Why not just wait and try to get Luton promoted and have that on your CV, Instead of going to Stoke and earning more money for 4 months before they sack you because you haven't magically got them back up challenging for promotion.
Didnt see that one coming.
Says a lot for Moyes when even the like of Stoke would rather take a punt on a lower league manager!
I think it’s hard to truly judge his Everton stint, especially as a failure as it was short and he improved on his predecessor and doesn’t look like he will have done worse than his successor with more investment and a full season. I’m not sure how Everton can bust the top 6 let alone top 4 but it would need a Poch type and at least three seasons. The fans didn’t want him there and if style of football is everything then that’s fair enough. If he’d had a full season and they were sitting fourth I’m sure all would be forgetten but I’d say realistically I can’t see anyone doing much better than I think he could have done. On paper Allardyce is a chairman’s wet dream as he almost guarantees a performance level, unfortunately fans of some of the clubs felt the opposite before he arrived. Football entertainment wise he’s mourinho with a budget.Would you say Everton did as well as they could under him? Or that it was a very compromised stint, and that there was more in the tank? Id suggest the latter, hence my point they hit the managers peak and not the clubs.
Its similar with other examples. Redknapp with us is one where I felt the same.
Thats not to try and slag BFS off, I actually think he is alright. I just think there is a limitation to what he can do.
Moyes I think is infinitely worse, and to be honest I did BFS a bit of a disservice lumping them together.
Stoke have the resources to be a prem team, fantastic as he’d done at Luton it’s hard to think of how much further he could have taken them. It’s a much bigger gap then say Rowett jumping ship from Frank Lampard’s Derby County.Why not just wait and try to get Luton promoted and have that on your CV, Instead of going to Stoke and earning more money for 4 months before they sack you because you haven't magically got them back up challenging for promotion.
I think it’s hard to truly judge his Everton stint, especially as a failure as it was short and he improved on his predecessor and doesn’t look like he will have done worse than his successor with more investment and a full season. I’m not sure how Everton can bust the top 6 let alone top 4 but it would need a Poch type and at least three seasons. The fans didn’t want him there and if style of football is everything then that’s fair enough. If he’d had a full season and they were sitting fourth I’m sure all would be forgetten but I’d say realistically I can’t see anyone doing much better than I think he could have done. On paper Allardyce is a chairman’s wet dream as he almost guarantees a performance level, unfortunately fans of some of the clubs felt the opposite before he arrived. Football entertainment wise he’s mourinho with a budget.
Redknapp I feel similarly defensive about, he took us up a level getting CL and the football was attacking, in his only opportunity at a big club. Is he really that different to Klopp, as in he’d have bought van Dijk to shore up the back line rather than make Lovren a better player and just encourage players to get the ball forward quickly? Also think he should have got the England job, he would have got the players relaxed and playing a simple game to their strengths like Venables. There’s no doubt Hodgson is a great coach but his methods don’t transcend to the big time Charlie’s, whereas Redknapp knows how to play to their egos and get the best out of them. VdV given a free role, the signing of Gallas and Benny’s consistency at lb.
In defending their achievements and lack of opportunities towards the end of their careers, it is notable that Sam threw away his biggest opportunity almost instantly out of sheer greed (nothing like that reputable Swedish chap eh?!) and redknapp’s tax avoidance and bringing a super agent in to negotiate a new deal did him no favours when his stock was at its highest.
As you can tell it’s a topic that intrigues me - a chicken and egg situation. Could Allardyce win the league with Emirates Marketing Project and could Pep have kept the likes of Sunderland up? Even Moyes who looked to have proved the theory about it being the managers peak didn’t do much worse than a than his big name successor, who spent more and had more time. Moyes two big signings are still very much part of the team too!
Of the current crop of British (ed. and Irish) managers I wonder where Hughton or Howe can go next, the difference between finishing tenth and seventh seems minimal to me in terms of career advancement.
Because Luton is one of the few places more grim than Stoke?Why not just wait and try to get Luton promoted and have that on your CV, Instead of going to Stoke and earning more money for 4 months before they sack you because you haven't magically got them back up challenging for promotion.
I think it’s hard to truly judge his Everton stint, especially as a failure as it was short and he improved on his predecessor and doesn’t look like he will have done worse than his successor with more investment and a full season. I’m not sure how Everton can bust the top 6 let alone top 4 but it would need a Poch type and at least three seasons. The fans didn’t want him there and if style of football is everything then that’s fair enough. If he’d had a full season and they were sitting fourth I’m sure all would be forgetten but I’d say realistically I can’t see anyone doing much better than I think he could have done. On paper Allardyce is a chairman’s wet dream as he almost guarantees a performance level, unfortunately fans of some of the clubs felt the opposite before he arrived. Football entertainment wise he’s mourinho with a budget.
Redknapp I feel similarly defensive about, he took us up a level getting CL and the football was attacking, in his only opportunity at a big club. Is he really that different to Klopp, as in he’d have bought van Dijk to shore up the back line rather than make Lovren a better player and just encourage players to get the ball forward quickly? Also think he should have got the England job, he would have got the players relaxed and playing a simple game to their strengths like Venables. There’s no doubt Hodgson is a great coach but his methods don’t transcend to the big time Charlie’s, whereas Redknapp knows how to play to their egos and get the best out of them. VdV given a free role, the signing of Gallas and Benny’s consistency at lb.
In defending their achievements and lack of opportunities towards the end of their careers, it is notable that Sam threw away his biggest opportunity almost instantly out of sheer greed (nothing like that reputable Swedish chap eh?!) and redknapp’s tax avoidance and bringing a super agent in to negotiate a new deal did him no favours when his stock was at its highest.
As you can tell it’s a topic that intrigues me - a chicken and egg situation. Could Allardyce win the league with Emirates Marketing Project and could Pep have kept the likes of Sunderland up? Even Moyes who looked to have proved the theory about it being the managers peak didn’t do much worse than a than his big name successor, who spent more and had more time. Moyes two big signings are still very much part of the team too!
Of the current crop of British (ed. and Irish) managers I wonder where Hughton or Howe can go next, the difference between finishing tenth and seventh seems minimal to me in terms of career advancement.
I think it’s hard to truly judge his Everton stint, especially as a failure as it was short and he improved on his predecessor and doesn’t look like he will have done worse than his successor with more investment and a full season. I’m not sure how Everton can bust the top 6 let alone top 4 but it would need a Poch type and at least three seasons. The fans didn’t want him there and if style of football is everything then that’s fair enough. If he’d had a full season and they were sitting fourth I’m sure all would be forgetten but I’d say realistically I can’t see anyone doing much better than I think he could have done. On paper Allardyce is a chairman’s wet dream as he almost guarantees a performance level, unfortunately fans of some of the clubs felt the opposite before he arrived. Football entertainment wise he’s mourinho with a budget.
Redknapp I feel similarly defensive about, he took us up a level getting CL and the football was attacking, in his only opportunity at a big club. Is he really that different to Klopp, as in he’d have bought van Dijk to shore up the back line rather than make Lovren a better player and just encourage players to get the ball forward quickly? Also think he should have got the England job, he would have got the players relaxed and playing a simple game to their strengths like Venables. There’s no doubt Hodgson is a great coach but his methods don’t transcend to the big time Charlie’s, whereas Redknapp knows how to play to their egos and get the best out of them. VdV given a free role, the signing of Gallas and Benny’s consistency at lb.
In defending their achievements and lack of opportunities towards the end of their careers, it is notable that Sam threw away his biggest opportunity almost instantly out of sheer greed (nothing like that reputable Swedish chap eh?!) and redknapp’s tax avoidance and bringing a super agent in to negotiate a new deal did him no favours when his stock was at its highest.
As you can tell it’s a topic that intrigues me - a chicken and egg situation. Could Allardyce win the league with Emirates Marketing Project and could Pep have kept the likes of Sunderland up? Even Moyes who looked to have proved the theory about it being the managers peak didn’t do much worse than a than his big name successor, who spent more and had more time. Moyes two big signings are still very much part of the team too!
Of the current crop of British (ed. and Irish) managers I wonder where Hughton or Howe can go next, the difference between finishing tenth and seventh seems minimal to me in terms of career advancement.
It’s not to say Allardyce doesn’t have a ceiling, I just think because he’s seen as Mike Bassett he’s never really had the time to prove / disprove it. Which is why he’s chippy about it too. If he could have kept himself clean the England job might have been a platform for him to get a bigger job after, it like I say little sympathy for blowing it. Managers are more and more the corporate face of the club too, same as top positions in other large orgs and sometimes you need to carry yourself in a way to be thought of in those circles (occasionally masking the inability to actually do the job!)Allardyce at Everton Ill give you, probably unfair to call him on that one. It was originally a pretty flippant comment that seems to be set to bite me on the ass though.
Redknapp I contest. I think he failed the club and was ultimately not good enough.
I agree he could have done well with England. I do think though he should have done so much more with us.
His limitations were showing, badly, and that early momentum was failing. We needed more structure, proper tactics, a real identity - and had surpassed his "just put good players in and let them play" methodology.
We got as far as we did under him, IMO, because the players were that good, not because he was.
Essentially he managed us in the same way he did West Ham, Pompey, QPR... and how did that go?
Yes we definitely had the two extremes with Redknapp and AvB. Whilst I wasn’t a fan of AVB before he came I think he would have benefitted from being a number 2 with a reasonably free reign on the coaching side and then as he gained experience he might have developed some more flexibility / man management skills. By the same token Redknapp would have benefitted from younger modern coaches to run that side of the job for him as opposed to his trusted cronies. I think AF took a similar approach at United. Thinking about it BMJ was a man manager who came up tactically short and Ramos was a strict disciplinarian! Someone told me once that in his first team meeting Redknapp put a bottle of ketchup on the table and said something along the lines of ‘here you go lads!’I think Redknapp wasnt structured enough. He simply let the players play their game, when it worked it worked wonders, when it didnt work we were disjointed, all at sea, and had no foundation to fall back on. We were crying out for a shape, for some tactics drilled into us, a platform and structure to play from.
AVB represented that. And I think at the beginning, did well. I think people forget the results were solid and he really got the best out of Bale over time. Though, the longer he was here the more and more rigid in his system he became. Especially as results turned a bit, he seemed to double down on it. Essentially, the anti-Redknapp. If one was far to relaxed about these things, the other was far too overbearing.
Ignoring the farce that was Sherwood (still, IMO, a case of giving him the rope to hang himself), that leads to Pochettino.
Who, if I were to "in a nutshell" his style, Id say is the perfect mid-point between Redknapp and AVB.
He has the clear and defined structure. Our shape is well drilled, and on those days that its not going our way that very foundation regularly see's us to results. Exactly what I wanted from Redknapp.
But, at the same time, he expects the players to play with freedom, to take risks, and to express themselves. Something Redknapp really was good at and ultimately was the failing that lost AVB his job.
Great appointment, Nathan Jones.
I think he’s done brilliantly at Burton but it might be a case of the perfect fit with less pressure.Doubt it. He wasnt mind blowing at Derby and is only really doing "ok" with Burton right now (admitedly having previously over achieved).
I wonder if they will look more at Moyes. He is a "Name", and is available. Though given the fans dont like Karankas style I think it would be a mistake to follow up with him.