NorthstandRacoon
Well-known member
Is it though?a lot of what he says is right, you mean?
Is it though?a lot of what he says is right, you mean?
Yes I thought the blinded by emotion comment was interesting.You won't win. I tried to reason with him once. Never again. 'Blinded with emotion' indeed.
I agree, maybe Potter should stop sulking then.maybe cos he keeps sulking?
Agreed. At BHA we proudly speak about the structure as being all important. Even fans of failing clubs like Everton get that firing Lampard without fundamental changes in how the club is run is a waste of time. Chelsea signed Potter to make that change and build for the future. I reckon the American will follow through and pick sides …..with GP.Its what Manchester United is doing, what Arsenal did and what Chelsea will need to be doing in order to be successful. Or they'll just have another players-vs-manager situation any time someone tell them to do something else than walk around believing they are Gods gift to mankind.
I think it's interesting when a manager, any manager, but especially a "new" one takes on a big ego based club.Or do what has to be done - with the Andone and Connolly clones......
Personally I don't think they are all unmanageable. Ziyesh has been a different player under Potter - almost humble. Mount, however - total dick today. They looked like they expected to lose. On the pitch that's down to them.
Potter has not publicly thrown the dicks under a bus, either. And the squad has not downed tools (like they did under Maureen II). There may be tools that need to be downed though, and I'm sure that will happen. Perhaps a mass clear out at the end of the season?
But there are a lot of expensive contracts there, and who would be queuing up to take them on, this minute. Fancy any of them at Brighton? None immediately spring to mind. That may change. We shall see.
Nail. Head. End of. Panto villains and stupid chants to the away fans (in the ground) is what makes it fun. Taking it too seriously outside the ground (and having aggro outside the ground) is daft imho.At the end of the day, football is a pantomime. You don’t just support your club, you dislike the chosen villains at any given time too. There will normally be a couple of long term targets but also a lot of smaller targets that come and go.
When I first started going it was Chesterfield and Scott McGleish. Since then it’s been dozens of different players and clubs. Southampton, Nigel Adkins, Mike Dean, Reading, Joey Barton and a whole host more I can’t currently think of.
Graham Potter is just one the current Panto villains. He’s a punchline, an easy target mak, the butt of the joke. But that’s it. Nobody actually hates them. Nobody is going to run up and swing for him in the middle of Churchill Square. Nobody is going to see Cucurella in La Galleria and drag him out and launch him in the River Adur.
Anybody trying to diagnose people laughing at Potter as anything for more than football fans doing what they’ve done for generations sadly misses half the point of being a football fan which is pretty sad.
I’ve said it about Cucurella and I’ll say it about Potter too. You’d have to be a sick man to find their situation funny, and I’m in critical condition
Exactly this it’s funny seeing a few take it so seriously. On one hand the same people pretend they are staunch Bloom fans and then stand up for the bloke who let him down after all the support he gave him with a job security six year deal.At the end of the day, football is a pantomime. You don’t just support your club, you dislike the chosen villains at any given time too. There will normally be a couple of long term targets but also a lot of smaller targets that come and go.
When I first started going it was Chesterfield and Scott McGleish. Since then it’s been dozens of different players and clubs. Southampton, Nigel Adkins, Mike Dean, Reading, Joey Barton and a whole host more I can’t currently think of.
Graham Potter is just one the current Panto villains. He’s a punchline, an easy target, the butt of the joke. But that’s it. Nobody actually hates them. Nobody is going to run up and swing for him in the middle of Churchill Square. Nobody is going to see Cucurella in La Galleria and drag him out and launch him in the River Adur.
Anybody trying to diagnose people laughing at Potter as anything for more than football fans doing what they’ve done for generations sadly misses half the point of being a football fan which is pretty sad.
I’ve said it about Cucurella and I’ll say it about Potter too. You’d have to be a sick man to find their situation funny, and I’m in critical condition
Nail. Head. End of. Panto villains and stupid chants to the away fans (in the ground) is what makes it fun. Taking it too seriously outside the ground (and having aggro outside the ground) is daft imho.
Yep, all the great stuff he did for us was significantly negated for me the minute he f***ed off with very, very indecent haste to the first big cheque waved in his direction, taking not just ’his’ boys but ‘ours’ in the process. I am going to enjoy every minute of Chelsea crashing and burning this season (yes I know they’ll come out of their current slump and probably finish above us, but in the meantime **** ‘em, and if he’s still there next time we play them I’ll be giving him dog’s abuse)I hope he fails and gets the boot.
Why? Because for me, Potter was always the embodiment of the greed that festers in professional football.
It‘s impossible to conceive he left to join Chelsea for anything but the money and this was reflected by his cold, detached view of the Albion. Even when the club stood by him in the darker spells, he never looked particularly grateful, just miserable, nonchalant.
Yes, the likes of Klopp, Pep etc also earn monstrous pay packets but they do actually seem to care about their respective clubs, their history, their fanbase.
Potter never seemed more than a narcissist, waving frantically from the shop window - I‘M A TACTICAL GOD, COME AND GET ME….
It’s not as black and white as that. I was very critical of Potter whilst he was at BHA. I was also very supportive at other times. I just call it as I see it at any given time and prefer not to be in the in or out camp. In all those Icy polls I think I voted out just the once, no vote (fence) a few times but mostly ‘in,’ albeit sometimes a little lukewarmly. No change and the only vote that counted was Tony’s anyway. Mine are just comments about the state of Chelsea and they are not influenced by a view of Potter but by the American’s stated backing of his Potter project. It would make no sense to ditch that so quickly.Exactly this it’s funny seeing a few take it so seriously. On one hand the same people pretend they are staunch Bloom fans and then stand up for the bloke who let him down after all the support he gave him with a job security six year deal.
Very good analogy.They’re in a similar position to where Man Utd were with Moyes, it would have come good in the end (Moyes is too good a manager) but they opted for the sack option and have only just started to recover.
Or bringing the DJ on, or perhaps just the frustration of seeing decent performances not getting the results they deserve. Plus frustration that there was not the urgency/pace in our attacks. All legitimate.I think it was more Maupay missing when it seemed easier to score that annoyed supporters that evening. Anyhow when you pay your money you are entitled to an opinion it may be the wrong opinion in some people’s eyes but there you go footballs always been that way.
Yes, you're right. My final year BSc classes are keen and attentive. On the other hand I long ago refused to do 'year one' medicine tutorials because the students are a bunch of entitled twats, openly yawning (till I bollock them or chuck them out, whence they shit themselves). Perhaps there's a lesson there.....I think it's interesting when a manager, any manager, but especially a "new" one takes on a big ego based club.
As I'm sure you'll agree when talking to a group of engaging people you can really feel rewarded and they can be excited about what they have been taught. Conversely when you get a load of wasters you feel completely knackered and drained. One expects Potter to be worn out at the moment.
He needs to get some players in who want to play for him. Probably rules out March and Alzate. Interested the mention often of Trossard on the radar, I wonder if he liked his many positions including WB
9 grand a year well spentYes, you're right. My final year BSc classes are keen and attentive. On the other hand I long ago refused to do 'year one' medicine tutorials because the students are a bunch of entitled twats, openly yawning (till I bollock them or chuck them out, whence they shit themselves). Perhaps there's a lesson there.....
They just shook hands, not much to see.Quite a few comments here about our team's response to Potter after the Chelsea match. Can anybody muster up any footage demonstrating this? I wasn't there and I don't remember seeing any of it at the time.
I'd love to be a fly on the wall of Potter's brain right now. It would be fascinating to know how he's feeling about his current predicament, if he even spares a moment to consider the little club he left behind or whether that chapter has been shut down entirely.
He did go back to the training ground to clear out his desk etc.Genuinely, was it?
a) No respect for the manner of the departure …. speaking to Boehly asap, then taking the kitchen sink with him mid-season?
b) He’s non touchy-feely, not one of life’s charismatic huggers?