by The Goat was fed »
12 Mar 2013 00:02
My two pence worth below. Overall theme is sadness. Sadness that a top bloke has loved a job he loved. Sadness that our club has finally succumbed to the tasteless knee-jerk culture that is ruining this game on a global level. Sadness that this signals the end of our club's mantra of trying to do things the right way - however frustrating it has been at times.
Brian has been a victim of his own success. To get that group of players into the Premier League, by winning the title, was an outstanding achievement. This is a separate argument, but I think last season was a better managerial success than Coppell's 106 season, because the 106 side had so much quality. Of the side that won promotion last year, I'd say that only about four of the squad would have walked into any CHAMPIONSHIP side. Even fewer (maybe even just Kebe for me, but that's another separate argument) would get into any Premier League side, most wouldn't make the bench. That's why it was such a managerial success. We became symbolic of what it actually means to be a "team". We were the sum of our parts and it made our group of players likable - we had something to be proud of, we were a middle finger to the likes of Leicester City and the various relegated Premier League clubs who tried and failed to buy their way out of the division.
However, this very success was ultimately our undoing this season. Realistically, we needed to replace at least 7/8 first team players of the side that won the Championship. We barely replaced any. At one point in the season (when Kebe, Roberts and Karacan were injured) we were actually playing a weaker side than the over-performing Championship side. Now some use this to highlight that Brian McDermott was too loyal to his players and unwilling to spend. I just can't believe this. For all his niceties, McDermott had a ruthless streak. Federici dropped for McCarthy when he was poor, Gorkks dropped when he was poor, Shorey dropped when he didn't jump, Gunter replaced when it became apparent he was dire, Guthrie dropped when he wasn't playing to a system and being a prick, Pearce dropped when he was at fault for goals...or not signing a contract. Now I'm not suggesting these were all right decisions, but it certainly showed he had the balls to make ruthless decisions. That's why I cannot believe he "didn't spend money that was there", he didn't spend money because it wasn't there.
Now don't get me wrong, I do not think Brian was without faults. The change to 4-5-1 came too late. A traditional 4-4-2 has no place in modern football and it seemed to go against the key lessons from last year, getting a structure in place to just win games. Everybody's favourite scapegoat Mikele Leighterwood simply doesn't have the ability to play in a two man midfield in this league, in a three man midfield, he instantly looked better and could play a role. Another prize scapegoat, Jobi McAnuff was better in this system because his defensive duties were shared and didn't have to spend half his game covering for Ian Harte. However, when we played 4-5-1, we weren't exactly world beaters either. Better defensively, but by no means a force that looked like it belonged in the Premier League, the players just weren't good enough.
I'm personally of the opinion that there is not a single manager in the world that can keep this group of players in the Premier League, they're simply not good enough. We needed massive investment in the summer to make it work - the signings of Chris Gunter etc. implied that investment wasn't forthcoming. Now it may be that I've got this all wrong and McDermott refused funds to improve his squad, but for the reasons explained above and because no other manager in history has done this, I don't think that's the case.
The saddest thing for me is that this decision does appear to be directly related to the crowd's reaction on Saturday. Most of what I've said has been quite balanced up until this point, but I was disgusted by those "fans" that cheered Leighterwood's departure and I can't help but think it was the "new fans". Those that see football as a product, those that want only instant gratification, those that don't really get what it is to support a football team. I implore you to have a look at the video on the BBC website at the moment, Mikele Leighterwood being carried by our fans on the pitch after Nottingham Forest. It's devastating to watch that and think it's the same fans booing him, it has to be the new fans, because I know can't boo that man for his contribution to this club. Mikele Leighterwood should be held in the same regard as Brynjar Gunnarsson, but he won't be now, because he wasn't replaced - he was shown up at a level he's not good enough to consistently play at.
I've got a bit rambly now, but to conclude, we had a very good thing under Brian McDermott, we've been let down by a board that simply didn't invest big at the right time. It didn't need hundreds of millions and any investment that kept us up would have been instantly repaid by our Premier League status next year with new, ridiculous TV revenues.