Naughton16
Clive Wilson
He'll need patience from chairman, players, fans....sadly not something found in abundance at WHL. Implementing a new system rarely yields instant results.
Villas-Boas has already asked for assistants Jose Mario Rocha and Daniel Sousato, who worked under him at Chelsea last season, to join him at the club.
If AVB is appointed I don't think it will be long before the media stick the knife in and and keep on sticking it in. There won't be much if any honeymoon period. He is the perfect target. His failure at Chelsea will be repeated over and over. There will be crticism from anonymous sources. He will continually be compared to Harry. THe only way AVB is going to come out of this OK is by improving on Harry's record. Which won't be easy.
He is brave man (or just doesn't realise what he is letting himself in for) if he takes the job. Look what happened to the last European star manager we hired. Ramos' career has never been the same since - he's currently plying his trade at Dnipro Dnipropetrovs.
Both have been with AVB at the three clubs he's been in charge at.
Jose Mario Rocha is a more experienced coach that has spent many years in Porto's youth set up. Fitness coach.
Daniel Sousa is even younger than AVB, in his late 20s. Main task is as opposition scout, although he's qualified to coach as well.
we should have finished 3rd this season - 3 of the teams which are 'above' us had poor season by their standards - which in turn means that our targets naturally are changed as a result. that 6th now becomes 3rd
if the same situation arises in the next season (well the season after as this coming season the manager coming in should be afforded time to acclimatize) where 3 teams who are higher than us in the pecking order have bad seasons then i will be wanting us to over take them - should the teams above us play to their level/standard then yes, 6th is an acceptable finish
judging your performance based solely on a league position, not taking in to account the opposition and what standard they are performing to will not give you an accurate indication of how well you did
finishing 6th with everyone above us playing well - decent season
finishing 6th when those above us under perform - bad season
that's my take on it anyway
Levy is a good and clever chairman and what he wants is Spurs on an upward journey. Jol established us as a solid top 5 club. But there wasn't enough evidence that he could break into the top 4 of the division. Redknapp took us a bit further, and now we look more established at that level. But again, is there any evidence we could go beyond this? No; we had it on a plate this season and blew it. Plus Redknapp just wasn't interested in any of the cups.
In short, Redknapp's ambition was questionable..... did he really believe we could sustain a serious title challenge this season back in January? Because I think a different boss might have done, and that could have made a difference. Scraping into the top 4 and a decent cup run if you get a decent draw, that's Harry's limit. And let's be honest, after the mediocrity of the last 18 years, we would have that any day.
I think if AVB finished 6th in his first year, Levy might accept it if there were clear signs the club were still going places. You have to put our final position in it's context..... This year we had City and United in a class of their own, little between us and Arsenal, Saudi Sportswashing Machine getting lucky with injuries, a poor Chelsea season and a terrible Liverpool one. Next year, Manchester will be just as strong, Arsenal don't look a huge amount better or worse, Chelsea potentially much stronger. Saudi Sportswashing Machine and Liverpool need a lot of work to push for top 4, but it's quite possible that both could be in the race again. So if that were to happen 6th with all those teams performing well would be a success.
If we were good enough to compete for the title last season (i don't believe that we had a squad equipped to do it but...) then we should be competing for it again this season and sixth would be unacceptable.
AVB would bring exactly what Redknapp lacked to the club - a plan B. Without a plan B you are going to ultimately fail and that is what happened under HR. The importance of being able to change your style to counter your opposition and change during games are both vital. However, AVB may not be the players' best friend - but a manager is not supposed to be one IMO. Redknapp only took us so far - I believe AVB will take us that little bit further...
I didn't see much evidence of a plan b at Chelsea.
I am worried that people are already building up AVB into something that he cannot possibly match. He will get team selections wrong, he will make the wrong substitutions at the wrong time, he will make baffling tactical choices, he will sign players that we don't rate or think that we don't need. All managers do.
I didn't see much evidence of a plan b at Chelsea.
I am worried that people are already building up AVB into something that he cannot possibly match. He will get team selections wrong, he will make the wrong substitutions at the wrong time, he will make baffling tactical choices, he will sign players that we don't rate or think that we don't need. All managers do.
I didn't see much evidence of a plan b at Chelsea.
I am worried that people are already building up AVB into something that he cannot possibly match. He will get team selections wrong, he will make the wrong substitutions at the wrong time, he will make baffling tactical choices, he will sign players that we don't rate or think that we don't need. All managers do.
Anyone who saw AVB's final league game for Chelsea against WBA will agree with you. Rarely have I ever seen a team so clueless, so lacking in togetherness and so utterly lacking a Plan B. Or a Plan A for that matter. It was a shambles and AVB looked like a lost child on the sideline. Was sacked a day or two later iirc.