nevergoagain
Well-known member
This academy player merry go round with Chelsea, Villa, Everton and now Leicester is disgraceful. A massive loophole that needs closing down.
It may well have been done - and very probably was - just not announced yet.As the deal wasn’t down yesterday, does that mean Leicester are going to get a further points deduction?
AgreedThis academy player merry go round with Chelsea, Villa, Everton and now Leicester is disgraceful. A massive loophole that needs closing down.
Roberto throwing IPads and Potter asking Billy Reid to pick them up?I think we all know the dream team would be Potter and RDZ as a partnership.
I agree with you.Great stuff!! The only caveat I would add is that - on the evidence of my own eyes, in many, many games - RDZ had us playing the most exciting, innovative football for the past 50 years (and no doubt in our entire history). Lots else to pick apart in your assessment, but I’ll leave that for now….
RDZ had the team play 1990s football with players locked into their roles and position. The reason why his tactics were perceived as "innovative" is because no one has seen them since Arsene Wenger turned up in 1996 and said "you can't do it like that".Great stuff!! The only caveat I would add is that - on the evidence of my own eyes, in many, many games - RDZ had us playing the most exciting, innovative football for the past 50 years (and no doubt in our entire history). Lots else to pick apart in your assessment, but I’ll leave that for now….
Some other people saw it differently:RDZ had the team play 1990s football with players locked into their roles and position. The reason why his tactics were perceived as "innovative" is because no one has seen them since Arsene Wenger turned up in 1996 and said "you can't do it like that".
I didn't care all that much when Guardiola and Klopp were handing out free blowjobs to Graham Potter and I CERTAINLY won't read much into it when they did it with RDZ. According to Klopp and Guardiola, every manager they face are Gods gift to football.Some other people saw it differently:
"I had the feeling when he arrived the impact he would have in the Premier League would be great - I didn't expect him to do it in this short space of time. There is no team playing the way they play... If you don’t play at a high level, he can do whatever he wants against you... They completely deserve the compliments and the success that they have. It’s one of the teams that I try to learn a lot from, it’s unique.... One of the most influential managers in the last 20 years."
“I told De Zerbi to keep turning the football world upside down...I will watch it from some distance. I respect so much what he’s doing....It is incredible what he has done. Brighton have lost Alexis Mac Allister and Moises Caicedo, they have lots of injuries, but he puts a team like that together. An incredible job.”
Never mind though, Pep Guardiola and Jurgen Klopp probably don't have your unique insight and tactical knowledge.
Yes please, I hope Hürzy can deliver it! We didn't see that earlier this year, it was quite boring actually.... football where players are allowed to be creative and independent.
You were not on here when De Zerbi took us to our highest ever finish, nor when we topped our group in Europe. Yet things go wrong and you ride back into town to reinterpret everything that we lived through.I didn't care all that much when Guardiola and Klopp were handing out free blowjobs to Graham Potter and I CERTAINLY won't read much into it when they did it with RDZ. According to Klopp and Guardiola, every manager they face are Gods gift to football.
However, nothing in the quote really changes what I've said. De Zerbi came with a slightly modernized version of obsolete system football and it was "new" until people noticed the weaknesses. First the tactical managers like Sean Dyche, and not much later the inspirational managers like Klopp and Pep. Once it was noticed that RDZs style actually wasn't "new", it was "the old one that was rightfully abandoned after Barca flogged United in the CL", it didn't take long for results - and those fine words - to deteoriate.
Pep and Klopp were humble about an upcoming opponent. If you want some honest words of wisdom, listen to mr Ancelotti:
"To try and have one identity for your team is a limit. We played a game in the Champions League against Shakhtar Donetsk. Very good team, Roberto De Zerbi was their coach. What he was doing with full backs, and different positions, really good. But I said to my players, they want you to press. Don’t press. If you press they will pass the ball around you. Don’t press, and they will give the ball to you. We didn’t press – and we won 5-0.”
That would certainly give Potter's emotional intelligence degree a very stiff test indeed.I think we all know the dream team would be Potter and RDZ as a partnership.
It does look a very strange signing. If Winstanley had suggested this deal when Abramovich was in charge he would have been sent to a Siberian gulag.Even Chelsea fans don't seem impressed by this signing according to many comments on their message boards - along the line of 'why do we need another midfielder, and what a waste of money on a reserve!'.
All arrows do point towards he’s a good championship player and not much else.I'm happy with how this has panned out.
KDH a decent player but if we had to spend £30m i'd rather Minteh than a player who would have no real resale potential and who was god awful every time i've seen him play live
Playing devil's advocate,This academy player merry go round with Chelsea, Villa, Everton and now Leicester is disgraceful. A massive loophole that needs closing down.
I agree, there's not enough evidence that he's a top half PL player for us to part with £30m, which we'll never get backAll arrows do point towards he’s a good championship player and not much else.
Of course I may be wrong.
Yeah I hope so too.Yes please, I hope Hürzy can deliver it! We didn't see that earlier this year, it was quite boring actually.
Ride back into town... I watched the Albion play at least 50 hours of utterly unwatchable football last season.You were not on here when De Zerbi took us to our highest ever finish, nor when we topped our group in Europe. Yet things go wrong and you ride back into town to reinterpret everything that we lived through.
We liked Graham Potter when he was our manager. We really did. We didn't want him to go. It wasn't our fault that he did, nor that Chelsea was a disaster, nor that De Zerbi arrived and made us better. However, because he did, we liked De Zerbi too. He's now gone too and the usual form applies: We're done with the things we liked in the past and are concentrating on the thing that we have always, and will always love: Brighton & Hove Albion. We're not concerned by what has passed. We all sincerely hope that Hurzeler is better than De Zerbi. We know from what we've experienced, that it'll be a hell of a high bar.
We all get hung up on things, but please try to understand that your constant revisionist attacks on De Zerbi are of interest mainly to you. By all means write them down, but then keep them to yourself or head to Marseille's board and share them there. Without wishing to offend, it was our lived experience and very few of us care what you thought, from another country, months later. We were in the ground. We watched the football. At it's peak, it was by a country mile, the best football we've ever seen our beloved club play. Yes, we all knew that RDZ was an arrogant ideolog and we knew it would probably end in tears, because we had already had the same experience, at a lower level, with Gus Poyet. However, we enjoyed some performances beyond our wildest dreams, and in the Chelsea and Marseille games, some of the best atmospheres we've ever had at home games. We lived and breathed it. We were moved by it. I suspect that I was not the only person in the ground wiping away a few tears on the final whistle against Marseille. Our tiny club actually experienced one of those European nights that we'd been watching the big boys have on telly for decades! No dry, tactical analysis can possibly compete with our lived experience.
If you want to support Brighton, then by all means do so. Even better, travel over and do it. Love should be shared and everyone is welcome if they want to ride this train. Please stop endlessly finding fault with the last driver. We know very well what you think and finding a hundred different ways to argue it is not going to make anyone else care. We're travelling on down the line with a new driver and both Potter and RDZ got off at stations somewhere behind us.
And taking this further, it reduces the incentive to have a team who relies on high wage "proven" players. You need to get players in the team you can sell instead.Playing devil's advocate,
You could argue it's EXCELLENT for the game. Clubs now have even more incentives to get young homegrown players out there into their team and noticed. Sure, it's to then cash in on them but no one is buying them if they are rubbish. The upside, young player gets football sooner and move to clubs who have invested in buying them so they get played.
Tl;dr - are bottle tops going to be allowed next season or not?You were not on here when De Zerbi took us to our highest ever finish, nor when we topped our group in Europe. Yet things go wrong and you ride back into town to reinterpret everything that we lived through.
We liked Graham Potter when he was our manager. We really did. We didn't want him to go. It wasn't our fault that he did, nor that Chelsea was a disaster, nor that De Zerbi arrived and made us better. However, because he did, we liked De Zerbi too. He's now gone too and the usual form applies: We're done with the things we liked in the past and are concentrating on the thing that we have always, and will always love: Brighton & Hove Albion. We're not concerned by what has passed. We all sincerely hope that Hurzeler is better than De Zerbi. We know from what we've experienced, that it'll be a hell of a high bar.
We all get hung up on things, but please try to understand that your constant revisionist attacks on De Zerbi are of interest mainly to you. By all means write them down, but then keep them to yourself or head to Marseille's board and share them there. Without wishing to offend, it was our lived experience and very few of us care what you thought, from another country, months later. We were in the ground. We watched the football. At it's peak, it was by a country mile, the best football we've ever seen our beloved club play. Yes, we all knew that RDZ was an arrogant ideolog and we knew it would probably end in tears, because we had already had the same experience, at a lower level, with Gus Poyet. However, we enjoyed some performances beyond our wildest dreams, and in the Chelsea and Marseille games, some of the best atmospheres we've ever had at home games. We lived and breathed it. We were moved by it. I suspect that I was not the only person in the ground wiping away a few tears on the final whistle against Marseille. Our tiny club actually experienced one of those European nights that we'd been watching the big boys have on telly for decades! No dry, tactical analysis can possibly compete with our lived experience.
If you want to support Brighton, then by all means do so. Even better, travel over and do it. Love should be shared and everyone is welcome if they want to ride this train. Please stop endlessly finding fault with the last driver. We know very well what you think and finding a hundred different ways to argue it is not going to make anyone else care. We're travelling on down the line with a new driver and both Potter and RDZ got off at stations somewhere behind us.