Terminal Boardom Whereas spending millions does not guarantee success, I would be interested to know how much Wigan have spent since being promoted in 2005. They get smaller crowds than us yet they have reached a cup final. Fulham are also a similarly sized club yet they too have reached a cup final in recent years. What are they doing right that we can not understand or, as a minimum, aspire to?
By running at a massive loss but with owners prepared to cover that loss. Problem comes if/when they are no longer able/willing to do so as we eventually found out with Madejski.
Wigan have been pretty astute in the transfer market too, buying some relative unknowns and then selling them for a huge profit after a season or two. However even with all that, they've been fighting relegation to pretty much the last day of the season every year bar their first.
I'm not sure what proven Premiership players Norwich have added since their promotion and they pretty much kept most of the squad that saw them promoted in 2nd place. Despite losing their talismanic manager they seem to be doing alright. I'm sure McD and the club looked at them as a guide for how it could be done rather than QPR who to a more extreme degree tried to buy their safety. Personally I think where we've gone wrong though is that unlike Norwich and Swansea from last season our key players we've kept faith with were age-wise probably at their peak last season. Other sides had players that were either in the middle of their peak career phase or at least approaching it whilst for us it's a case of young promising talent thats not quite there yet or those past their peak.
Honestly is there anyone in our team that you could say were in the peak of their career? Ironically you'd probably come up with Guthrie and the Pog.
Thing is though, as I've said many times there is no real blueprint for success but you have to do what you think best suits your club's resources and ethos. Stoke play pretty antiquated football from an aesthetic point of view yet are the current form team in the League and look pretty settled. The aforementioned Norwich are hardly Barcelona and are doing ok. On the flipside Wigan and Swansea are surviving by playing a more pleasing style and despite accepting that they will usually lose key players at the end of the season. There are various ways of acheiving it but even then if you're a club of a certain size/resource you're still really only a couple of poor signings/bad decisions away from relegation.
There's also a bigger picture at stake here too for me. Much as I thought we didn't look at the bigger picture as a club when removing Rodgers, I think we have to look beyond the current results when assessing what is best for Reading FC in the future. We currently have a pretty thriving Academy set up which could pay dividends for us in the future if the transition from youth to 1st team is handled correctly. The question for me is, whether we survive this season or go down, in the next couple of years what type of club are we going to be and what manager is the most likely to aid us in getting us to that place. The one significant point about the clubs mentioned of similiar size to us that have achieved successive periods of Premiership football is that none of them seem to have been able to incorporate their own academy players into regular 1st team players. Stoke,Norwich,Fulham,Wigan? Can't recall many,if any coming through the ranks there.
I've digressed a bit (a lot) here and it's probably more about what I personally want to see us achieving as a club rather than what is best at this precise moment in time.(I might try and dig up an old thread on that subject from last year which might make for an interesting read given where we are now) For me that's the criteria that would influence whether I wanted McD to stay or go.