Postman Pat
Well-known member
Is Mullers to old for the Sky gig now - surely a better choice
I thought they would go for Muzza actually. He seems to be getting a bit more media work these days and would cover both camps.
Is Mullers to old for the Sky gig now - surely a better choice
Can’t read that as it is behind a paywall, so the below may be mentioned.
I remember he also said, not long after the match that this would be a good result to leave the fans with, and a good time to leave the club. Pretty sure that I haven’t made that up.
I’ll turn it on at 7.50 and I’ll be surprised if I miss anything regarding the game
I thought they would go for Muzza actually. He seems to be getting a bit more media work these days and would cover both camps.
Deserves better than he gets on here.
We were awful to watch before he came along. Revolutionised us tactically and won promotion in his first full season.
He got us playing some beautiful football and into Championship play-offs which seemed like a dream before his arrival.
Oversaw the transition into the Amex and was the catalyst for bringing a new class of player to the club.
His reign was magnificent, his departure was squalid.
To be fair, at the time (although we didn't see it as fans) there was a was a glass ceiling and one that we'd placed there. Bloom was heavily reigning in his spending, FFP was biting, David Burke was in charge of transfers. The season after he left Garcia was allowed to sign 3 free transfers and 4 loans: Upson, Chicksen and Agustein (free) and Andrews, Ward, Conway and Lita (loan).
There a reason Garcia left after 1 season and it wasn't because he had too much money to spend. Poyet was a complete turd in the way he left and conducted himself in the media (particularly after the Palace game where I felt he made it all about him), but in hindsight the "glass ceiling" comment turned out to be bang on at the time.
To be fair, at the time (although we didn't see it as fans) there was a was a glass ceiling and one that we'd placed there. Bloom was heavily reigning in his spending, FFP was biting, David Burke was in charge of transfers. The season after he left Garcia was allowed to sign 3 free transfers and 4 loans: Upson, Chicksen and Agustein (free) and Andrews, Ward, Conway and Lita (loan).
There a reason Garcia left after 1 season and it wasn't because he had too much money to spend. Poyet was a complete turd in the way he left and conducted himself in the media (particularly after the Palace game where I felt he made it all about him), but in hindsight the "glass ceiling" comment turned out to be bang on at the time.
Exactly the point I was going to make. Between signing Ulloa for £1.6m in January 2013, in Poyets last season, and signing Hemed for £1.2m in July 2015, we only spent more than a million on Stephens, Baldock and Stockdale, while selling Bridcutt, Buckley and Ulloa, each for more than we spent on any of those three buys. After setting our transfer record when we bought Mackail-Smith in July 2011 it took another four and a half years til we broke it again by buying Knockaert in January 2016.
It took that change in spending approach in 15-16, with over a million spent on each of Hemed, Murphy, Manu, Hunemeier, Knockaert and Skalak, followed by Murray and Duffy the next summer, with no sales, to break that 'glass ceiling'. And let's face it, they're is never a shortage of people on NSC demanding the club spend more and more on players.
I'm not saying it was the wrong approach for the club, but for a young ambitious manager like Poyet having just taken his side to fourth, it's completely understandable that he wanted to push on, instead it took us another three seasons to match that without him. And by all accounts he had already fallen out with TB by then anyway and knew the writing was on the wall.
I watched his post match press conference and I felt his pain, felt that he was just as devastated as the rest of us were feeling. I didn't bristle at criticism or disappointed at making it about him - after all, our meteoric rise from the foot of league 1 to 4th in the championship in 3 and a half short seasons was in no small part down to him. We were f*cking brilliant. After the draw in the first leg and the previous dismantling of Palace in the league game, we all expected to win that night. I put Poyet comments squarely on the crushing disappointment of that evening. It was the unguarded, perhaps misplaced, passion of a man who truly cared. It was only after coming on here that I realised other Brighton fans had taken his comments very differently. Then came the suspension and firing and fall out from poo-gate and the courting of Bridcutt and Buckley, it was a very long goodbye.
And his career nosedived after us. I imagine he was hurt more than we know about what happened at Brighton. He gave his all to us for those three and a half years, the effort and dedication taken to transform our players and our style of play and achieve the success he did, speaks plainly to that.
I was all in with Gus and could never get on board with Garcia or Hyppia. Took Chris to drag me back into day-to-day Albion passion.
It is rare that a manager can leave with his head held high and be an unblemished hero long after he has gone. For all their achievements, there will always be negatives in the memory of Poyet, Adams, Gritt, Melia, Hughton and Mullery's time at the Albion. Rare is the manager who leaves with his record untarnished, even the very best like Wenger, Mourinho or Klopp, as his Liverpool journey seems to be going. Perhaps only Sir Alex, King Kenny (who can be forgiven his second coming at Anfield) and likely Pep, from the recent past, are never going to hear a negative about how things turned out on the end.
I liked Gus. No, that a lie, I LOVED Gus. I'm interested to see what he says tonight. I hope and pray that he's complimentary about us and his time with us.
Exactly the point I was going to make. Between signing Ulloa for £1.6m in January 2013, in Poyets last season, and signing Hemed for £1.2m in July 2015, we only spent more than a million on Stephens, Baldock and Stockdale, while selling Bridcutt, Buckley and Ulloa, each for more than we spent on any of those three buys. After setting our transfer record when we bought Mackail-Smith in July 2011 it took another four and a half years til we broke it again by buying Knockaert in January 2016.
It took that change in spending approach in 15-16, with over a million spent on each of Hemed, Murphy, Manu, Hunemeier, Knockaert and Skalak, followed by Murray and Duffy the next summer, with no sales, to break that 'glass ceiling'. And let's face it, they're is never a shortage of people on NSC demanding the club spend more and more on players.
I'm not saying it was the wrong approach for the club, but for a young ambitious manager like Poyet having just taken his side to fourth, it's completely understandable that he wanted to push on, instead it took us another three seasons to match that without him. And by all accounts he had already fallen out with TB by then anyway and knew the writing was on the wall.
I watched his post match press conference and I felt his pain, felt that he was just as devastated as the rest of us were feeling. I didn't bristle at criticism or disappointed at making it about him - after all, our meteoric rise from the foot of league 1 to 4th in the championship in 3 and a half short seasons was in no small part down to him. We were f*cking brilliant. After the draw in the first leg and the previous dismantling of Palace in the league game, we all expected to win that night. I put Poyet comments squarely on the crushing disappointment of that evening. It was the unguarded, perhaps misplaced, passion of a man who truly cared. It was only after coming on here that I realised other Brighton fans had taken his comments very differently. Then came the suspension and firing and fall out from poo-gate and the courting of Bridcutt and Buckley, it was a very long goodbye.
And his career nosedived after us. I imagine he was hurt more than we know about what happened at Brighton. He gave his all to us for those three and a half years, the effort and dedication taken to transform our players and our style of play and achieve the success he did, speaks plainly to that.
I was all in with Gus and could never get on board with Garcia or Hyppia. Took Chris to drag me back into day-to-day Albion passion.
It is rare that a manager can leave with his head held high and be an unblemished hero long after he has gone. For all their achievements, there will always be negatives in the memory of Poyet, Adams, Gritt, Melia, Hughton and Mullery's time at the Albion. Rare is the manager who leaves with his record untarnished, even the very best like Wenger, Mourinho or Klopp, as his Liverpool journey seems to be going. Perhaps only Sir Alex, King Kenny (who can be forgiven his second coming at Anfield) and likely Pep, from the recent past, are never going to hear a negative about how things turned out on the end.
I liked Gus. No, that a lie, I LOVED Gus. I'm interested to see what he says tonight. I hope and pray that he's complimentary about us and his time with us.
Legend of a manager who pulled us up by our bootstraps and ensured we kicked off at the Amex in the Championship.
It didn't end well. But anyone who fails to acknowledge what Poyet did for BHA is a class-A twatter.
Many fond memories, instrumental in our resurgence but he didn't help himself on the way out. This was very disingenuous
There a reason Garcia left after 1 season and it wasn't because he had too much money to spend. Poyet was a complete turd in the way he left and conducted himself in the media (particularly after the Palace game where I felt he made it all about him), but in hindsight the "glass ceiling" comment turned out to be bang on at the time.