Risby wrote:
I agree that tactics play a fundamental role in the game and our tactics this season haven't been great at times.
Unlike last season, this year we have looked ordinary at times. We lost the flair and wow factor from our play.
I hope the new philosophy brings that back, but my main worry, as I've stated in another thread is I don't want philosophy and stubbornness to cost us three points each game like it did when we played 3-5-2, then reverted back to a style that has been worked out.
We should play to our strengths and the philosophy should be player oriented, not boardroom oriented. Surely this will prove more successful than saying 'right, from now on we are playing and organising ourselves 4-3-3'.
I understand your view, but amongst other things, FFP should focus football administrators on eliminating waste at every level within a football club.
If the club aspires to rely heavily on a world class youth system in the future, then it would be absolute madness to allow a clubs coaches to just train them any old way, then expect that at 18-19 they will be ready for places in and around the first team squad, without necessarily having had any real schooling in the way that first team operates. It creates a situation where no kid will ever make it to the first team squad without a big risk on the part of the first team coach, and as we saw with Mancini's demise, who could blame him for not wanting to risk his career on youngsters.
Beyond that, the biggest waste at any football club surrounds the replacement of a manager. The old guard leaves with their entourage, and the new man comes in thinking he is gonna be some kind of new alex ferguson, demanding all sorts of changes to the training regimes, coaching facilities, in anticipation that he is gonna preside over a baconesque dynasty - utterly deluded and financial idiocy from both the club administrators, and the manager when both parties know the likely shelf life is a couple of years, 5 at best. Thats before all the money they expect to be able to spend replacing the players they dont fancy.
The waste in british football clubs is utterly scandalous, and it runs far far deeper than transfer fees, and it has to stop for the club to become financially efficient. Im glad the club have come out and recognised now that a coach isnt going to be a 20 year position, and maybe some of our fans should wake up and smell the coffee before banging on about "stability", because there is more than one way to skin that particular cat, rather than just aimlessly hoping that the new man is the long awaited messiah.
I completely back the approach the club are taking, and it doesnt mean that the coach doesnt have the flexibility to switch to a different formation for specific games if the situation demands it, but it does mean that all the best kids in our youth system will be capable of playing in and around the first team squad much sooner than would otherwise be the case, and it means the new coaches dont want to rip everything up and start again - if thats what a manager thinks he is gonna get - he wont be appointed, so the new man cant ever argue he didnt know the score on that front.