el punal
Well-known member
Oh! Hello, must dash.Going.
The players have realised and gone flat.
I think Bloom has realised too.
Who cares, we can do better than him.
Oh! Hello, must dash.Going.
The players have realised and gone flat.
I think Bloom has realised too.
Who cares, we can do better than him.
Yes. The Cult of de Zerbism that precludes him of being capable of errors of judgement brings out the same reaction in me; I know it shouldn't but it does.Perhaps he's always been like that and I just didn't care.
Maybe it's the blindness of others who are causing me to react.
Yeah, I know what you mean, he's like a souped-up Gus Poyet on steroids. I'm still shocked though that people can say they're 'done with him'.I kind of understand where you are coming from tbh. He's 'hard work' and high maintenance, which after a while becomes draining- both for supporters and players / staff alike I should imagine.
Of course it changed. He learned to speak Italian again without needing an interpreter for Billy Gilmour.Going - Body language and tone significantly different.
I thought everything changed after he went to Italy for few days.
This is why I think he stays for another year.his lack of defensive tactics when required have cost us points and possible progression in two competitions.
Agree with a lot of this. I'd love RDZ to stay but also think his managerial genius is occasionally exaggerated. He's still learning and I'd like to see him be a bit more adaptable and sometimes pragmatic in his tactics. Roma and Luton both blew us away and a different tactical approach may have resulted in very different scorelines.This is why I think he stays for another year.
He can get away with not being able to keep clean sheets here because the stakes are lower. Kinda. But he can't get away with it at Liverpool where goal difference could very well be the deciding factor in them winning a trophy.
His tactical inflexibility is an issue as well. Not to mention that we seem to be entirely reliant on two players to produce any kind of attacking threat.
He's very much a "my way or nothing" manager. But if his way doesn't produce results at a big club which will be expecting results then it becomes dangerous for him.
The 'worked out' thing is laughable. One thing I've really noticed in this country in the last few years is that people here don't really place any value on people learning things. It's always 'xxx isn't good enough, replace him with xxx' rather than thinking that now xxx has been through this experienced and learnt lessons, he will be much more valuable moving forward. It's like when people used to get angry when Potter said he'd take the positives and learn from something, as if that was somehow a negative. I find it really odd.Yeah, I know what you mean, he's like a souped-up Gus Poyet on steroids. I'm still shocked though that people can say they're 'done with him'.
I hope he doesn't go, but if he does - where to? Has he really done enough to convince the top clubs that he's a good fit for them? His work before he came to us was very much 'under the radar' (most UK fans hadn't heard of him), so he comes to us, starts with a HUGE bang and gets us into Europe. But now is there a feeling that he's been 'worked out'? That he plays pretty pretty football but it can be stopped by a simple low block? Is he tactically good enough? Can he handle the pressure of a club like Liverpool or Man U? And most importantly - have I asked too many questions for one post?