The Wookiee
Back From The Dead
Its a done deal
Well, Potter also knows the club inside out and that experience may be useful to settle in quicker with the players.Potter didn't have PL experience until we appointed him.
RDZ didn't have PL experience until we appointed him.
Pep didn't have PL experience until Citeh appointed him.
Klipperty didn't have PL experience until Liverpool appointed him.
Ange P didn't have PL experience until spuds appointed him.
Etc etc etc....
"Got to have PL experience" is like saying that you can only go to Bognor on holiday because it's in Sussex and we can't go on holiday anywhere outside of Sussex.
Ok, so I should’ve said elite league experience, whatever. Only England, Spain, Italy and Germany qualify. MLS doesn’tI do feel that the PL experience is a bit overblown and provincial. It's not like we are playing a completely different sport than they play in Germany, France, Italy, Sweden, or even the Championship. All things being equal, sure, you'd take the guy with some/more PL experience over an equally qualified alternative, but I can't imagine it really makes that much difference in this day and age.
I find your last sentence interesting and how longevity would play a part amongst the fan base. Once you have a taste of success in our case Europa league football the obvious reaction is to want more and build on that success.I didn’t know the full extent of McKenna’s experience until I read this:-
Why Kieran McKenna is England's most-coveted coach
Endorsed by Sir Alex Ferguson and nurtured by Jose Mourinho, the 38-year-old is wanted by Chelsea, Manchester United and Brightonwww.standard.co.uk
16 years of coaching experience puts him beyond almost every top tier manager/head coach In terms of longevity. If we can get him, it could prove to be a big success story, but like every other ambitious coach, BHA is not top of their long-term management list. We have to accept that it’s inevitable that any manager/head coach who joins the club will only want to stick around for 2 or 3 seasons if a bigger club comes knocking.
We are a mid-sized club, who will need to match Ipswich’s £5m annual salary offer. Manager wages have finally caught up with players, rightly so. That means that most managers will not be put off by the wages we offer, Potter included. De Zerbi knew we couldn’t match his ambitions in other aspects, which is fair enough I think. So Potter could come back, but will want a bigger club again if the opportunity arises. McKenna, like every other ambitious manager/head coach would not stay for long either (he wants to manage Man United, now or in the future, that is clear).
We are a stepping stone club, as Paul Barber has advertised, but that is not necessarily a bad thing if we can continue to get some of the best young players and managers in world football, just enjoy the ride while they are with us.
Does a top 5 league in the world qualify?Ok, so I should’ve said elite league experience, whatever. Only England, Spain, Italy and Germany qualify. MLS doesn’t
Not talking about his relationship with Barber/Bloom - but with the fans.It clearly didn't happen like that. Barber has told us Potter left on good terms. So why don't you trust Barber?
I too was shocked and disapointed to see Bruno and Ben Roberts leaving along with Potter, but when De Zerbi showed up with his mega team it all made sense. I all was a ruthless and nescessary part of our succession planning. We will have to learn to live with it.
In the end it doesn't matter. There is no way we can afford to mach Potters current salary from Chelsea, and he isn't going to give it up to rejoin us.
I’d prefer Thomas Frank, but would settle for Cooper, given how he was able to avoid relegation with virtually a whole new and completely unfamiliar squad in Forest’s promotion season. Cooper and Frank are 2 managers who might stick around for more than 2 or 3 seasons too.I don't want Steve Cooper but I have a very strong feeling it will be him.
Europa League was well beyond the clubs expectations, even conference league was a hope, rather than expectation. That is where the club is at if it wants to remain on a sound financial footing. Us fans should be very happy with conference league every few seasons TBH, but as you say, that taste of Europa League demands more than might be achievable. We get into Europe, we lose our manager and the cycle repeats, that’s the frustrating element if you don’t maintain focus on the achievement of being in Europe each time.I find your last sentence interesting and how longevity would play a part amongst the fan base. Once you have a taste of success in our case Europa league football the obvious reaction is to want more and build on that success.
If it’s then dumbed down by the club to well if we just make the top ten that would be a decent season supporters would start to question ambition.
Europa league whilst fun for the supporters was probably a headache the hierarchy could have done without.
A friend of mine works in the warehouse at the Amex and packs up merchandise that is shipped all over the world all day every day. I found it quite surprising although that is the reach of the PL.Europa League was well beyond the clubs expectations, even conference league was a hope, rather than expectation. That is where the club is at if it wants to remain on a sound financial footing. Us fans should be very happy with conference league every few seasons TBH, but as you say, that taste of Europa League demands more than might be achievable. We get into Europe, we lose our manager and the cycle repeats, that’s the frustrating element if you don’t maintain focus on the achievement of being in Europe each time.
We need to keep Mitoma if we want to grow commercially, which is why the Japan summer tour is really important. At the moment, we are still a local club, without anywhere near the reach and international revenue of the establishment. Japan is a massive opportunity and the club will need to recruit regularly from there, maybe a player from one of the opponents this time and so on.
add in the seven staffMckenna has been offered £5+ million for a newly promoted club, and yet we were only paying RDZ Sub £2m.
Maybe our wages contracts need a reality check.
Gonna need a bigger warehouseA friend of mine works in the warehouse at the Amex and packs up merchandise that is shipped all over the world all day every day. I found it quite surprising although that is the reach of the PL.
Lallana’s wages cover it, £100k a weekMckenna has been offered £5+ million for a newly promoted club, and yet we were only paying RDZ Sub £2m.
Maybe our wages contracts need a reality check.
Would they have left a few million on the table as compensation??Imagine your partner moving in with you, messing around with your house and all the stuff in it. Then just as everything is beginning to workout and it's all looking great for the future, and you make investments like new carpets and so on - they see someone else with more money and leave you, taking with them most of what you have built up and spent your money on - leaving you still with a house but no windows or doors and with the potential to be completely ruined.
Would you be angry?
And how would you feel if a few years later they just strolled back in again.