Knocky's Nose
Mon nez est retiré.
Ok, so Fulham are finding it tough, but Huddersfield have shown that you can come up and play attacking football and succeed.
You almost had me though
Ok, so Fulham are finding it tough, but Huddersfield have shown that you can come up and play attacking football and succeed.
He is not 'revelling in his notoriety'. Nor is he owning up to it 'All over twitter'. He is responding to people like you who jump on somebody because their opinion differs from yours.
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He is not 'revelling in his notoriety'. Nor is he owning up to it 'All over twitter'. He is responding to people like you who jump on somebody because their opinion differs from yours.
Huddersfield and Fulham both play this brand of attacking football, committing players high up the pitch, high press, it’s not always the answer that fans think. BTW I don’t think CH is devoid of criticism, would love us to be more flowing and attacking but I see the pragmatism of the approach
I think we also need to remember that a team that wants to attack needs to be able to pass the ball to each other consistently, and we are struggling to do that at the moment. For whatever reason, things aren't clicking, so I think the idea we're not trying to attack is probably wrong. It's a needs must kind of thing. We're struggling for form and we're playing against teams that are able to ping the ball around at the moment pushing us back. When we get our passing game back on track, I think we'll see more attacking play.
Hudd's and Fulham are often the reference points as are City and L'Pool but it feels like the argument is more of a battering ram approach to the debate
Hudd's just don't have any quality in their squad and I'm not sure whatever approach they took would yield results. City and L'pool and others just have the quality running throughout that they can
Fulham I suspect though is more a matter of too many 'individuals' in their team and assembled far too quickly. From what I've seen their defensive positioning is dreadful and their midfielders caught way too high up the pitch ... I don't believe this is how Jokanovic is intending it, just dreadful execution
I agree we're probably taking the pragmatic approach right now. Propper and Gross injured and our new recruits still not settled but I would hope that when we have a full squad and 2 or 3 of the new recruits become regular starters (if indeed they have the quality to do so) then we might look to play more like the likes of Watford and B'Muff. Their teams are not packed with expensively assembled 'stars' and they have been playing like that ever since they were promoted.
I like to think I'm adopting a middle ground, but to some I'm sure my views will be considered heresy
This is exactly how I see the current situation.
Yesterday against Everton, we consistently struggled to pass our way out of defence. This meant that there was very little respite between Everton attacks . This is purely down to a lack of confidence in the current team , as we have been capable of slick and accurate interplay during last season. We are clearly missing the calm heads of propper and Pascal gross , who both are capable of holding the ball or playing accurate passes as part of our attacking moves.
This is exactly how I see the current situation.
Yesterday against Everton, we consistently struggled to pass our way out of defence. This meant that there was very little respite between Everton attacks . This is purely down to a lack of confidence in the current team , as we have been capable of slick and accurate interplay during last season. We are clearly missing the calm heads of propper and Pascal gross , who both are capable of holding the ball or playing accurate passes as part of our attacking moves.
Everton have simply spent many £100m’s in fees and wages on far better players than us in midfield. Just one of those things in football. Swap their 3 CM’ers for ours, and we’d control many a PL match. Until that time, CH has wisely taken a rudimentary approach to accumulating points.
We are actually currently averaging more goals a game than we averaged over last season.
We are three places higher in the league than we finished last season.
We have just won three games in a row in the top league for the first time since the early eighties.
Our success has not been founded upon out attacking teams. We are organised, resilient and hard to break down and have been ever since Chris Hughton instilled this approach to stop us from getting relegated from the Championship in his first season.
We won three matches in October in the Premier League. Do you remember when we never used to win in October? Which manager stopped that?
Despite a nomination for manager of the month and two players up for player of the month, Hughton has made it clear in interviews that he is not satisfied that the team is reaching the levels that they are capable of.
Players have said repeatedly that one of Hughton's great strengths is that he does not react to the highs and lows of football results. He focuses on the next target.
We are missing Gross and Propper. Following injury, Izquierdo is playing his way into form in the same way he did when he joined last year. The new signings are going through the same acclimatising process that Izquierdo went through last year.
Seven of our eleven games have been against teams who sit above us in the league; six against the top half and four against the big six. We have not lost to anyone currently below us.
Our top striker is one behind the division's leading goalscorer.
Hughton's approach has led to a Brighton player being called up to the England squad for the first time in more than three decades.
We are currently one place above where Newcastle were when Mike Ashley sacked Chris Hughton in 2010: a decision rightly derided by most people in football as utterly disrespectful, hubristic and short-termist.
We have a manager who is committed, decent, honourable, knowledgeable, realistic, hard working and successful and, as fans we would do well to reflect his attitude to football. Doing so would keep us grounded enough to never feel the need to ring a football phone-in show.
Everyone should have stopped listening to 606 the moment #prodnose was sacked. His concept of a programme celebrating the shared joyous madness and pointlessness of football obsession has become completely corrupted and is now nothing more than a forum for amateur and professional partisan bores to share opinions that their friends and families have become tired of hearing.
Other than that, carry on...
A bit (actually, a lot) of perspective put perfectly.We are actually currently averaging more goals a game than we averaged over last season.
We are three places higher in the league than we finished last season.
We have just won three games in a row in the top league for the first time since the early eighties.
Our success has not been founded upon out attacking teams. We are organised, resilient and hard to break down and have been ever since Chris Hughton instilled this approach to stop us from getting relegated from the Championship in his first season.
We won three matches in October in the Premier League. Do you remember when we never used to win in October? Which manager stopped that?
Despite a nomination for manager of the month and two players up for player of the month, Hughton has made it clear in interviews that he is not satisfied that the team is reaching the levels that they are capable of.
Players have said repeatedly that one of Hughton's great strengths is that he does not react to the highs and lows of football results. He focuses on the next target.
We are missing Gross and Propper. Following injury, Izquierdo is playing his way into form in the same way he did when he joined last year. The new signings are going through the same acclimatising process that Izquierdo went through last year.
Seven of our eleven games have been against teams who sit above us in the league; six against the top half and four against the big six. We have not lost to anyone currently below us.
Our top striker is one behind the division's leading goalscorer.
Hughton's approach has led to a Brighton player being called up to the England squad for the first time in more than three decades.
We are currently one place above where Newcastle were when Mike Ashley sacked Chris Hughton in 2010: a decision rightly derided by most people in football as utterly disrespectful, hubristic and short-termist.
We have a manager who is committed, decent, honourable, knowledgeable, realistic, hard working and successful and, as fans we would do well to reflect his attitude to football. Doing so would keep us grounded enough to never feel the need to ring a football phone-in show.
Everyone should have stopped listening to 606 the moment #prodnose was sacked. His concept of a programme celebrating the shared joyous madness and pointlessness of football obsession has become completely corrupted and is now nothing more than a forum for amateur and professional partisan bores to share opinions that their friends and families have become tired of hearing.
Other than that, carry on...
He is not 'revelling in his notoriety'. Nor is he owning up to it 'All over twitter'. He is responding to people like you who jump on somebody because their opinion differs from yours.
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Definitely a fan, I've just recognised him, used to sit near me at Withdean.
So what you're saying is you can give an opinion, but responding to that opinion with your own is 'jumping on somebody'.
Bath seagull has already admitted that the 'Hughton out' comment was to just get himself on the radio, which in my opinion is pretty pathetic; if it's okay with you that I give my opinion on that. Feel free to give your opinion in return, I won't take it as 'jumping on me' just because it might differ from mine.
What I would suggest, in my opinion, is that if someone is a bit sensitive about people giving their opinion back to you, you don't go on national radio saying something stupid to hundreds of thousands of people.
The style debate might be a good one, what was it about 146 goals over 2 seasons you didn’t like? We’ve seen distinct ways of playing over the past decade, I loved us under Gus too but feel Hughton has been more attacking and direct than Gus was. Thing about Hughton for me is he plays to his team’s strengths, at present that is defensively, but we’ve already seen this season that isn’t always the case, and last season the same happened over the course of the year.
Huddersfield and Fulham both play this brand of attacking football, committing players high up the pitch, high press, it’s not always the answer that fans think. BTW I don’t think CH is devoid of criticism, would love us to be more flowing and attacking but I see the pragmatism of the approach, and also loved the last 3 seasons, I honestly don’t know what you’ve enjoyed in your history of watching us if you haven’t enjoyed Hughton’s team and style over his tenure! :crazy: