It might be worth mentioning that very few teams are better than last year. The small gap between the two seasons and the relatively quiet transfer markets have meant that two out of three of the promoted sides will probably be going down and at least two of the three relegated sides will be coming back up. Aston Villa started very well, but recently the old defensive issues have returned and they're still poor if Grealish is absent. West Ham are the exception. They solved their defensive organisation problem with Dawson's loan. They already had some very good players and have probably been the team to have most benefited from the absence of fans, given how poisonous things had got at their home matches.
We haven't made progress in scoring goals. We're averaging the same goal a game that we did last year. We've made progress in controlling games and in defensive solidity against the better sides. We all know where our problems lie and, if we are going to make a step forward next year, we'll have to turn long periods of domination into goals, stop the occasional defensive sloppiness / overreaching in pursuit of goals that has given opposition forwards chances in open spaces, and find a way of unlocking the low block sides. A whole season of a fully fit Lamptey could help the latter. Perhaps we fans can also help make the difference ourselves when they let us back into the Amex. I suspect that some of the away teams' backs to the wall defensive performances that have been our undoing at home this year could have been a lot more wobbly had we been able to scare them into a few errors.
The playing style is different, but in tone, Potter seems much like Hughton. He's intelligent, decent, modest and quiet. He's not going to reveal a lot to the media. Some of us will get irritated because we may perceive the forward-defensive approach to interviews as a lack of passion rather than the 'don't get too high, don't get too low' style that the players have praised both managers for. Its probably fair to say that, as fans, its our privilege to rage and throw our toys when things go wrong, but that doing so as a manager probably doesn't do the playing group many favours.
The publishing of the accounts have perhaps suggested good reason why this was not going to be the season to make the big push. We may have to accept that circumstances dictate that it might not be next year either. In the past Tony's investment pushes seem to have come in cycles. The signing of younger prospects suggests that forward planning of the squad is now his preferred way forward. Personally, I would never want our chairman to gamble everything on big signings on big wages. I'm still far too haunted by the memory of considering whether the club would be here for my kids to support. In taking this view, I have to accept the disadvantage too. We are always going to be trying to punch above our weight and that this means that we will occasionally get flattened. To overstretch the metaphor, we've still looked like a cruiser weight fighting the super-heavies. We haven't developed a knockout punch, but we've looked a bit quicker on our feet and more capable of getting a points victory from any opponent. A bit more knowledge of the dark arts in the clinch wouldn't go amiss next year, but it looks like progress rather than regression.
All of that. Top work.