Richy_Seagull
Well-known member
is a lovely read….
(https://inews.co.uk/sport/football/...tingham-forest-tweak-chelsea-brighton-2085513)
“Brighton
Their 3-0 win over Liverpool was the perfect display and the perfect embodiment of Brighton’s progress. They had never beaten Liverpool at home in the top flight, and they beat Jurgen Klopp’s team at what used to be their own game: high pressing, quick overlaps, players entering the attacking penalty area from different angles and at different times and, finally, efficient finishing. Roberto De Zerbi has got this team scoring like never before and he’s done it without the wantaway Leandro Trossard. Any player who wants to leave this project in midseason wants their head checking.
The next time a supporter of an elite club, probably online and probably angrily, tells you that their club needs to spend tens of millions of pounds to create a team worthy of the club’s ambitions, tell them about Brighton. You don’t need to do that, and if you do it’s because of the pressure put upon the club to relentlessly reach their potential every season without even temporary decline and the culture the club created by spending so much in the first place. Yes, this is about Chelsea.
Brighton’s starting XI against Liverpool cost them £30m in transfer fees to buy. It took time, because these things do. They will not be forever, because eventually bigger clubs get things right (either by appointing the right people to make the decisions or through the sheer law of averages) and money makes the biggest difference when it is blended with expertise. But right now, Brighton are better than Liverpool and they are better than Chelsea.
They future-proofed by recruiting before they sold. They maintained a culture of excellence by allowing those who wanted to leave to go, rather than overpaying to keep them or pretending nothing would ever change. They bought youth but then quickly developed that youth by giving them regular league minutes.
Three months ago, Brighton lost their manager and supporters worried that the end of the cycle had been forced upon them by the extreme wealth of others. They lost their off-field staff too. Their starting XI on Saturday contained five players aged 24 and under. And they were utterly, irresistibly dominant. Good things happen to good clubs.”
(https://inews.co.uk/sport/football/...tingham-forest-tweak-chelsea-brighton-2085513)
“Brighton
Their 3-0 win over Liverpool was the perfect display and the perfect embodiment of Brighton’s progress. They had never beaten Liverpool at home in the top flight, and they beat Jurgen Klopp’s team at what used to be their own game: high pressing, quick overlaps, players entering the attacking penalty area from different angles and at different times and, finally, efficient finishing. Roberto De Zerbi has got this team scoring like never before and he’s done it without the wantaway Leandro Trossard. Any player who wants to leave this project in midseason wants their head checking.
The next time a supporter of an elite club, probably online and probably angrily, tells you that their club needs to spend tens of millions of pounds to create a team worthy of the club’s ambitions, tell them about Brighton. You don’t need to do that, and if you do it’s because of the pressure put upon the club to relentlessly reach their potential every season without even temporary decline and the culture the club created by spending so much in the first place. Yes, this is about Chelsea.
Brighton’s starting XI against Liverpool cost them £30m in transfer fees to buy. It took time, because these things do. They will not be forever, because eventually bigger clubs get things right (either by appointing the right people to make the decisions or through the sheer law of averages) and money makes the biggest difference when it is blended with expertise. But right now, Brighton are better than Liverpool and they are better than Chelsea.
They future-proofed by recruiting before they sold. They maintained a culture of excellence by allowing those who wanted to leave to go, rather than overpaying to keep them or pretending nothing would ever change. They bought youth but then quickly developed that youth by giving them regular league minutes.
Three months ago, Brighton lost their manager and supporters worried that the end of the cycle had been forced upon them by the extreme wealth of others. They lost their off-field staff too. Their starting XI on Saturday contained five players aged 24 and under. And they were utterly, irresistibly dominant. Good things happen to good clubs.”