Which is why I phrased it as a question, although Marseille's subsequent tweet calling Levy 'difficult' sort of adds weight to the Guardian's interpretation, I'd imagine.
That is true, sometimes other parties just aren't willing to negotiate. Like Steve Parish re; Zaha, and Jeremy Peace re; Berahino. But Marseille had the deal agreed in May, and proved perfectly willing to sell Batshuayi and Mendy (as well as Lemina before last season ended), so I guess my point is structured around the low likelihood of them being reluctant to deal with us but perfectly happy to deal with everyone else, *just* on account of them not liking Levy's cologne or dress sense or something.
Also, my suggestion is that N'Koudou, if he'd arrived earlier, could have trained enough to hit the ground running earlier than will now be the case, given that he spent the best part of a month presumably eating overpriced chocolate bars from the minifridge in whatever hotel room he was bunkered up in. The lost opportunities will come in that time period between when he *would* have been fit enough to start and when he now *will* be fit and ready to start, when a late N'Koudou goal, tap-in or tackle could either create, score or prevent a goal.
Or he could have scored nine rabona goals by now and we'd be top of the league with nine points and a +10 goal difference - monstrously unlikely, but whatever. The point is hopefully clearer - when I say 1.6m could be a false saving, I've factored in the likelihood that he won't now start for a while anyway.
Levy has done deals early. He's stretched deals longer than he has too as well. The thing about Janssen is that we spent a couple of weeks between apparently settling things with AZ and actually signing the guy, because apparently we weren't willing to pay what AZ were demanding - I sounded off about that as well, especially given that we passed up on Batshuayi to sign the guy. And Wanyama in particular confirmed that we were after him last summer as well, but Soton refused to sell.
I've never held a black and white position on Levy that clearly states that he's irretrievably cheap or lost to any sense in terms of pursuing pennies over backing his manager. I have, however, held the position that Levy unnecessarily stretches deals out more than he moves quickly to settle deals his manager evidently wants settled, and I've held that such a practice is sometimes quite detrimental to us. You mention Abramovich's last-minute deals for Luiz and that full-back (Alonso?) as evident counterweights to the idea that Levy's unique in this - my answer to that would be that Abramovich has outbid Levy and swooped in to seal deals to our detriment before, in short spans of time (Batshuayi and Willian, for example), and that his transfer dealings over the years haven't really shown any indication of a desire to scrimp and save over backing his managers (even if he does sack them later).
Levy is generally the opposite - there are certainly times where he backs his manager, but there are more instances where he's tried to save and left the manager short (or ultimately in the position of having to make do with an inferior signing or none at all). One constant in my position has been that this sequence of events is counterproductive, and that we should be doing the opposite.
I absolutely don't mind recognising it, because I'm quite happy about it - and I applaud the move
. For me, instances like these (like I mentioned in either this thread or another one, can't quite remember) will help tip the scale back to the point where I defend Levy from accusations of not backing his man. For now, in this window, Sissoko proved that last summer's relatively quick deals for quality players (beating off competition for them, like with Toby) and (save for perhaps Berahino) lack of long-drawn out sagas wasn't a complete fluke, and that at least some prioritization of actual backing for the manager is definitely present in how Levy approaches the market now. With N'Koudou and others, I felt he delayed too long and fell back towards his flawed previous approach. With Sissoko, he swallowed his distaste and went in, all guns blazing, on a frankly unconvincing player but one that Poch evidently wanted, and that redeems him in my eyes to a considerable extent - and it will remain that way however Sissoko ends up performing, because it's the intent that matters in this instance, not the player.
More of the latter, less of the former, Daniel. Like I mentioned elsewhere, balancing's no doubt necessary, and it can be done later (as we'll likely end up doing if the options on Bentaleb and N'Jie are exercised). But it shouldn't be our priority if we're serious about giving Poch the tools he asks for, so that we can properly judge his time at the club without needing to put an asterisk next to his name that reads 'wasn't given the players he wanted', as happened with AVB.
Also, thanks for crediting me with speaking my mind, mate - I don't usually need encouragement to determinedly holler at random posters here, but it's appreciated nonetheless.