carl_feedthegoat wrote:Btajim.
Hi Garry,I just wanted to shake your hand and ask you a question.I go to COMS as mucha as possible but sometimes I cannot leave the house as Sophie.....sorry..Sophie is my Cat...... needs a carer when Im away and sometimes I cannot find one.
My question is ; Is it possible to bring Sophie to matches at COMS in her kitten box and can she come in for free?
mcfc1632 wrote:john68 wrote:so Hughes wasn't the man for you..sack him....and if mancini doesn't cut the mustard...sack him too...what about the next manager and the next...etc? Do we keep hiring and firing them?
In over 50 years of supporting City, I have watched 27 managers come and go....I'm still waiting for the one we dicide to give the time to develop his particular project....or do we keep upour short term policy for another 50 years if one doesn't succeed in the 1st few seasons.
It doesn't matter what the quality of the ingredients you use to bake the cake...They have to be put together and blended correctly...That takes time.
Regarding Mancini, He was brought in to have an immediate positive impact because our ownwers felt that Hughes may not make the top 4. He was brought in to specifically ensure that target was reached. He doesn't have time.
This is a stability thread
What really irritates me is that long term supporters like you and me (40+ years for me) that have seen many ill-thought through sackings - followed by ill-thought through appointments and then same again and again - commented on the need for stability for a change - lets give the manager until the end of the season - and we were subjected to vitriol from the small group of anti-Hughes brigade - dubbed Hughes-lickers etc etc
We wanted stability - that group had to break things into extreme groups - well you reap what you sow - be good if the usual suspects had the pair to come on and admit they were perhaps wrong - but it is not in their character
BobK - fair play to you - you stand your ground - fight your corner etc - but I think what you are missing is remembering the level to which this group of 'usual suspects' just shouted down the rest - so don't be surprised that people are wondering where they are hiding now
Waz wrote:Granted, we had had eight draws on the bounce. I'm sure though as frustrating as the home ones were (and they were the costly ones) most of us would have taken a draw away at Liverpool, Villa and (given their season form) Birmingham.
Alex Sapphire wrote:Waz wrote:Granted, we had had eight draws on the bounce. I'm sure though as frustrating as the home ones were (and they were the costly ones) most of us would have taken a draw away at Liverpool, Villa and (given their season form) Birmingham.
I think the really damaging draws were Hull Burnley and Wigan because it felt like these teams were being routinely thrashed by quality opposition. The truth was that Burnley had beaten the scum and Wigan had beaten Chelsea, so it's true that "there are no easy fixtures", However...
So far RM has turned the Hull draw into defeat.
We've got Wigan and Burnley on 29/3 and 3/4
Easter could be really interesting
Crucify Him!
BobKowalski wrote:Ted Hughes wrote:BobKowalski wrote:Because Hughes couldn't organise the team and was shipping goals faster than the Titanic shipped water.
You can berate Mancini for not getting it right in two and bit months but then Hughes didn't get it right in 18 months and there was no sign of it improving. Stability works if you have the right man in charge. You can argue that Mancini is not the right man based on what he does or does not do but using Hughes as a yardstick is woefully ineffective.
You're talking as if he took over a side at the bottom. He took over a side near the top that played football but let in some shit goals. He's turned it into a side full of defenders that can't play football & lets in shit goals. That's supposed to be tactically brilliant but imo tactically brilliant would be solving the defensive problem whilst playing attacking football. Had Hughes managed to achieve that, he would have been brilliant. He almost did, for example v Chelsea then he got injuries then the sack. Any twat can scrape out points by staying in their own half most of the game, especially with the players we've got but going forward & not conceding is much harder, takes a lot longer but is much more suitable for a club of our apparent ambition.
If Mancini is to have any chance of saving his job, he needs plan B, immediately.
As I said you can rip Mancini for what he does or doesn't do but using Hughes as a yardstick is pointless. Hughes was in charge for 18 months won 4 league games away from home, conceded 9 league goals in his last 3 matches and in his only full season finished 10th, after I may add promising a top 6 finish and no excuses and then treated us to the classic excuse that it was better to finish 10th and not have Europe as a distraction.
Or if you want to compare lets take Sven's one and only full season in charge who spent less, had less time in preseason and who finished 9th. Now you can slice and dice the two mens respective talents as manager anyway you want but the records show that Sven shaded it over Hughes.
Anyway we can kill Mancini all day long and I am sure a lot of people will do so with vim and vigour but do it based on his record at City not on some fantasy about Hughes because the facts don't back you up.
Original Dub wrote:BobKowalski wrote:Ted Hughes wrote:BobKowalski wrote:Because Hughes couldn't organise the team and was shipping goals faster than the Titanic shipped water.
You can berate Mancini for not getting it right in two and bit months but then Hughes didn't get it right in 18 months and there was no sign of it improving. Stability works if you have the right man in charge. You can argue that Mancini is not the right man based on what he does or does not do but using Hughes as a yardstick is woefully ineffective.
You're talking as if he took over a side at the bottom. He took over a side near the top that played football but let in some shit goals. He's turned it into a side full of defenders that can't play football & lets in shit goals. That's supposed to be tactically brilliant but imo tactically brilliant would be solving the defensive problem whilst playing attacking football. Had Hughes managed to achieve that, he would have been brilliant. He almost did, for example v Chelsea then he got injuries then the sack. Any twat can scrape out points by staying in their own half most of the game, especially with the players we've got but going forward & not conceding is much harder, takes a lot longer but is much more suitable for a club of our apparent ambition.
If Mancini is to have any chance of saving his job, he needs plan B, immediately.
As I said you can rip Mancini for what he does or doesn't do but using Hughes as a yardstick is pointless. Hughes was in charge for 18 months won 4 league games away from home, conceded 9 league goals in his last 3 matches and in his only full season finished 10th, after I may add promising a top 6 finish and no excuses and then treated us to the classic excuse that it was better to finish 10th and not have Europe as a distraction.
Or if you want to compare lets take Sven's one and only full season in charge who spent less, had less time in preseason and who finished 9th. Now you can slice and dice the two mens respective talents as manager anyway you want but the records show that Sven shaded it over Hughes.
Anyway we can kill Mancini all day long and I am sure a lot of people will do so with vim and vigour but do it based on his record at City not on some fantasy about Hughes because the facts don't back you up.
You could be onto something here mate - In the same season Sven spent 40 odd million, hughes bettered him with blackburn on a shoe string budget.
Also, we finished 8th under Pearce playing similar football to what we are now but had a lot less money.
So should we go and get Pearce as he had our best finish so far?
The fact remains that we WERE improving on last season and it was significant even to those who wanted hughes gone all last season. Almost everyone except your good self will say the timing was bizzare because we were on course for 35 points at the halway point which was EXACTLY what was asked. We were also playing exciting, attacking football for the most part (no one can do it ALL the time) and had reached our first semi final for fucking YEARS with OUTSTANDING displays against the best in the country (U***d, Chelsea and Arsenal). It was never going to be an easy ride and we had two or three poor draws (at least 4 draws were decent results) that equated to our "terrible run".
So yes, stability WAS the answer, but we panicked.
The mistake has been made, we just need to rectify it asap. How? I've no idea.
BobKowalski wrote:Original Dub wrote:BobKowalski wrote:Ted Hughes wrote:BobKowalski wrote:Because Hughes couldn't organise the team and was shipping goals faster than the Titanic shipped water.
You can berate Mancini for not getting it right in two and bit months but then Hughes didn't get it right in 18 months and there was no sign of it improving. Stability works if you have the right man in charge. You can argue that Mancini is not the right man based on what he does or does not do but using Hughes as a yardstick is woefully ineffective.
You're talking as if he took over a side at the bottom. He took over a side near the top that played football but let in some shit goals. He's turned it into a side full of defenders that can't play football & lets in shit goals. That's supposed to be tactically brilliant but imo tactically brilliant would be solving the defensive problem whilst playing attacking football. Had Hughes managed to achieve that, he would have been brilliant. He almost did, for example v Chelsea then he got injuries then the sack. Any twat can scrape out points by staying in their own half most of the game, especially with the players we've got but going forward & not conceding is much harder, takes a lot longer but is much more suitable for a club of our apparent ambition.
If Mancini is to have any chance of saving his job, he needs plan B, immediately.
As I said you can rip Mancini for what he does or doesn't do but using Hughes as a yardstick is pointless. Hughes was in charge for 18 months won 4 league games away from home, conceded 9 league goals in his last 3 matches and in his only full season finished 10th, after I may add promising a top 6 finish and no excuses and then treated us to the classic excuse that it was better to finish 10th and not have Europe as a distraction.
Or if you want to compare lets take Sven's one and only full season in charge who spent less, had less time in preseason and who finished 9th. Now you can slice and dice the two mens respective talents as manager anyway you want but the records show that Sven shaded it over Hughes.
Anyway we can kill Mancini all day long and I am sure a lot of people will do so with vim and vigour but do it based on his record at City not on some fantasy about Hughes because the facts don't back you up.
You could be onto something here mate - In the same season Sven spent 40 odd million, hughes bettered him with blackburn on a shoe string budget.
Also, we finished 8th under Pearce playing similar football to what we are now but had a lot less money.
So should we go and get Pearce as he had our best finish so far?
The fact remains that we WERE improving on last season and it was significant even to those who wanted hughes gone all last season. Almost everyone except your good self will say the timing was bizzare because we were on course for 35 points at the halway point which was EXACTLY what was asked. We were also playing exciting, attacking football for the most part (no one can do it ALL the time) and had reached our first semi final for fucking YEARS with OUTSTANDING displays against the best in the country (U***d, Chelsea and Arsenal). It was never going to be an easy ride and we had two or three poor draws (at least 4 draws were decent results) that equated to our "terrible run".
So yes, stability WAS the answer, but we panicked.
The mistake has been made, we just need to rectify it asap. How? I've no idea.
No I always said that the timing was odd. I never once called for Hughes to be sacked midseason. He should have been sacked last summer or we should have waited until this summer before any decision was made. That said after the Spurs game you would have to be blind or stupid not to realise that the game was up for Hughes. You cannot be in charge for 18 months and serve up that sort of directionless, mindless display or watch as Lennon ripped Sylvinho to shreds without any leadership being shown from the man paid to lead. It just ain't going to happen.
Like it or not (and clearly you don't) Mancini is just doing what Mancini does. And that is get the team playing the way he thinks you need to play if you want to compete at the top. Its all concentration, awareness and thinking about the game. Which is pretty much what all the top sides do. Chelsea are nothing if not well drilled. Its almost a default setting and when things get tough every player automatically knows what to do and where to go. For us it isn't automatic because we are still learning. Capello now has the England side well drilled and when first appointed he was placing players in positions on the pitch. Mourinho does the same, Ancelotti, Mancini it doesn't really matter. With a team that is trying to be one of the elite the first thing they are going to do is tighten them up, drill them and smack them round the head until they learn to be alert and concentrate for 90 or 120 mins.
Whatever top manager we employ you're going to get what we currently get or at least a variation on the theme. What you ain't going to get is 'charge' and lets try and score lots of goals which is pretty much what we had.
We are trying to break into the European elite of football. You don't do this by emulating the local eleven from the Dog&Duck.
BobKowalski wrote:Original Dub wrote:BobKowalski wrote:Ted Hughes wrote:BobKowalski wrote:Because Hughes couldn't organise the team and was shipping goals faster than the Titanic shipped water.
You can berate Mancini for not getting it right in two and bit months but then Hughes didn't get it right in 18 months and there was no sign of it improving. Stability works if you have the right man in charge. You can argue that Mancini is not the right man based on what he does or does not do but using Hughes as a yardstick is woefully ineffective.
You're talking as if he took over a side at the bottom. He took over a side near the top that played football but let in some shit goals. He's turned it into a side full of defenders that can't play football & lets in shit goals. That's supposed to be tactically brilliant but imo tactically brilliant would be solving the defensive problem whilst playing attacking football. Had Hughes managed to achieve that, he would have been brilliant. He almost did, for example v Chelsea then he got injuries then the sack. Any twat can scrape out points by staying in their own half most of the game, especially with the players we've got but going forward & not conceding is much harder, takes a lot longer but is much more suitable for a club of our apparent ambition.
If Mancini is to have any chance of saving his job, he needs plan B, immediately.
As I said you can rip Mancini for what he does or doesn't do but using Hughes as a yardstick is pointless. Hughes was in charge for 18 months won 4 league games away from home, conceded 9 league goals in his last 3 matches and in his only full season finished 10th, after I may add promising a top 6 finish and no excuses and then treated us to the classic excuse that it was better to finish 10th and not have Europe as a distraction.
Or if you want to compare lets take Sven's one and only full season in charge who spent less, had less time in preseason and who finished 9th. Now you can slice and dice the two mens respective talents as manager anyway you want but the records show that Sven shaded it over Hughes.
Anyway we can kill Mancini all day long and I am sure a lot of people will do so with vim and vigour but do it based on his record at City not on some fantasy about Hughes because the facts don't back you up.
You could be onto something here mate - In the same season Sven spent 40 odd million, hughes bettered him with blackburn on a shoe string budget.
Also, we finished 8th under Pearce playing similar football to what we are now but had a lot less money.
So should we go and get Pearce as he had our best finish so far?
The fact remains that we WERE improving on last season and it was significant even to those who wanted hughes gone all last season. Almost everyone except your good self will say the timing was bizzare because we were on course for 35 points at the halway point which was EXACTLY what was asked. We were also playing exciting, attacking football for the most part (no one can do it ALL the time) and had reached our first semi final for fucking YEARS with OUTSTANDING displays against the best in the country (U***d, Chelsea and Arsenal). It was never going to be an easy ride and we had two or three poor draws (at least 4 draws were decent results) that equated to our "terrible run".
So yes, stability WAS the answer, but we panicked.
The mistake has been made, we just need to rectify it asap. How? I've no idea.
No I always said that the timing was odd. I never once called for Hughes to be sacked midseason. He should have been sacked last summer or we should have waited until this summer before any decision was made. That said after the Spurs game you would have to be blind or stupid not to realise that the game was up for Hughes. You cannot be in charge for 18 months and serve up that sort of directionless, mindless display or watch as Lennon ripped Sylvinho to shreds without any leadership being shown from the man paid to lead. It just ain't going to happen.
Like it or not (and clearly you don't) Mancini is just doing what Mancini does. And that is get the team playing the way he thinks you need to play if you want to compete at the top. Its all concentration, awareness and thinking about the game. Which is pretty much what all the top sides do. Chelsea are nothing if not well drilled. Its almost a default setting and when things get tough every player automatically knows what to do and where to go. For us it isn't automatic because we are still learning. Capello now has the England side well drilled and when first appointed he was placing players in positions on the pitch. Mourinho does the same, Ancelotti, Mancini it doesn't really matter. With a team that is trying to be one of the elite the first thing they are going to do is tighten them up, drill them and smack them round the head until they learn to be alert and concentrate for 90 or 120 mins.
Whatever top manager we employ you're going to get what we currently get or at least a variation on the theme. What you ain't going to get is 'charge' and lets try and score lots of goals which is pretty much what we had.
We are trying to break into the European elite of football. You don't do this by emulating the local eleven from the Dog&Duck.
BobKowalski wrote:
No I always said that the timing was odd. I never once called for Hughes to be sacked midseason. He should have been sacked last summer or we should have waited until this summer before any decision was made. That said after the Spurs game you would have to be blind or stupid not to realise that the game was up for Hughes. You cannot be in charge for 18 months and serve up that sort of directionless, mindless display or watch as Lennon ripped Sylvinho to shreds without any leadership being shown from the man paid to lead. It just ain't going to happen.
Like it or not (and clearly you don't) Mancini is just doing what Mancini does. And that is get the team playing the way he thinks you need to play if you want to compete at the top. Its all concentration, awareness and thinking about the game. Which is pretty much what all the top sides do. Chelsea are nothing if not well drilled. Its almost a default setting and when things get tough every player automatically knows what to do and where to go. For us it isn't automatic because we are still learning. Capello now has the England side well drilled and when first appointed he was placing players in positions on the pitch. Mourinho does the same, Ancelotti, Mancini it doesn't really matter. With a team that is trying to be one of the elite the first thing they are going to do is tighten them up, drill them and smack them round the head until they learn to be alert and concentrate for 90 or 120 mins.
Whatever top manager we employ you're going to get what we currently get or at least a variation on the theme. What you ain't going to get is 'charge' and lets try and score lots of goals which is pretty much what we had.
We are trying to break into the European elite of football. You don't do this by emulating the local eleven from the Dog&Duck.
Ted Hughes wrote:But we beat Chelsea a few weeks before h was sacked, that being 3 days after beating Arsenal.
Original Dub wrote:You have a LOT of faith in him Bob and I hope you're right I really do.
However, you intimate a transitional period with the highlighted above and a transitional period was not an option... or at least if it was an option it has to be over NOW. Otherwise we won't achieve top four and the decision will have been completely pointless.
Like I say, I hope you're right and all this "discipline" pays off FROM NOW ON.
Every passing week/match isn't telling me this though and that's THE ONLY problem I have. Honest to God if he turns this shite around, I'll be the first to hold my hand up.
But I refuse to do so until I see improvement, and so should you TBH.
BobKowalski wrote:Original Dub wrote:You have a LOT of faith in him Bob and I hope you're right I really do.
However, you intimate a transitional period with the highlighted above and a transitional period was not an option... or at least if it was an option it has to be over NOW. Otherwise we won't achieve top four and the decision will have been completely pointless.
Like I say, I hope you're right and all this "discipline" pays off FROM NOW ON.
Every passing week/match isn't telling me this though and that's THE ONLY problem I have. Honest to God if he turns this shite around, I'll be the first to hold my hand up.
But I refuse to do so until I see improvement, and so should you TBH.
There isn't a transitional option. Mancini has to do all this and achieve top 4 spot. Which is why there is all this speculation about Mancini under pressure etc. I do see an improvement or at least I see what he is trying to do and that it is getting there. In an interview he said it would take 3 months to get the squad where he wants them to be. Its just a question of whether he can keep the results on the positive side whilst he does it and can convince the players, the board, the fans its the right way forward. If he can't do this then he is toast.
Ted Hughes wrote:Anyone else seen this quote attributed to Shay Given? I saw it on a really shite blog which is just some twat doing a hatchet job on City but it's down as an actual quote. Wondering where the quote is from. Doesn't sound to promising for Mancini if it's genuine;
Asked if he thought it was too early for people to be questioning Mancini's position, Given said: "Yes. It is a big club, obviously, and there is huge expectation at the club now, but we have to just try and take a deep breath and try and finish the season on a high.
"We are very much in contention for fourth spot and we've got to focus on that. Hopefully we can do that and then reassess things in the summer."
john68 wrote:Times were different in the 60s and I blame much of the change (for the worse) on the media.
Whereas football was usually covered by football writers for football purposes...match reports etc, now we have a subversive media that digs out anything and everything it can about clubs and players, even down to the minutiae of their lifestyles. It panders to the celeb culture that it has created and then having built it up...ensures that it knocks it back down again.
For me, the worst part is that the media demands only SUCCESS NOW. It ignores the reality that success usually and historically is an evolvement that takes time. Time is not allowed, anyone seen to be failing from the very start is destroyed.
Whether we like to admit or not, whether we believe we are free thinkers who make up our own minds or not, the vast majority are victims of what we read incessantly, on a daily basis. We become part of the society that demands "what we want...NOW."
...and therein lies the danger....Nobody is given time. Failure, even temporary failure is not tolerated. Results NOW have become all important.
At City, we have GOT to succeed NOW...there is a demand for the marquee celeb footballer. There is the belief that titles can be bought without the necessity of the work and time to gel a team together. Every failure is seen in gut wrenching extremes, when the reality is that it takes time
I tried to make a thread some time ago about Mercer and whether he would have been given the time or at what point he would have been seen as a failure. I wasn't allowed and it was dragged into a Hughes in/out debate...But I honestly think that Mercer could have been in danger under today's pressures and not allowed to gradually evolve and build his team.
john68 wrote:Times were different in the 60s and I blame much of the change (for the worse) on the media.
Whereas football was usually covered by football writers for football purposes...match reports etc, now we have a subversive media that digs out anything and everything it can about clubs and players, even down to the minutiae of their lifestyles. It panders to the celeb culture that it has created and then having built it up...ensures that it knocks it back down again.
For me, the worst part is that the media demands only SUCCESS NOW. It ignores the reality that success usually and historically is an evolvement that takes time. Time is not allowed, anyone seen to be failing from the very start is destroyed.
Whether we like to admit or not, whether we believe we are free thinkers who make up our own minds or not, the vast majority are victims of what we read incessantly, on a daily basis. We become part of the society that demands "what we want...NOW."
...and therein lies the danger....Nobody is given time. Failure, even temporary failure is not tolerated. Results NOW have become all important.
At City, we have GOT to succeed NOW...there is a demand for the marquee celeb footballer. There is the belief that titles can be bought without the necessity of the work and time to gel a team together. Every failure is seen in gut wrenching extremes, when the reality is that it takes time
I tried to make a thread some time ago about Mercer and whether he would have been given the time or at what point he would have been seen as a failure. I wasn't allowed and it was dragged into a Hughes in/out debate...But I honestly think that Mercer could have been in danger under today's pressures and not allowed to gradually evolve and build his team.
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