Tom Hark Preston Park
Will Post For Cash
- Jul 6, 2003
- 72,401
(from today's Mirror - comment also applies to League One surely? )
Mind the gap
Forget about Cup results, the Championship is the worst in living memory
Lawro 8/03/2008
If You take a casual look at the FA Cup quarter-final line-up then you could be thinking there was a shift in power away from the Premier League.
There are three clubs from the Championship - Barnsley, Cardiff and West Brom - and Bristol Rovers are flying the flag for League One.
Well, don't get too carried away because this is without doubt the worst Championship that I can ever remember.
The gap is even wider than ever between the Championship and Premier League.
There are three separate divisions in the Premier League - with the top four, the next group pushing for a UEFA Cup place and then the rest fighting for survival.
But with the Championship, there is just one league because it is so mundane and average.
You only have to look at the leadership in the Championship and the fact that no-one is capable of staying top to realise that teams do not have quality or consistency.
Stoke, Bristol City and Watford have all gone top in recent weeks - only to lose their nerve and slip up against clubs way down the table.
Even the preseason favourites, West Brom, do not seem to have any consistency even though their home form may see them clinch automatic promotion.
...
I can't think of a single player to excite you. The keeper at Wolves, Wayne Hennessey, looks a good prospect, but apart from that there's no one else.
Tony Pulis has done a great job at Stoke to get an incredibly average side to the top of the table. The same goes for Gary Johnson, who has worked wonders at Bristol City. Johnson has done an amazing job wherever he has been - Cambridge, Latvia and Bristol City.
Charlton under Alan Pardew were expected to bounce straight back but have stuttered and struggled.
But these guys are doing great jobs despite their limited resources. It's not a reflection on them, but a reflection of the complete lack of quality outside of the Premier League.
Championship matches have been poor. I went and saw my club Preston beat Stoke a couple of weeks ago and it was an awful game.
Stoke are direct, hard-working and tough. They could have scored four but ended up losing 2-0 to a club who are fighting for survival.
Mind you, even Preston could have beaten Olympiacos by the way they played at Chelsea in midweek. And the FA Cup will probably even out this weekend as it is hard to see many shocks.
The Championship is just an amazingly poor league. Teams are average, the standard is getting worse and that is being proved by the lower clubs beating the top clubs with alarming regularity.
But most overwhelmingly, the football is so mundane and so poor. Whoever goes down from the Premier League this season will be favourites to go back up.
And whoever survives this season will be confident that they will stay up the following season because of the poor quality of teams who will come up.
That is a damning indictment of the Championship - and if the league below the Premier League is going down in quality, then the Premier League will inevitably deteriorate in quality, too.
Mind the gap
Forget about Cup results, the Championship is the worst in living memory
Lawro 8/03/2008
If You take a casual look at the FA Cup quarter-final line-up then you could be thinking there was a shift in power away from the Premier League.
There are three clubs from the Championship - Barnsley, Cardiff and West Brom - and Bristol Rovers are flying the flag for League One.
Well, don't get too carried away because this is without doubt the worst Championship that I can ever remember.
The gap is even wider than ever between the Championship and Premier League.
There are three separate divisions in the Premier League - with the top four, the next group pushing for a UEFA Cup place and then the rest fighting for survival.
But with the Championship, there is just one league because it is so mundane and average.
You only have to look at the leadership in the Championship and the fact that no-one is capable of staying top to realise that teams do not have quality or consistency.
Stoke, Bristol City and Watford have all gone top in recent weeks - only to lose their nerve and slip up against clubs way down the table.
Even the preseason favourites, West Brom, do not seem to have any consistency even though their home form may see them clinch automatic promotion.
...
I can't think of a single player to excite you. The keeper at Wolves, Wayne Hennessey, looks a good prospect, but apart from that there's no one else.
Tony Pulis has done a great job at Stoke to get an incredibly average side to the top of the table. The same goes for Gary Johnson, who has worked wonders at Bristol City. Johnson has done an amazing job wherever he has been - Cambridge, Latvia and Bristol City.
Charlton under Alan Pardew were expected to bounce straight back but have stuttered and struggled.
But these guys are doing great jobs despite their limited resources. It's not a reflection on them, but a reflection of the complete lack of quality outside of the Premier League.
Championship matches have been poor. I went and saw my club Preston beat Stoke a couple of weeks ago and it was an awful game.
Stoke are direct, hard-working and tough. They could have scored four but ended up losing 2-0 to a club who are fighting for survival.
Mind you, even Preston could have beaten Olympiacos by the way they played at Chelsea in midweek. And the FA Cup will probably even out this weekend as it is hard to see many shocks.
The Championship is just an amazingly poor league. Teams are average, the standard is getting worse and that is being proved by the lower clubs beating the top clubs with alarming regularity.
But most overwhelmingly, the football is so mundane and so poor. Whoever goes down from the Premier League this season will be favourites to go back up.
And whoever survives this season will be confident that they will stay up the following season because of the poor quality of teams who will come up.
That is a damning indictment of the Championship - and if the league below the Premier League is going down in quality, then the Premier League will inevitably deteriorate in quality, too.