Agree with much of that apart but Mac Allister wasn't great when he first came here - Potter still did play him a lot.I think too many of us are still showing the bruises of a parting that one of the partners didn't want.
My view is that he moved us forward after Hughton ran out of ideas, transformed the playing style and raised our expectations. But while he took us to our highest finish at the time, he was slow to recognise the potential in such players as Ally Mac and Caicedo, and his shortcomings (one home win in the calendar year of 2020, three months without scoring at the Amex) were exposed by the results De Zerbi got from the same squad. His 'history lesson' comments got under our collective skin a bit too.
But he still has to be up there among our best-ever coaches/managers. Top five? Top ten probably.
Took him a while to turn into the player that he became and Potter deserves credit for that as he does for Bissouma and various others who developed a lot under his coaching.
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