by Alan Partridge »
22 Oct 2014 10:32
Got to be honest, i barely follow RFC any more these days for a host of different reasons but looking in from afar I kind of don't know what you were all expecting this season? Looking at that team on paper it is mediocre at best, the club has basically been in turmoil for 18 months off the field and you can't be successful on it if you are a shambles off it. The whole ownership nightmare combined with letting your best players go over a period of time to be replaced by unproven young kids along with a few championship plodders is never going to mean a side that challenges at the top of the league. Funnily enough teams not at the top of the league lose more than they win......
The new 'consortium' would worry me in the same way the last one did, change isn't often a good thing within football clubs especially relatively stable ones and ever since Madejski has made it clear he REALLY wants out the downward spiral has kicked in, it's made it exceptionally difficult for both managers Reading have had in this time. You felt that during the Pardew/Coppell era everyone at the club was singing from the same hymn sheet and had the same sort of motivation and goals, albeit on a budget but Reading never sold their best players to sides in the same league. Both managers were supported well in the transfer market (even Rodgers was) and both had a plan in how they were going to do it. You don't get that same feeling now, in that aspect Adkins job has been extremely tough from day 1. He hasn't had that support or stability that previous managers have had.
However I've always thought Adkins would make a great politician, he has a remarkable way of making a 10 second interview last 5 minutes where he talks and talks but says absolutely nothing. He's just a bit weird and a bit timid, if he's like this with the players then I would find it difficult to understand how he'd pick people up when their confidence was low or really turnaround a side. He's not the sort of muck and nettles in your face manager that might inherit a struggling club and keep them up or really turn it around. That would concern me about this run Reading are on, they've got the ideal fixture Saturday but if they don't win it they could be in some serious bother and like I said I don't think he's the guy you want in a fight.
With this core of predominantly young players, a lot of them homegrown or been at the club for a long time I think you could make a case for a manager that knows the club a bit more, that has a feeling for it to galvanise players and fans, Dolan or Parkinson would be the obvious choices. Parkinson would probably be the supporters choice but Dolan has worked with all of these players before and probably should have got the job in the first place once they'd decided to move McDermott on, a decision that was ridiculous at the time and nothing has happened since to suggest it was the right thing to do.