I'm a big fan of Jonathan Pearce who has always been a big fan of ours. Nice interaction between him and RDZ post-match...
- Roberto looks exhausted which can be deflating in itself and is hardly surprising given how the injuries have just been a pile on since the beginning of the season.
I think with RDZ you see what you get - that he is genuinely happy to be with the Club, proud of his achievements but now, as all perfectionists do, needs some affirmation from the fans and sports pundits when results haven’t been as good as you want them to be. He is his own worst critic- sometimes that needs reigning in and I think the interviewer sensed that which makes it a very warm and intimate interview imo…hats off to JP.
I hope we offer him a renewal of his contract on the much improved terms he truly deserves (Or at least buy him some players in January )
Hmm, it's never a good look when the interviewee becomes interviewer.
IMO, like.
No, I don't think he was being arsey at all. And you're right, I'd much rather expansive answers than grunts or a refusal to talk.I know what you mean, sometimes it can come across as being arsey although I don’t think RDZ did on this occasion.
I prefer to those who do the one-word answers and are just straight up arseholes to the interviewer though, at least RDZ was engaging with him and it was a good discussion.
Good post.That was all perfectly fine. I didn't detect any criticism of the club.
RDZ does not think we are on a par with Manchester United, Arsenal, Liverpool and Newcastle. If that comes as a shock to any of our supporters then I recommend a lovely hot mug of Horlicks.
If at some point a bigger club comes in for him then greater resources would be very attractive. Can you imagine what a bloke like him could do at a club where the very best players could be signed? Obviously it takes a lot more than that to create success, but if he can navigate Brighton further up the table than Chelsea.....he knows he can control and coach players. Can you imagine Fernandes at ManU pouting and strutting with RDZ in charge? He'd have to shape up or ship out. Have we ever seen RDZ moan that we lost because the players didn't do what was asked of them? Not even away at Villa. No. This is a man who is in charge, and who accepts that a team can win every minute of every game, but he could squeeze that more juice out of a team at a bigger club with more money than us. And he knows he can. So we should enjoy the ride while we can.
He sat next to me in the Ajax stand for the away game.... he nearly got our faces smashed in for jumping around when Adingra scored hahaThat was the strangest and best interview I’ve seen in ages. Have seen JP in the queue for the trains in the past. He does enjoy coming here and has attended as a fan. But he always manages to maintain objectivity. Today it was great to see some of that emotional mask slip.
No, I don't think he was being arsey at all. And you're right, I'd much rather expansive answers than grunts or a refusal to talk.
If anything, I get the impression RDZ likes JP and was more than happy to ask questions (that often happens in that situation). But the moment any interviewee starts asking questions, instead of giving an answer, (apart from 'Can you repeat the question?') it's very telling that they are either not comfortable or don't know what to say. That's just my take on it, having been on that side of things many times. As a journalist, I'm not the expert and my opinion doesn't count or even matter. That's why I'm asking the questions!
Personally I like it when it's done politely, and I think RDZ did that. Think of how many thick, and sometimes antagonist questions they put up with regularly. I think/ guess RDZ respects JP and so was comfortable to engage with him.Hmm, it's never a good look when the interviewee becomes interviewer.
IMO, like.
Yeah, maybe – and I've had situations like that. But I just think in a post-match interview environment, managers should be able to deal with any question thrown at them, regardless of what angle they are taking. I was once told "there are no stupid questions, just stupid answers." Clearly it's not as black and white as that, but the interviewer/journalist is there to do their job, whether people like how they go about it or not. When the person answering the questions starts asking the questions, that can become a (one could argue, needless) story on its own.Personally I like it when it's done politely, and I think RDZ did that. Think of how many thick, and sometimes antagonist questions they put up with regularly. I think/ guess RDZ respects JP and so was comfortable to engage with him.