Billy the Fish
Technocrat
I'm convinced that some people get an endorphin rush when they are moaning. It needs a study.
I think this is as close to the truth as we're going to get.
I've seen quite a few posts recently from some of those who were making a fuss in pre-season trying to say they were right all along. The crux of their argument seems to be "Tony Bloom and Paul Barber have got it wrong, therefore we are going to abuse them". They now feel vindicated because we're having a crap season and see it as licence to gripe, whinge moan and abuse on here.
I really don't understand that attitude, and whether it's caused by not being able to see the bigger picture or a simple lack of intelligence I'm not sure. Anyone with half a brain should be able to work out that Tony Bloom won't get everything right all of the time, that is just the nature of football. There's no blueprint for success and no secret formula that will work forever - the owners and managers have to steer the ship on instinct as best they can.
It's possible to think of it in numbers. There's 72 clubs in the football league trying to do the same thing, 3 of them will win the league and another 5 will win automatic promotion. 12 will go into the playoffs so that's 20 clubs who's fans will most likely think they had either a good or acceptable season. The other 52 ended up nowhere or relegated which means nowhere or relegated is the most likely outcome of a season every single season you support a football club and that will never change. It is also reflected in history. ***
As a football fan why would I get angry on a message board and start abusing the management when we end up at the most likely outcome? Which brings us back to post I've quoted - some people just want to moan at someone and if it wasn't football it would probably be their wife, colleagues, family and god knows what else. In fact it probably is!
Football is a game of fine margins and it probably won't take much to turn this season around, whether that's sacking the manager or giving Sami time to change things I'm not sure - and neither are Tony Bloom and Paul Barber, they will just have to take an educated guess and hope they get it right.
I see my role as a fan is to enjoy the ride, back the team and if they do happen to get it wrong accept that they didn't do it on purpose and tried their best.
*** Before people begin pedantically picking this apart I realise I haven't included every variable and I'm kind of ignoring the relationship between expectation of fans and playing budget at the club which adds a heavy weighting as to whether a season was perceived as good, I simply want to make a point rather than do a GCSE maths project.