2018: NSC would look a very different place this afternoon if even 2 of Wolves' 25 shots had gone in. It was a piss-poor home performance by the Albion whichever way you look at it. Well, apart from the 3 points, obviously. At some point sometime our heroic defenders deserve some kind of respite from being human shields. Our attacks are increasingly few and far between. Those desperate 1-0's playing much the same side as we had in the Championship won't see us comfortably through the season. We're riding the very edge of our luck currently.
Admittedly we haven't been too easy on the eye in recent games and those nine points have been earned at a time when we look below par in our attacking and build-up play.
But we know that this side can also play fast, fluent, passing football – AND with a rock-solid defence. That will be a pretty impressive combination when everything clicks.
Glenn Murray talked about us going "back to basics" in recent games and concentrating on clean sheets. That's obviously worked. Now we just need to see the more positive, attacking side of our play get back to previous levels.
Izquierdo is getting back to the form we saw last season. Knockaert is superb on his day. Add a returning Gross to the equation and I'd be hopeful of seeing some more exhilirating football as the season wears on.
I am getting a bit bored with disagreeing with you. Can't you say something nice for a change
TBh I don’t mind winning 1-0 each week playing dull football, what I do mind is being put through a bombarding assault by visiting non top six sides for the last 15 minutes, that isn’t enjoyable especially when we hit them on the counter twice and **** it up!
On 10/28/2018 at 13:16, Howay said:
Sadly it’s what we are though, this has been the case for the majority of this blokes ownership of the club. We’re shite relegation fodder.
If we do go down this time I’m at the point where I don’t really want us to bounce back up. It doesn’t seem like he’s going to sell if we’re in the Premier League unless someone came in with an outrageously over the top offer. I’d rather not watch this dick head bleed the club every year while we have to suffer watching players completely out of their depth struggle against ****ing Brighton.
The point is moot anyway though, if Rafa leaves and this lot go down there’s not a chance they’d bounce up, the squad is so poorly invested in that we’re behind the top championship sides.
I really don't see how any of those with the exception of Villa "belong" in the Premier League. With our facilities and expenditure, our claim is bigger than theirs in the present day.
Which one are you?
1. I’d rather win 1-0, keep a clean sheet, 3 more points on the board and bollocks whether we deserved it or not.
or
2. I prefer that we lost 4-3 in a jolly exciting and entertaining game, full of incidents and drama and no little skill. Oh well, better luck next time. Still, much better than a boring 1-0 win with only one shot on target.
Many on the Wolves fans forum much preferred the expansive, attacking play to our “dull, negative” approach. Fair enough. But we got the 3 points and they didn’t. Had the reverse scenario happened I wonder whether their opinion would have changed?
That sums up my own feelings pretty well. I would rather play attractive football and am confident we will get back to it. The points in the bag is very reassuring.
But it would be nice on occasion to have a two goal cushion. I haven't enjoyed the last two home matches particularly because of the nerve shredding. Against Wolves, though, I did feel more confident earlier on (i.e. at about 85 mins) that we would hold on.
But then that confidence was sorely tested even in the time added on...… Thank God for Maty Ryan!
But that’s the problem, being a big club and deserving a place at the top table isn’t about now, it’s all about the past - and there were two European Cup winners in my list and a team who think they invented football... I could have added Sheffield Wednesday to my list but that would have been pushing things a bit too far...
Admittedly we haven't been too easy on the eye in recent games and those nine points have been earned at a time when we look below par in our attacking and build-up play.
But we know that this side can also play fast, fluent, passing football – AND with a rock-solid defence. That will be a pretty impressive combination when everything clicks.
Glenn Murray talked about us going "back to basics" in recent games and concentrating on clean sheets. That's obviously worked. Now we just need to see the more positive, attacking side of our play get back to previous levels.
Izquierdo is getting back to the form we saw last season. Knockaert is superb on his day. Add a returning Gross to the equation and I'd be hopeful of seeing some more exhilirating football as the season wears on.
At the beginning of the season, I watched Huddersfield, Newcastle and our games with interest, (Obv. ours with more interest )
I think there IS such a thing as second season syndrome.
The players from Hudds and Newcastle don't seem to have quite the same intensity and desire as the same time last year.
The same could be said of our performances; Watford, Southampton and Fulham being cases in point, notwithstanding the recovery in 2 of those games.
(Man. U. is an outlier. Who wouldn't raise their game against them having beaten them at the tail end of last season).
The difference, is that Chris has identified the problem early, and gone back to basics. I wouldn't be at all surprised if some hard truths about workrate and desire weren't aired at some point in the dressing room, and on the training pitch.
When the level of intensity to our play has once more become ingrained, the team can go back to working on passing accuracy, a.k.a. ball retention, which is what improved through all of last season, and is woefully inadequate in our current play.
We have ground out 3 1-0 victories by going back to basics... defence... without having the ability to pass the ball to each other.
Without those 9 points, we would be down the table with Newcastle and Hudds. Two teams who I believe are having similar issues to those we had at the start of the season, but who's managers have not managed to put right yet.
This may also be the reason why we are seeing our expensive new signings on the bench more often than not.
Sorry, a fray knot. Wouldn't be easier for both of us if you just added me to your extensive Ignore list?
2018: NSC would look a very different place this afternoon if even 2 of Wolves' 25 shots had gone in. It was a piss-poor home performance by the Albion whichever way you look at it. Well, apart from the 3 points, obviously. At some point sometime our heroic defenders deserve some kind of respite from being human shields. Our attacks are increasingly few and far between. Those desperate 1-0's playing much the same side as we had in the Championship won't see us comfortably through the season. We're riding the very edge of our luck currently.
All about the tools at a managers disposal.
Gathering a stack of amazing players on huge wages in the blink of an eye turned an awful Wolves team we ripped apart at Molyneux 18 months ago, into a media loved squad destined for amazing things apparently.
Neves, Cavaleiro, Traore, Moutinho, Boly, Jota, Costa, Bonatini were brought in, as they did a PSG/ManC. Without that $$$$ lot, they’d be languishing in the Championship playing forgettable football.
CH is doing a great job with our resources, and the Albion’s Board are building the club brilliantly for the future.
The Chinese owners of Wolves made £60 Billion profit last year. es, £60 Billion
nonscence
Really, this suggests different.
https://www.expressandstar.com/news...er-fosun-sees-half-year-profits-soar-to-800m/
Their company is worth 60 Billion which is where the confusion starts I think.
All in all, they are ####### loaded and we are possibly looking at another Man City. I think we can safely tick off Wolves as a club likely to go down and they will cement their position in the league.
Described as a Chinese Business they have assets all round the world and added a football team to their portfolio.
They own a large chunk of Thomas Cook for instance.
Where it gets slightly murky is they also own a slice of super agent Mendes' company. However it's passed all the rules and maybe a model that other "sleeping giants" follow.