R. Slicker
Well-known member
- Jan 1, 2009
- 4,490
I'm thinking maybe Simon Rusk could at the very least be given a chance, as least to the end of the season?
Not yet Simon!
I'm thinking maybe Simon Rusk could at the very least be given a chance, as least to the end of the season?
Potter got us more points in the EPL last year than Hughton ever did.
His line up against the Arse was explained in today's press conference. Have a listen and you'll go 'oh, OK then '.
What have you (and a hell of a lot of others on here) got against our most successful manager ever?
Fair enough defending Potter, but the whataboutery on Hughton is pathetic, absolutely pathetic.
So quick to forget those brilliant seasons getting to the “promised land”.
It’s pretty disgraceful, as was his unceremonious sacking
Someone else moaned that Chris Hughton had only been able to get a job at the bottom end of the Championship, since being chucked out.
Forgetting of course, that he took on our club, when we were at the bottom end of the Championship. And finished up being chucked out after getting automatic promotion, keeping the club up twice, and with a better points per game in the EPL than our current manager.
Hughton had a dreadful run of results, but started at Xmas that year from a position of strength. The squad was light, mostly Championship players with a few cheap imports that made the grade, and some expensive ones that didn’t.
Now, the squad has been built having had two seasons in the EPL, with a few (relatively) cheap imports. It’s worth remembering that Hughton didn’t have the benefit of Webster £20m, Maupay £20m, MacAllister, Lamptey, Trossard £15m, Llallana and Welbeck.
He had an ageing Murray and Bruno, Duffy and Montoya and Ryan.
And yet we are worse off at this moment than we have ever been, with some very tough games to come.
I don’t blame Potter, I felt sorry for him when he was appointed, as he was always destined to be operating in and around the relegation zone with the funding available. As was Hughton
So why can’t we leave off the Hughton slagging?
He achieved dramatically more than Potter has for this club.
This has taken a lot of time and effort, so no taking the piss please
What have you (and a hell of a lot of others on here) got against our most successful manager ever?
Fair enough defending Potter, but the whataboutery on Hughton is pathetic, absolutely pathetic.
So quick to forget those brilliant seasons getting to the “promised land”.
It’s pretty disgraceful, as was his unceremonious sacking
Someone else moaned that Chris Hughton had only been able to get a job at the bottom end of the Championship, since being chucked out.
Forgetting of course, that he took on our club, when we were at the bottom end of the Championship. And finished up being chucked out after getting automatic promotion, keeping the club up twice, and with a better points per game in the EPL than our current manager.
Hughton had a dreadful run of results, but started at Xmas that year from a position of strength. The squad was light, mostly Championship players with a few cheap imports that made the grade, and some expensive ones that didn’t.
Now, the squad has been built having had two seasons in the EPL, with a few (relatively) cheap imports. It’s worth remembering that Hughton didn’t have the benefit of Webster £20m, Maupay £20m, MacAllister, Lamptey, Trossard £15m, Llallana and Welbeck.
He had an ageing Murray and Bruno, Duffy and Montoya and Ryan.
And yet we are worse off at this moment than we have ever been, with some very tough games to come.
I don’t blame Potter, I felt sorry for him when he was appointed, as he was always destined to be operating in and around the relegation zone with the funding available. As was Hughton
So why can’t we leave off the Hughton slagging?
He achieved dramatically more than Potter has for this club.
Ffs. Let him go man. Or go support Forest. Meanwhile, In the real world, Potter out pointed your hero at his first prem attempt. And with similar funding BTW...
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Ffs. Let him go man. Or go support Forest. Meanwhile, In the real world, Potter out pointed your hero at his first prem attempt. And with similar funding BTW...
Do we really need to do this again?
Hughton took over the club at the bottom of the Championship - got promoted and kept the club in the PL for two season - Potter came in, had an already existing base to build on, had the benefit of £70m+ of new players and gained ONE point more than Hughton did in his first PL campaign. While it is an improvement - it is a very slight improvement. Would you be arguing that Potter is a better manager if he gets one point more than Hughton did in 18/19 and Brighton get relegated anyway?
Hughton is gone - his legacy is clear - Potter's legacy still has to be determined and if the club get relegated this season then that is what Potter will be remembered for - not for getting ONE point more than Hughton last season.
Now - I am still skeptical about whether Potter is any good as a PL manager. In my view the jury is still out . I hope is does turn out to be the next PL whizzkid - but let's see how things pan out before suggesting that he is remotely as accomplished a manager as Chris Hughton.
No reasons to do comparisons like that. GP saying he helped the team getting the most points in the PL years so far was simply his way of saying "we´re not as shit as some say" rather than "Im much better than CH".
They had different missions, if Ive read up correctly.
TB says that in the long run he hopes the club could become a top 10 club in the PL. He also said that the club might get relegated somewhere in this long-term ambition.
CH had the job of saving the team in the Championship. He did. He also had the job of giving the club a stability that wont pretty much ever take it below Championship. He did. He even did a little bit better than that, taking the club into the Premier League. While there, he had the job to save the club in the PL, allowing the club to get some fat paychecks to hire people, improve facilities etc. He did.
Potter got a different set of objectives. Give the club a modern style of playing. Give the club use for those new fancy facilities and possibilites by introducing young players. Give the club a new, more viable and elite football level adapted identity on the pitch.
You could say CH had results based objectives securing the opportunity to go do more adventerous stuff. He did it in excellent fashion. Potter got more identity based objectives, so far carrying them out in a decent manner. TB will probably judge them a lot based on these things. CH going down without giving young players etc. a chance would have been the end for him. Potter staying up but doing things in the CH manner would probably have had him sacked at the end of last season. Instead even a relegation could possibly be tolerated as long as GP fulfills the objective to change the on-pitch identity.
In the long run both of these men did and have done a lot to make Brighton get closer to the long-term target. The manager finally reaching that could possibly be an entirely different one, building on what CH established and GP expanded on. Or it might be GP going all the way, who knows. Either which way the shouldnt be compared. CH shouldnt get a lot of shit because his team was "boring" and GP shouldnt get a bunch of shit because the "results/league table placements are not progressing". They did/are doing what they were brought in to do.
No reasons to do comparisons like that. GP saying he helped the team getting the most points in the PL years so far was simply his way of saying "we´re not as shit as some say" rather than "Im much better than CH".
They had different missions, if Ive read up correctly.
TB says that in the long run he hopes the club could become a top 10 club in the PL. He also said that the club might get relegated somewhere in this long-term ambition.
CH had the job of saving the team in the Championship. He did. He also had the job of giving the club a stability that wont pretty much ever take it below Championship. He did. He even did a little bit better than that, taking the club into the Premier League. While there, he had the job to save the club in the PL, allowing the club to get some fat paychecks to hire people, improve facilities etc. He did.
Potter got a different set of objectives. Give the club a modern style of playing. Give the club use for those new fancy facilities and possibilites by introducing young players. Give the club a new, more viable and elite football level adapted identity on the pitch.
You could say CH had results based objectives securing the opportunity to go do more adventerous stuff. He did it in excellent fashion. Potter got more identity based objectives, so far carrying them out in a decent manner. TB will probably judge them a lot based on these things. CH going down without giving young players etc. a chance would have been the end for him. Potter staying up but doing things in the CH manner would probably have had him sacked at the end of last season. Instead even a relegation could possibly be tolerated as long as GP fulfills the objective to change the on-pitch identity.
In the long run both of these men did and have done a lot to make Brighton get closer to the long-term target. The manager finally reaching that could possibly be an entirely different one, building on what CH established and GP expanded on. Or it might be GP going all the way, who knows. Either which way the shouldnt be compared. CH shouldnt get a lot of shit because his team was "boring" and GP shouldnt get a bunch of shit because the "results/league table placements are not progressing". They did/are doing what they were brought in to do.
No reasons to do comparisons like that. GP saying he helped the team getting the most points in the PL years so far was simply his way of saying "we´re not as shit as some say" rather than "Im much better than CH".
They had different missions, if Ive read up correctly.
TB says that in the long run he hopes the club could become a top 10 club in the PL. He also said that the club might get relegated somewhere in this long-term ambition.
CH had the job of saving the team in the Championship. He did. He also had the job of giving the club a stability that wont pretty much ever take it below Championship. He did. He even did a little bit better than that, taking the club into the Premier League. While there, he had the job to save the club in the PL, allowing the club to get some fat paychecks to hire people, improve facilities etc. He did.
Potter got a different set of objectives. Give the club a modern style of playing. Give the club use for those new fancy facilities and possibilites by introducing young players. Give the club a new, more viable and elite football level adapted identity on the pitch.
You could say CH had results based objectives securing the opportunity to go do more adventerous stuff. He did it in excellent fashion. Potter got more identity based objectives, so far carrying them out in a decent manner. TB will probably judge them a lot based on these things. CH going down without giving young players etc. a chance would have been the end for him. Potter staying up but doing things in the CH manner would probably have had him sacked at the end of last season. Instead even a relegation could possibly be tolerated as long as GP fulfills the objective to change the on-pitch identity.
In the long run both of these men did and have done a lot to make Brighton get closer to the long-term target. The manager finally reaching that could possibly be an entirely different one, building on what CH established and GP expanded on. Or it might be GP going all the way, who knows. Either which way the shouldnt be compared. CH shouldnt get a lot of shit because his team was "boring" and GP shouldnt get a bunch of shit because the "results/league table placements are not progressing". They did/are doing what they were brought in to do.
Do we really need to do this again?
No reasons to do comparisons like that. GP saying he helped the team getting the most points in the PL years so far was simply his way of saying "we´re not as shit as some say" rather than "Im much better than CH".
They had different missions, if Ive read up correctly.
TB says that in the long run he hopes the club could become a top 10 club in the PL. He also said that the club might get relegated somewhere in this long-term ambition.
CH had the job of saving the team in the Championship. He did. He also had the job of giving the club a stability that wont pretty much ever take it below Championship. He did. He even did a little bit better than that, taking the club into the Premier League. While there, he had the job to save the club in the PL, allowing the club to get some fat paychecks to hire people, improve facilities etc. He did.
Potter got a different set of objectives. Give the club a modern style of playing. Give the club use for those new fancy facilities and possibilites by introducing young players. Give the club a new, more viable and elite football level adapted identity on the pitch.
You could say CH had results based objectives securing the opportunity to go do more adventerous stuff. He did it in excellent fashion. Potter got more identity based objectives, so far carrying them out in a decent manner. TB will probably judge them a lot based on these things. CH going down without giving young players etc. a chance would have been the end for him. Potter staying up but doing things in the CH manner would probably have had him sacked at the end of last season. Instead even a relegation could possibly be tolerated as long as GP fulfills the objective to change the on-pitch identity.
In the long run both of these men did and have done a lot to make Brighton get closer to the long-term target. The manager finally reaching that could possibly be an entirely different one, building on what CH established and GP expanded on. Or it might be GP going all the way, who knows. Either which way the shouldnt be compared. CH shouldnt get a lot of shit because his team was "boring" and GP shouldnt get a bunch of shit because the "results/league table placements are not progressing". They did/are doing what they were brought in to do.
Do we really need to do this again?
Hughton took over the club at the bottom of the Championship - got promoted and kept the club in the PL for two season - Potter came in, had an already existing base to build on, had the benefit of £70m+ of new players and gained ONE point more than Hughton did in his first PL campaign. While it is an improvement - it is a very slight improvement. Would you be arguing that Potter is a better manager if he gets one point more than Hughton did in 18/19 and Brighton get relegated anyway?
Hughton is gone - his legacy is clear - Potter's legacy still has to be determined and if the club get relegated this season then that is what Potter will be remembered for - not for getting ONE point more than Hughton last season.
Now - I am still skeptical about whether Potter is any good as a PL manager. In my view the jury is still out . I hope is does turn out to be the next PL whizzkid - but let's see how things pan out before suggesting that he is remotely as accomplished a manager as Chris Hughton.
Hughtom is gone - his legacy is clear - Potter's legacy still has to be determined and if the club get relegated this season then that is what Potter will be remembered for - not for getting ONE point more than Hughton last season.
And now we get the insults - I am not the one who keeps bringing up the topic.no, we don't; plainly, you do. how many years have you been banging this same flippin' drum? please stop, you dullard.
Yep - Forest are in the relegation places in a very competitive division - Hughton has a really tough job on his hands - a bloated squad with 35 players and no striker. Like Brighton, they are struggling to score goals - despite playing attacking football. I think he will turn things around - but the Forest owners are quite fickle so we will have to wait and see if he is given the opportunity.just checked, notts f. in the drop zone, have the forest fans fukced you off?
maybe hughton is not the messiah.....?
Let it go. The overwhelming majority of us are Brighton fans, not manager fans. Players and managers come and go.
The King is dead, long live the King.
This is the problem. The budget WAS similar. The points total WAS bigger, and was achieved whilst transforming us from a team playing the most boring football I have ever seen to somewhere near the best I have seen us play. In addition, Potter actually gave youth a chance, which your beloved failed to do. Other than that, I agree with you.
And now we get the insults - I am not the one who keeps bringing up the topic.
Yep - Forest are in the relegation places in a very competitive division - Hughton has a really tough job on his hands - a bloated squad with 35 players and no striker. Like Brighton, they are struggling to score goals - despite playing attacking football. I think he will turn things around - but the Forest owners are quite fickle so we will have to wait and see if he is given the opportunity.
Anyway -
Brighton's current form - LDDDL
Forest - LWDDD
Since Hughton took over at Forest - 4W, 7D, 7L - 14G - 19 GA
In the same time - Brighton - 1W, 7D, 4L - 10GF - 15GA