ewe2
Well-known member
To my mind RDZ does certainly leave with a legacy of pushing us on .However when one compares his with say Kopps track record ,he had a long way to go before becoming a legend.
Highest ever finish , took us in to Europe for the first time , had an amazing group and finished top
last season was the best football I had ever seen a Brighton team play , and that is 60 years ,
if he had received the same support as Klopp we would of qualified for Europe again
i would say our best ever manager without doubt,
didn’t stay long enough to be a legend, but whoever follows will have a hard job to achieve what RDZ did
And what has Potter done since he has left us , nothingIt seems that sometimes, here at that the Albion, the stars align and the right manager comes to the club at just the right time and great things happen.
Micky Adams, Peter Taylor, Mark McGhee, Gus Poyet, Chris Hughton, Roberto De Zerbi.
I'm sure RDZ is a good manager, but I'm pretty sure he is not a great one. None of the above were great managers, but they came to the club at the right times and all of them brought us unprecedented successes.
RDZs legacy will always be (for us anyway), our highest ever finish (to date) and our debut in European football.
I suspect, over time, it will be recognised that Graham Potter was our greatest ever manager. He took us truly to Premier League standard, and RDZ polished it off.
Add to that Fulham and Bournemouth away plus Everton at homeGetting battered by Villa, Luton and whoever else? That's his legacy in my mind.
And what has Potter done since he has left us , nothing
and if you don’t think that achieving our highest ever position makes him our greatest manager, and taking us into Europe, that no other manager has achieved, and finishing top of the group of death , apart from Mullery no other manager we have had is in the same class
as RDZ
No.I suspect, over time, it will be recognised that Graham Potter was our greatest ever manager.
Such a negative way to consider things. It must be tiring living like that?Getting battered by Villa, Luton and whoever else? That's his legacy in my mind.
I'm genuinely not sure whether he'll become a great, or if his ego will prevent that...
Such a negative way to consider things. It must be tiring living like that?
At Liverpool, certainly.To my mind RDZ does certainly leave with a legacy of pushing us on .However when one compares his with say Kopps track record ,he had a long way to go before becoming a legend.
GriefGetting battered by Villa, Luton and whoever else? That's his legacy in my mind.
I’m not so sure ‘think’ is applicableTrue, but junior probably doesn't really think that, he's just fishing
Good question. Successful like Mourinho (if Mourinho had a cuntectomy) or merely entertaining like Bielsa (if Bielsa had a bit of a charm implant)?I normally don't care what managers go on to do, bit I'll be watching with interest wherever he ends up. He's obviously very driven, but I'm still not convinced his experienced enough to be given a top, TOP job.
I'm genuinely not sure whether he'll become a great, or if his ego will prevent that...
Potter achieved a record losing run nowhere near as bad as the odd defeat. Liverpool often lose to crap sides a couple of times a season.Add to that Fulham and Bournemouth away plus Everton at home
Both of those were established managers before they got to the big time. RDZ - maybe quite rightly wants his big break NOW.I don't think an ego is a problem if you're a) good enough, and b) at a club that can afford the best players.
If Pep has an ego, would it be a problem? If Fergie has, was that a problem?
It's not so easy at a lower level club though, as they're not going to get the best players, and they'll be thinking of climbing the ladder.