TomandJerry
Well-known member
- Oct 1, 2013
- 12,323
Like I say, they have good intentions and are in the process of repairing the club off the field.Debatable that this was the biggest decision they had to make. An important decision no question, but off the field the stadium hasn’t had a kick of paint in anger for 25 years, two stands closed, the ground sold off to a third party by asset stripping owners and its status as a cultural asset removed (sound familiar?), two sanctions already for FFP and a perilous financial position that was not sustainable under the previous ownership. I would say buying the ground back and shoring up the financial position was far more important, progress on the pitch of course is very important but not more so than risking the very future of the club. I’m surprised any Albion fan would think differently, perhaps only if they didn’t know the full picture.
Dont think Potter potentially thinking he can come back in at a much higher level than Birmingham is a question of his integrity.That’s interesting. I still think Potter has some integrity. I think he would see Birmingham as an interesting project.
Agreed that this was a poor footballing decision made by the CEO, who is an employee of the club and not one of the owners as far as I know.Like I say, they have good intentions and are in the process of repairing the club off the field.
But in terms of footballing decisions, thus far they have shown themselves to be dumber than a bucket of spanners. Doesn't bode well.
I find that when a manager, who on paper looks decent, gets the boot the external reaction is rarely aligned with the internal views of the fans.The legend of Eustace has grown over the last few months. Many fans wanted himout anyway, there had been several winless runs and 4 poor away defeats on the trot, and his style of football was very basic. He then won 2 games in a row which put them 6th but that was only 3 points above something like 16th so it was a bit misleading. Because of the 2 wins, he had started to get popular and then got sacked in favour of the CEO’s mate Rooney, and it was the way that was done, more than the fact the Eustace was doing a good job, that was unpopular
I missed that news.Dont think Potter potentially thinking he can come back in at a much higher level than Birmingham is a question of his integrity.
It was all over press few weeks back that if Ten Hag is to be fired, Ratcliffe fancies Potter (as he did at Nice), Potter will be aware of that, and after a considerably upward trajectory of club size/success/finances in Swansea, Albion, Chelsea, I reckon Potter may well believe the level he gets back in, based on his time here and leaving rather than being fired, would qualify him for more than championship relegation battle.
That was the moment I thought he’d lost it and was deffo on borrowed time. It was actually quite sad I thought!G Pott will want to go somewhere where he can “win the f*cking champions league” no doubt
Being more charitable to the less fortunate, didnt make the resolutions list?Personally, I'm hoping Steve Cooper is willing to drop back down a league, because it's been widely rumoured that a currently failing Premier League club have had their eye on him for ages, and it would be funny if a single scrappy win against another poor team saved their current manager (who they'll sack in the end anyway) for just long enough to ensure their first choice replacement came off the market.
Oh yes, that ol FA Cup Semi Final and the two solid years in the Prem crap.I find that when a manager, who on paper looks decent, gets the boot the external reaction is rarely aligned with the internal views of the fans.
We had it with Hughton: How can you sack Hughton? He got you into the league! He kept you up! He's a "proper football man"! Careful what you wish for! And assorted Troy Townsend hysteria.
In truth, although almost everyone was sad to see him leave us, the last 6 months at Brighton were so, so bad (and I say this as someone who genuinely loves Hughton) that I know a number of long time fans thought about giving up their season ticket because the experience of going to games had become so frustratingly bleak.
- We couldn't score,
- We couldn't win,
- We'd stopped keeping clean sheets,
- We were shutting up shop an 1-0 DOWN to stop shipping more,
- We won two games between January and the end of the season in the league'
- The gap between Murray and the midfield was about half the pitch,
- and the line-ups had become so predictable that I could probably name more or less the bulk of it now without looking
- Ryan;
- Bruno, Dunk, Duffy, Bong or Bernardo;
- Stephens, Propper, Bissouma, Knockaert, Gross;
- Murray
From the outside though, the decision looked like madness. All they saw was an FA Cup Semi-Final appearance and two solid years in the Prem
They have a significantly bigger wage bill than us: I wouldn't call them less fortunate in many respects. Less good, maybe?Being more charitable to the less fortunate, didnt make the resolutions list?
Cheap shot. I would say they appear to be very good owners with a long term plan for the club, the stadium, the finances etc which the club hasn’t had for a generation. But they made a poor decision in appointing Rooney.
I'd agree with both you and the wider point made by @JBizzle though you can't also discount Hughton was a disaster at Forest who Cooper took from bottom to play offs with almost entirely same squad.Oh yes, that ol FA Cup Semi Final and the two solid years in the Prem crap.
Maybe they forgot he got he got us promoted to the Prem in the first place......
From being one of the worst teams in the Championship to oh so nearly promotion in his first full season.
Like you it seems
There is no comparison between Chris Hughton at Brighton and Wayne Rooney at Birmingham
Some already saying it’s a done deal and Cooper is at the ground today. I don’t have a lot to back that up, however, so please don’t invest your Christmas bonus on it just yet ….Would be very surprised if Cooper went there. Although it would be hilarious because Palace think they are getting him after Woy
Think this also comes from having an experienced owner leading the ship. I can very much imagine Bloom’s instructions to Hughton were to steady the ship by whatever means necessary so we don’t get relegated. If successful he will reinvest in the squad and then Hughton could stamp his style down.When Hughton came to us, and we were struggling, he was at least pragmatic enough to come up with a system however turgid, based on the players here, that stopped us shipping goals and losing so many matches.
Rooney, didnt do that, he has tried to impose a style of play on players who he says can't play it. Hughton, like all good managers looked at what he had here and worked out what he needed to do with that squad to get results. Rooney is either dumb or naive.