JCL - the new kid in town
Well-known member
- Aug 23, 2011
- 1,864
Strong is the WORD, none of them are remotely STRONG players. We need people who can get STUCK in
i wonder what David Batty is doing these days.....
Strong is the WORD, none of them are remotely STRONG players. We need people who can get STUCK in
Er, no. If it takes a foreign manager 6 months to adjust and we don't get promoted next season, that's fine. They have a year in the championship, and 3 transfer windows before the push the following season. Burnley, Hull and Palace didn't do it by giving 110% for a British manager.Were caught between a rock and a hard place. Yes we have a fantastic ground and training facilities but any manager who doesn't have experience of the Championship (i.e. any foreign manager) will take six months to adjust and will then want to spend big in January to become promotable. But we haven't got the dosh for players so is the only realistic route the Burnley, Hull , Palarse route where a team is built around solid British yeoman who will give 110% every game for a British manager?
Nor were the ones you listed, what does nationality have to do with their strength?
MENTAL STRENGTH , we need people who are NOT going to HIDE when it's TIME to go over the TOP
Evens on Sky bet!!
Now odds on
Frederic Hantz now also front running - who!!
What does 'knows the Championship' even mean?
It pops up on almost every managerial appointment thread as a quality that some believe is essential in our next manager but no-one seems able to quantify what it actually means.
The Championship is just like any other league, there's no special quality required to get promoted out if it other than the time-honoured 'beat everyone else' approach.
Admittedly, there are a lot of tough teams involved in the division, but managing within the Championship previously is unlikely to give you any extra insight that you wouldn't get through thorough research (which we can probably assume most clubs/managers now do as a matter of course).
What I'm trying to say is that a decent manager will be a success regardless of the league you put them in, football doesn't need to be any more complicated than beating the team that's in front of you on any given Saturday.
Also, I'd be happy with Hyypia.
I posted this on another thread but it's worth sticking it here too. "Knows the championship" is a nonsense requirement. For us to get a manager who "knows the Championship" we would either have to prize Dyche away from Burnley or Pearson from Leicester in their moments of triumph or poach another manager from one of the teams in with us who would have done no better than we did last season.
If you start talking about managers who managed in the division a couple of seasons ago their experience becomes less and less relevant.
It's a bullshit requirement, a lazy phrase for people who read tabloids and think Alan Hansen is a genius.
I'd like Hyypia too btw.
Tell that to the mugs who cheered as they waved Barnes on his way.
Frederic Hantz now also front running - who!!
He's the one that looks like he'll fix your washing machine while his mate has a look for the jewels.
Tell that to the mugs who cheered as they waved Barnes on his way.
I think the new manager will have a history of working with youth teams as well as being a manager or part of a management team.
We have known for a long time that Bloom feels building a team from a successful academy is the way forward, after all he has just spent close to £30m to improve our training facilities and create an academy.
I'm not saying this rules Semi Hyypia out, but it may be that we will only look to the likes of him if we cannot appoint the right candidate with the aforementioned credentials.
Oscar Garcia had these qualities, he left us, he wasn't sacked. Paul Clement has these qualities, but apparently wants to stay with Madrid for now. I think we may be looking more along the lines of Steve Clarke or Glenn Hoddle, Clarke is favourite for the Celtic job and is a Scot, so that may very well appeal to him. Hoddle has youth coaching academies all over Europe, I believe, which could be mutually beneficial to both parties. If neither of these wish to become manager of Brighton then yes, maybe someone like Sami Hyypia will get the job but I don't think he will be 1st choice.
I think the new manager will have a history of working with youth teams as well as being a manager or part of a management team.
We have known for a long time that Bloom feels building a team from a successful academy is the way forward, after all he has just spent close to £30m to improve our training facilities and create an academy.
I'm not saying this rules Sami Hyypia out, but it may be that we will only look to the likes of him if we cannot appoint the right candidate with the aforementioned credentials.
Oscar Garcia had these qualities, he left us, he wasn't sacked. Paul Clement has these qualities, but apparently wants to stay with Madrid for now. I think we may be looking more along the lines of Steve Clarke or Glenn Hoddle, Clarke is favourite for the Celtic job and is a Scot, so that may very well appeal to him. Hoddle has youth coaching academies all over Europe, I believe, which could be mutually beneficial to both parties. If neither of these wish to become manager of Brighton then yes, maybe someone like Sami Hyypia will get the job but I don't think he will be 1st choice.