Wellesley
Well-known member
- Jul 24, 2013
- 4,973
Absolutely not....well not yet anyway
Just got promoted so way go early to decide and you need a cup final place also to be seen as number one.
You think Jimmy Melia was better?
Absolutely not....well not yet anyway
Just got promoted so way go early to decide and you need a cup final place also to be seen as number one.
You think Jimmy Melia was better?
You think Jimmy Melia was better?
He's up there, and I might be close to giving him that accolade. I think its still Mullers on top, but as I don't remember Mullery part 1; from Mullers part 2 onwards, the shortlist is Chris, Gus and Micky.
Micky took us over at such a lowpoint and transformed us into a wonderful team that refused to lose, two great promotions with his team. He didn't have a director of football or recruitment department, he didn't have 20,000 crowds or wonderful facilities or money to spend, so to do what he did at Withdean was extraordinary. The players he brought in outlasted him and were our spine for more than half a decade, and we never looked back from his tenure. The legends of Bobby Zamora and Bob Booker and Charlie Oatway and Gary Hart and Danny Cullip are all writ deep in the Albion's history
Gus took over in the relegation zone of league 1 with a playing squad not up to scratch, kept us up and in two seasons had us 4th in the championship. He did that whilst transforming our style of play into something distinct and beautiful, with dismantlings of Charlton, Peterborough and Palace that will live long in the memory and, just like Micky bringing us to Withdean on a high, Gus' team made the Amex our home. The patient, possession-based football ideology is something that we have never lost since, and along with that he brought us Calde, Bruno, Vicente - and Gus himself, the eccentric, passionate, complicated man always on the edge, but who stayed with us 3 and a half seasons, more than any manager we've had since Lloyd.
Chris is close to breaking that record. He took over a team and situation far better than Hyypia's incompetence suggested, and had the full backing of the board including the early decision to dismantle the director of football structure that was responsible in part for the demise of Poyet and Hyypia. But alongside that baseline he has instilled this fantastic togetherness and spirit that has allowed his team to continually bounce back from disappointments and adversity, and has taken his pragmatic brand of defense-first football and added to it strands of flair that keep getting us off our seats. The players he has at his disposal are the best we've ever had, and Knockaert, March and Izquierdo excite and excite and excite over and over. This combination of Hughton's experience and resilience, an owner fully invested in making a full investment and a recruitment team delivering the goods, has seen us to 8th in the country. What comes next will determine for me if he breaks free from this gang of three and takes on Mullers for greatest manager ever.
Utter respect for a man that was 'shown the door' at so called bigger and better clubs and yes Muller's however Hereford97, Steve Gritt.
If I was being a pedantic arse I'd say "Define 'best"'.
It's all about context. He has had the level of resources that other managers could only dream about - which admittedly he has used very well. As others have said the time to judge will probably be when his tenure ends, I remember people saying that Mark McGhee was our best-ever manager. That didn't last and I haven't seen his name mentioned here!
That does come over a bit curmudgeonly which is definitely not how I feel. This is our best-ever era though, so I understand why people say he's the best.
He's on the way to being one of the greatest IMO. I am SO proud of being in the premier league.
Utter respect for a man that was 'shown the door' at so called bigger and better clubs and yes Muller's however Hereford97, Steve Gritt.
This.He's on the way to being one of the greatest IMO. I am SO proud of being in the premier league.