This is where I'm at, too. People won't want to hear it though. Some would rather have a big stick to beat the club with.
Let's be clear: Poyet most certainly did not have "very limited funds".
I think many underestimate the importance of parachute payments (and remember there are 7/8 clubs in receipt of them in this division).
Last season totals
Bolton revenue £28.5 million, of which £3.8 million was from gate receipts and £19.1 million from broadcasting/parachute payments.
Albion £23.3 million, of which £8.7 million was from gate receipts and £4.8 million was from broadcasting.
If we wanted to match Bolton's income, and fans had to pay for it, it would be an increase of around £240 on the price of a season ticket, and that's to compete with Bolton, who have finished below us in the last two seasons.
This really isn't about needing vast sways of money to compete. We, and others (Palace and to a lesser extent Burnley as they have had parachute payments), have shown that it can be done.
Fair enough. He had way more than Oscar but seemingly not enough to keep him. OG wasn't provided with the funds he needed to compete, yet TB went public to say our budget was slightly increased (misleading even if true) and that he expected a top 6 finish. That's shoddy on TB's part as far as I see it,
This really isn't about needing vast sways of money to compete. We, and others (Palace and to a lesser extent Burnley as they have had parachute payments), have shown that it can be done.
Our new manager has to work within the constraints the club give him and not get disillusioned when transfers do not go his way. This is not to say that our recruiting process could be improved, of course it can, but TB has made it clear that FFP is king as far as he is concerned. I thought that Oscar would be the man, but clearly he has given up when confronted with reality. Anyone coming in will have a hard job on their hands but they HAVE to up to the challenge. Gus clearly wasn't and Oscar has given up too soon, in my opinion.
Fair play to Poyet. Despite having very limited funds he built a team that made the Championship playoffs - twice! They're all getting on a bit now and we don't have any money to replace them. The ceiling did exist.
A midtable budget will give us a midtable team. We can't continually over achieve.
If Oscar's telling the truth. He could turn up at the Hawthorns in a week or two (much they like the way I suspected he joined us)
I loved Oscar here don't get me wrong but resigning over budget ect is just a kop out, I'm certain he has another job lined up and is trying to avoid any clubs having to pay compensation.
Palace did it by amassing a pile of debt and going into admin, wiping it all out. Do you want us to go down that route? I certainly don't
The ceiling may well exist, but it is a lot higher than some believe it to be.
Burnley ( our higher revenue balances their 8 million parachute ), Palace, Derby are proof that we are perfectly able to go higher with our budget.
Poor decision making in recruitment needs to be addressed though, and perhaps that will give us the 3 - 5 place improvement that will see us go up a league.
I'd go along with that.None of this makes any real sense though. OG is an inexperienced manager in his first season in English football after only 1 season in full management. Did he really think he can just walk into a job and get free reign? What happened to managers earning their stripes, establishing their authority through hard work and sticking at it? After his success this season, he would have the confidence of the Chairman, board etc. to start to take more control over matters, instead, and I put this tentatively, he seems to have chucked in the towel like a spoilt child.
I've defended him over the course of the season, but our football has lacked pace, positivity and goals. I think he still has everything to prove, but he obviously thinks he is already bigger and better than this club.
We've seen evidence of managers given too much control over transfers and they can make a right hash of it. Perhaps our structure is a bit cumbersome, but I assume that can be an evolving process.
Disappointing to see a manager walk after effectively overachieving in a lot of ways, and perhaps there was more to come next season. We'll have to wait to see where OG crops up in his next job, as that is going to be more of an indication of why he left than inference over transfer policy.