clique of players.
For me, the larger, longer-term issue is this. What if we follow these five poor defeats by poor teams
with heavy defeats, maybe 0-3 or 0-4 to Arsenal, then 6-0 away at Manchester City, then lose at home
to the excellent Swansea team and lose to West Ham?
The structure is then tarnished, the manager goes anyway, no players want to come to Reading in January
and we are headed for the worst or second-worst points total ever and a terrible season next year, still
reeling from the effects of a disastrous premiership campaign. Teams don't just shrug off a disastrous season.
It can go to the heart of the club, affect coaching, management, purchases.
If, OTOH, McDermott resigns and a new manager comes in, that manager gets a grace period, a honeymoon,
where the defeats are not laid at his feet. He can come in and set out a new strategy of building for next
year and the year after while still "giving it a go" this year. The right manager might have connections and be
able to bring better players with that promise.
Relegation? You have Brian McDermott who, rightly or not, will be seen as failing, steering a team which will surely
now have a near-record low points total. His presence will be drastically weakened. He will most probably be seen
as a manger who went a level too high, and/or a manager who got lucky in 2011-12 and stole the league (something
I said last season.)
Or you have a new broom, who comes in, is relatively UN-tarnished and is given the brief to save face this season
while building a new team for the next four.
I have great respect for Brian. I like the bloke. But my head says it's 99% certain he can't change things now.
Had we been 6th-bottom and things collapsed over the last dozen games, THEN the manager might bounce back,
but that is not the case with Reading 2013. We are now W1 D6 L9. That 9 may well be 12 or 13 by year-end.
I don't believe we can bounce back from that. Successive relegations could be possible.
by Maguire » 12 Dec 2012 19:47
Snowballmelonhead cant steal a league
Funny, but there are a fair few serious posters who DO think we were lucky last season
and that's why we are struggling now, because the core of the squad was simply not up
to Premiership standard.
Many have dismissed Feds, Harte, Hunt, Church, HRK, Gorks, Ledge, McAnuff, Bryn, Tabb as not good enough
with Cummings and Alf marginal, Kebe inconsistent, Roberts ageing, Pearce maybe too slow...
by ZacNaloen » 12 Dec 2012 19:48
by Snowball » 12 Dec 2012 20:17
by Maguire » 12 Dec 2012 20:35
Snowball At Brighton, West Ham, and Southampton we could've and IMO should've, shipped a load of goals and lost heavily
but those sides froze and missed too often. That is, it was less we won those games deservedly
than the opposition blew it. A definite difference IMO
by RoyallyFcuked » 12 Dec 2012 20:48
loyalroyaldaz Does make you wonder what was offered to Guthrie and Pog to get them here. Clearly Bmc saw something in them and went after them, not with a bag of cash but maybe the assurance of first team football.
by creative_username_1 » 12 Dec 2012 21:45
MaguireSnowball At Brighton, West Ham, and Southampton we could've and IMO should've, shipped a load of goals and lost heavily
but those sides froze and missed too often. That is, it was less we won those games deservedly
than the opposition blew it. A definite difference IMO
Went away to big old West Ham and spanked them 4-2 on their own turf. Went away to Southampton in a title decider and stuck three past them.
That's not lucky. Why "should" we have "shipped a load of goals"?? If those side were better at football maybe but they weren't. It's not like Southampton missed a string of sitters and indeed at West Ham we were about an inch away from winning 5-2 when Roberts' cutback was judged over the line.
Brighton - we hit the bar with a free header from six yards. Why not say it "should" have been 2-0?
Don't get me wrong, i don't think RFC played spectacular football last season but we were better at football than any other side in the division and fully deserved the title. West Ham lost 7-2 to us over two games, that's a battering. No amount of revisionism is going to convince me that somehow we fluked it.
by SPARTA » 12 Dec 2012 21:51
by Man Friday » 12 Dec 2012 21:53
Snowball At Brighton, West Ham, and Southampton we could've and IMO should've, shipped a load of goals and lost heavily
but those sides froze and missed too often. That is, it was less we won those games deservedly
than the opposition blew it. A definite difference IMO
by Man Friday » 12 Dec 2012 21:54
SPARTA "Have heard Arsenal should be Brian's last game. The problems with Guthrie, Roberts and Federici have left the club with no choice."
This is from a usually reliable guy, but we'll see...
by SPARTA » 12 Dec 2012 21:59
Man FridaySPARTA "Have heard Arsenal should be Brian's last game. The problems with Guthrie, Roberts and Federici have left the club with no choice."
This is from a usually reliable guy, but we'll see...
What's that about Roberts?
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