Wonder if it’s the same journalist who wrote about “ Graham Potter & his all-passing, no-scoring performance art project” not very long ago.
That was a "Niall McVeigh" apparently.
A brilliant sentence tbh.
Wonder if it’s the same journalist who wrote about “ Graham Potter & his all-passing, no-scoring performance art project” not very long ago.
Sterling? Can’t think of many players at that kind of level, with less ego, tbh. Potter will love him. Probably play him all over the place!
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Yep - way too much being made into all this. Chelsea sacked their manager, wanted potter, offered him loadsamoney plus a chance to truly challenge for trophies including the champions league, he said yes as long as I can bring my coaching staff with me, or something like that.
Is he a wanker for it? No, why would he be - it's not like he was born here or has spent his entire life at our club. Even then he'd still be building his career. Most of us would have done the same and we're about to do it to another club and their fans
He's not a w@nker in reality, of course not. But it's what is not said in this letter that stands out. He left with BHA in such a promising position but with nothing delivered. He left with no notice. He took the entire coaching team leaving us with the (inexperienced) U21 coach in charge. He will have unsettled key players at a critical stage of negotiation. He has destabilized the club. He's shown us what we might have (and might yet, of course) and has snatched it away.
The letter didn't acknowledge that and so for a lot of fans, it rings hollow.
Yup. There is long and too long I believe. Sure, too long is nice when it is all going fine but it also comes with a cost that is double those years. Alex Fergusons United peaked probably around 2007/8 when they won the second CL title... if he had left then, they would have missed a few titles but they might also have recuperated quicker. At least it would have left his successor with a better squad to work with rather than the aging, wonky bunch Moyes had to deal with.
I’d had hoped that we were going to get another season, or the best part of that with him, but we all knew this was always going to happen. Whilst I’m still extremely disappointed I don’t think you can begrudge him leaving so don’t get the vitriol. This was an offer he couldn’t turn down. Roberts and Bruno, hitherto thought of as “Albion men,” is harder to accept but sadly the money and let us not forget, the opportunity to be part of a big club with Champions League football, is a very attractive combination which sadly Albion can’t compete with.
I also think it’s a mistake to think he won’t succeed at Stamford Bridge. They’ve given him a long term contract, and already public declarations that he doesn’t have to get them into the top 4 so may well get more time than previous incumbents. Of course that will be driven by results but make no mistake, Graham Potter is the real deal, a world class coach. That’s what’s so gutting. He is that good and he was ours. I expect he’ll be a big success at Chelsea for many years.
It’s been a terrible week but we have Tony Bloom, a very clever and fiercely determined owner, who has an excellent record in appointing coaches. Let’s see who he comes up with.
He's not a w@nker in reality, of course not. But it's what is not said in this letter that stands out. He left with BHA in such a promising position but with nothing delivered. He left with no notice. He took the entire coaching team leaving us with the (inexperienced) U21 coach in charge. He will have unsettled key players at a critical stage of negotiation. He has destabilized the club. He's shown us what we might have (and might yet, of course) and has snatched it away.
The letter didn't acknowledge that and so for a lot of fans, it rings hollow.
He's not a w@nker in reality, of course not. But it's what is not said in this letter that stands out. He left with BHA in such a promising position but with nothing delivered. He left with no notice. He took the entire coaching team leaving us with the (inexperienced) U21 coach in charge. He will have unsettled key players at a critical stage of negotiation. He has destabilized the club. He's shown us what we might have (and might yet, of course) and has snatched it away.
The letter didn't acknowledge that and so for a lot of fans, it rings hollow.
That's ridiculous logic; the timing of his move had nothing to do with him. What was he supposed to do when presented with an opportunity for all he knew he might not get again? Say to Chelsea 'yes I'd love to manage a champions league club and challenge for trophies but can I stay with brighton till the end of the season first?'
[MENTION=3462]Springal[/MENTION]. I'm not saying he shouldn't have taken the job or that he should have finished the season here. In merely saying that his open letter fails to really own the consequences. So for many Albion fans, at this moment, his letter doesn't provide much catharsis.
Which by the way he has already hinted at coming back for the rest in January
I’m not sure he’s going to mention POTENTIALLY leaving us in the shit, when it’s something he can’t justify or explain how everything will be ok.
It’s collateral damage for him, and to be fair if it was a strong thought he maybe wouldn’t have left.
At which point we either charge him way over the odds or tell him to do one. That's the way the world (and football) works.
Of course Shankly, Clough and to some extent Ferguson, had something, now unfashionable, that may have kept them in one community: A belief in socialism.
So says James Gheerbrant in Times; I was looking forward to his objective and considered view especially after his interview with GP published a month ago in Times.
To avoid paywall issues, here is precis and quotes from his Times article:
"Perhaps naively, I wondered whether Potter might wrestle with and perhaps even rebuff Chelsea’s approach. But I was probably underestimating his savviness....."
..."one of the defining themes of Potter’s career so far, as well as his obviously transformative coaching ability and emotional intelligence, has been his sense of mobility and timing. He knew when he had taken Ostersunds as far as he could and he may now have made the same calculation about Brighton & Hove Albion. So far, he has adroitly navigated a career in which his stock has only risen and he has made each move at the perfect moment."
JG compares GP's timing favourably with that of Ten Hag and Nagelsmann, likewise constrained by the seeming impossibility of competing with the Super League clubs. He notes that the dynasties created by 'imperial figures' of football - Shankly, Clough, Ferguson, Wenger - are no longer. He concludes: "The modern manager must, first and foremost, be the pilot of their own career." Those who stay too long - he cites Rodgers and Pochettino as examples - are doomed to have their CV darkened as a result.
"Knowing when to walk away is one of the most important skills in modern football management, but also one of the most difficult. The decision can be clouded by a sense of loyalty, an emotional bond with players and fans, a desire to avenge a near miss or see a project through, even the seductive thought of forging a dynasty."
The only long serving manager (>10 years) in Europe's top 5 leagues (other than Freiburg's manager) is Simeone. But, argues Gheerbrant: "Five years ago, he was one of the hottest properties in coaching, on everyone’s dream shortlist. But if he were to leave Atletico at the end of this season, and another of the big club jobs were to be open, would he be an obvious candidate? I’m not sure that he would: at this stage, he is so immersed in Atletico that it has become almost impossible to imagine him outside it."
Conclusion:
"In the present landscape, not even a club with the intelligence of Brighton, the history and romance of Ajax, or the commercial cutting edge of Hoffenheim or Leipzig, can expect to tie down the next great manager for long. I don’t fault Potter in the slightest for taking his chance. "
I don`t think i would call what Potter did "Savvy" more like out and out destructive and malicious , whether that was accident or intention i don`t know . But i do think he made absolutely no real effort to leave our Great club in a solid and effective state when he left with all the family silver . Which by the way he has already hinted at coming back for the rest in January , not so Mr Nice more Mr Cold and calculating .
In effect he has left us in our loftiest position ever , and don`t you believe he will remind everyone of that fact at every opportunity , but he knows he has left us weaker in personnel morale and time . Time to undo the carnage he has left , and time that will quite possibly cost us far more than just two beloved stalwart members of the Albion family .
Sorry , but for me that is not "Savvy" but low , lower than a snakes belly imo , and he can reflect on his achievements at his leisure when becomes very rich very successful and very disliked and untrusted in future . In time most fans will see through what he has done to us .
1) Potter is not savvy.
2) Did he take Swansea as far as he could? ( 10th place in the Championship in one season )
3) He is not the next great manager.
4) £50m is the chance worth taking.