I like the dig at Paul Merson in the article.
You've given a very narrow definition of a "Moneyball" influenced approach...
With Tony Bloom in charge it would be very surprising if Albion were not unusually good at evaluating players' real worth and shrewd recruitment from the international marketplace.
How about Ryan? I don't know the going rate of keepers, but was surprised how expensive he was.
Compared to Jordan Pickford at £30m, Ryan cost the Premier League equivalent of £1000 and a set of kit!
Pundits such as Paul Merson have criticised Brighton’s transfer activity using the same old cliches, saying: “I look through the list of signings and I don’t really know any of them.” Luckily for the club’s new players, whether or not Merson has heard of someone is not a great predictor of their future performance.
Hahaha
Is Mr Izquierdo any good defensively do we know ? I thought March and Suttner linked up well on Saturday
He does. Played well in his first 10 minutes and cost enough that our recruitment team must have expectations. Can he play alongside March if Knocky plays less well away from home? Or would he be better coming on after 65 minutes for now?
I like the dig at Paul Merson in the article.
But why were the club scratching around the bottom of the Bundesliga?
MoneyBall isn't just 'getting a player cheap'.
It's all about overlooking the weaknesses that causes players to fail elsewhere, while noting their 'hidden' strengths and how those strengths can be developed and become compatible along side similar team mates.
Gross doesn't have weaknesses that caused him to be given up on, his only weakness was he played for an unfashionable side playing at the wrong end of a league reliant on 2 teams.
Given the way he tracked back with that excellent tackle at the Watford game, shows the desire and commitment to do well.
Give him a go on Friday, if to replace Solly or Knocky, it is going to be a long season, so let's see what he can do over 90 mins.
The club approach isn't 'moneyball' as per the A's, it's just simple economics.
Every step of the way. the club has lead us to believe Tony has been priced out of the relevant market, it found itself in.
So the club has had to look elsewhere, in locations where the market is on a par with the Albion's buying expectations.
I like the dig at Paul Merson in the article.
You can call it economics if you like, but it certainly isn't simple. It is about getting the best value out of your budget by using Star lizards analytics to find the bargain buys. This is not 12 rolls of toilet roll type bargains that your fingers may or may not go through when wiping, this is about finding better players than those available in the UK at a fraction of the price. Not a simple thing to do at all.
Most obvious example is AK.
Knocky & Solly deserve to keep their place after sat imo, but would like Jose to get a good 20/30 mins. Surprised he didnt get on at the weekend
I wasn't looking at his cost, just that his stats were good in a particular area - creating chances. May be I don't have a full working knowledge of MoneyBall then.
Could be argued that we are working on his physical contribution to compete in the Premier
Great having a devoted fan who is also something of a genius as owner and chairman. Merson can fornicate off with his poorly researched and ill judged opinions. Worse than a pub bore.
I don't know how Merson keeps his SSN job. I like all the others in the Saturday afternoon team - they all offer something coherent, sober, intelligent and with a wealth of football knowledge.
Long before this summer's anti Albion jibes, I couldn't stand Merson on the box. Thick as shite remarks, and know-it-all vendettas against clubs such as Spurs and Liverpool, along with the predictable slagging off of Wenger.
Shirley from the thousands of ex players and managers, there are better options for SSN than Merson.