by melonhead » 20 Dec 2012 11:50
by southbank1871 » 20 Dec 2012 11:52
Hoop Blahsouthbank1871 Woodcote Royal talking a fair amount of sense here.
It's hard for McDermott with players being injure yes, but none of those players (apart from Kebe I suppose) are players he's seen as worthy of automatic selection so they're hardly the automatic starters that WR makes them out to be. If they were that much better than their competition why wasn't McDermott selecting them in the first place?
by Hoop Blah » 20 Dec 2012 11:56
by melonhead » 20 Dec 2012 12:01
by Woodcote Royal » 20 Dec 2012 12:16
Hoop Blah But only one of of them played in our only win WR? Only Kebe is a certain starter when fit as the manager has selected others over all those players so how can their absence be deemed to significantly weaken the team.
Remember that Morrision only came into the side as our form deteriated and played in 4 of the 6 consecutive defeats.
by Hoop Blah » 20 Dec 2012 12:21
by Woodcote Royal » 20 Dec 2012 12:38
by BR2 » 20 Dec 2012 13:08
Woodcote RoyalVictor Meldrew Woodcote's post above is the classic example of players getting better when they don't play.
Utter nonsense.
We agree about Pearce (and McDermott swapped him for Gorkss against Arsenal) but all of McCarthy, Morrison, Karacan and Kebe are now starters when fit and, as such, their absence significantly weakens our starting 11 which (surprise, surprise!!! ) has been reflected in our worst form of the season so far.
There's more evidence here of McDermott's detractors using this misfortune to trash his reputation.
by Royal Rother » 20 Dec 2012 13:19
by BR2 » 20 Dec 2012 13:30
Royal Rother Any evidence to suggest the players thought they were better than they are?
I've missed any BBBollox behaviour / comments from them myself.
by SPARTA » 20 Dec 2012 13:46
BR2Royal Rother Any evidence to suggest the players thought they were better than they are?
I've missed any BBBollox behaviour / comments from them myself.
Yes,a signed affidavit that is in my possession signed by all 25 of the turkeys.
by Hoop Blah » 20 Dec 2012 13:47
Royal Rother Any evidence to suggest the players thought they were better than they are?
I've missed any BBBollox behaviour / comments from them myself.
by Woodcote Royal » 20 Dec 2012 14:58
BR2Woodcote RoyalVictor Meldrew Woodcote's post above is the classic example of players getting better when they don't play.
Utter nonsense.
We agree about Pearce (and McDermott swapped him for Gorkss against Arsenal) but all of McCarthy, Morrison, Karacan and Kebe are now starters when fit and, as such, their absence significantly weakens our starting 11 which (surprise, surprise!!! ) has been reflected in our worst form of the season so far.
There's more evidence here of McDermott's detractors using this misfortune to trash his reputation.
Why do you always have to take an aggressive stance by using terms as "utter nonsense".
by Hoop Blah » 20 Dec 2012 15:10
Woodcote Royal Furthermore, whilst there will always be a case for saying the squad could be stronger, an impartial view would be that a manager who suffers no injuries to his first 11 would be seen as fortunate whilst he who loses anything approaching half his team would be deemed unfortunate.
by Royal Rother » 20 Dec 2012 16:53
Hoop BlahRoyal Rother Any evidence to suggest the players thought they were better than they are?
I've missed any BBBollox behaviour / comments from them myself.
Has anyone suggested it?
BR2 Whether the assembly of this squad is down just to Brian is an area for discussion but ultimately they are not as good as he (or the players themselves) thought they were.
by Divvy » 20 Dec 2012 19:16
by creative_username_1 » 20 Dec 2012 19:21
Hoop BlahWoodcote Royal Furthermore, whilst there will always be a case for saying the squad could be stronger, an impartial view would be that a manager who suffers no injuries to his first 11 would be seen as fortunate whilst he who loses anything approaching half his team would be deemed unfortunate.
I'm not going through the whole they weren't first choice a couple of months ago discussion again, but I will comment on this last bit of your post as I don't think it is just being fortunate.
Under Pardew and Coppell we had very good injury records and went for long periods with very little disruption to those players available for selection. I put a lot of that down to the excellent work of Niall Clark and Jon Fearn. Since Clark left our injury record has got progressively worse and we've seen a lot more training injuries and little niggles keeping players out. With Clark at the club I think our conditioning was that good that our players just didn't pick up those non-impact injuries.
It's also noticable that, I think, you seem to get more little niggles that don't clear up quickly when a team is struggling. When the team is winning it seems players play through the pain that bit more or come back from niggles that bit quicker.
When the squad isn't quite good enough you'll also notice the impact of players missing more games.
Lastly, I also think we're seeing a longer injury list this season because our players are playing at a level where they've got to really stretch themselves every game. They can't play at 98% which allows them to prevent injuries and they're not chasing the play as much and having to make those stretches and last ditch tackles that can often result in pulled muscles or impact injuries.
Basically what I'm trying to say is injuries aren't, IMO, just a matter of luck and fortune.
by Ian Royal » 20 Dec 2012 19:28
MaguireHoop Blah A fair reflection of that first half of football would've seen them 3 or 4 goals ahead, IMO
Well i'm glad it's been downgraded to three but football just does not work like that. Arsenal deserved to be three ahead, not Everton.
Anyway, I don't disagree with the point about 4-4-2 or whatever so let's knock this tedium on the head, accepting the fact that i started it.
by Millsy » 20 Dec 2012 19:29
creative_username_1Hoop BlahWoodcote Royal Furthermore, whilst there will always be a case for saying the squad could be stronger, an impartial view would be that a manager who suffers no injuries to his first 11 would be seen as fortunate whilst he who loses anything approaching half his team would be deemed unfortunate.
I'm not going through the whole they weren't first choice a couple of months ago discussion again, but I will comment on this last bit of your post as I don't think it is just being fortunate.
Under Pardew and Coppell we had very good injury records and went for long periods with very little disruption to those players available for selection. I put a lot of that down to the excellent work of Niall Clark and Jon Fearn. Since Clark left our injury record has got progressively worse and we've seen a lot more training injuries and little niggles keeping players out. With Clark at the club I think our conditioning was that good that our players just didn't pick up those non-impact injuries.
It's also noticable that, I think, you seem to get more little niggles that don't clear up quickly when a team is struggling. When the team is winning it seems players play through the pain that bit more or come back from niggles that bit quicker.
When the squad isn't quite good enough you'll also notice the impact of players missing more games.
Lastly, I also think we're seeing a longer injury list this season because our players are playing at a level where they've got to really stretch themselves every game. They can't play at 98% which allows them to prevent injuries and they're not chasing the play as much and having to make those stretches and last ditch tackles that can often result in pulled muscles or impact injuries.
Basically what I'm trying to say is injuries aren't, IMO, just a matter of luck and fortune.
I can't even be bothered
by creative_username_1 » 20 Dec 2012 19:40
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