metalblade
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Sep 6, 2005
- Messages
- 16,025
- Reaction score
- 24,054
Jesus wept, do you need it to be explained ?Care to explain why you think it's ridiculous?
Rather than just posting stupid emoji.
It's a forum.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
All advertisments are hidden for logged in members, why not log in/register?
Jesus wept, do you need it to be explained ?Care to explain why you think it's ridiculous?
Rather than just posting stupid emoji.
It's a forum.
20 pts off second place says it all.Care to explain why you think it's ridiculous?
Rather than just posting stupid emoji.
It's a forum.
Jesus wept, do you need it to be explained ?
Sorry buddy I neither have the time or inclination to go round in circles with you but I will say this, we have a 15 page thread right here which will adequately explain why claiming that Clough is being punished for last seasons success is a ridiculous thing to say. If you want to turn a blind eye to the failings of Clough all through the past season fine do so whatever anyone else says will not change your mind, by your logic Nigel better not ever win the league or he will be sacked the season after as punishment.I'm interested in your explanation.
It's a forum.
I'll keep it simple. Clough raised our expectations by being so successful at the end of last season. True or False?
It's an interesting point.
If Clough had taken over last season, got knocked out early in the cup and scraped together enough points to finish lower mid-table. Most fans would have said "job done, at least we didn't go down".
It's only because we went on that incredible run of 10 straight wins, that we shot up the table and reached the cup semi.
If you sack Clough now he would be effectively being punished for being great last season.
It's easy to forget how bad we actually were before Clough came in. One win in sixteen matches was it?
You are pretending not to understand so you can make a point.
If you have a personal conviction that Clough shouldn't be fired, or should have another chance, or whatever, that's fine. I accept it. Of course.
You are selectively choosing to count Weir's record as part of Clough's in the previous season so you can claim Clough has made progress. It's dishonest.
The issue is not whether Clough has made progress from Weir (he has), but whether Clough has improved on his own achievements last year. He hasn't.
I disagree. I think I've been quite clear on this.
The only stat in regards of progress that counts is finishing higher in the league, and we did.
playing like brazil
Because improved league position is always the target, never points per game.
Whilst that is correct, when dissected, it doesn't quite stand up imo
Clough came in when second from bottom (with less points than the top teams) and in the 31 games he had up until the end of the season he managed to climb to 7th
This season, he started with a level playing field (all teams on zero points) and had 46 games to manage a whopping two places higher
I don't see that as progress
Desparately stumbling from manager to manager isn't progress either.
Stability is very important, we just have to hope, and in some sense it is hope, that we aren't stabilised in Division 3.
Our best bet is to establish a solid foundation and progress from there.
Change the manager yet again, which has repercussions throughout the club, and we are building on shifting sands.
Worst case scenario is Clough doesn't deliver, then we really could be in for an extended period below stairs.
no sign or indication that he'll change as yet.
So league position is the only relevant metric to judge progress, and the number of points gained - the determining factor of league position, mind you - should be ignored.
Points per game ratios are meaningless and irrelevant in making comparative evaluations about whether a team is improving under a given manager.
I am going to leave this thread now. I am needed back on planet earth.
Also Porterfield, maybe time clouds my memory, but I never realised he had a 10-years contract. Just shows how times have changed.
Points (or PPG - essentially the same thing of course) do not in themselves determine league position. 90 points does not win the League for instance.
Afaict neither points (see above) nor League position (see below) determine whether a manager is making progress.
First you have to define progress:
Two people can argue all day long that we have or have not made progress and both be right if they're talking about different ideas of progress.
- Promotion at all costs with a team of mercenaries on short term contracts or loans with a strong prospect of relegation next season. But next season is the distant future so who cares? We've progressed up the League (for now).
- A focus on youth development set up, a new pitch, a different playing style (which some think might not be fully developed
), but no promotion (yet). We've progressed to a sustainable future (hopefully), but in a way that's hard to quantify.
- Something else.
i believe it is an idiomDidn't Brazil lose 7-1 to Germany in the World Cup semi-final?
We have to aim higher than this.![]()
i believe it is an idiom
better the devil you know , not a great starting point
we seem to suffer from player loss ,
ched cost us big time
now Baxter takes himself out and losing brayford at 1-0 up , lost our shape completely
means a 5th of the team we should have gone with was taken out
Clough said it was a long term strategy , lets hope he meant 2 seasons
The only doubt I have about NC being a liability to SUFC is the Ched factor.Sothall , there is a number of mitigating circumstances for Clough , which have no doubt be tabled by him , the same as us on the forum. The simple matter is they can all be packaged into one - Excuses.
UTB
The fury expressed by some seems to have replaced any semblance of considered thinking, and for them it's enough that we get rid, without a thought for who should replace Clough.
I'm sorry, but from my perspective I think most fans who want Clough to go have put forward a great deal of considered thinking as to why Clough should go (poor transfers, dire playing style, lack of any real progress, lower points per game return, player fall outs, inability to select a consistent team, dreadful handling of the media, stubborn refusal to admit mistakes, etc. etc.). I would argue that those who want Clough to stay purely cite that sticking with a manager is always preferable (agree if the manager is any good) and that he will learn from this season and improve next season - however, where is the considered thinking that this will be the case, on what basis are we to believe Clough will learn his lessons and change?.
Clough has ended this campaign saying that we have made progress and we need to bring in 3-4 players, with the focus being on the centre halves.
At the end of the 2011/12 season Clough was Derby manager, fans were pissed off that they had only finished 12th, however, Clough stated that 12th was satisfactory, they had improved, and what they needed for the following season was more firepower. So to address the firepower issue Clough signed Conor Sammon, whose record at Wigan was played 32 scored 1 (his career average was less than a goal every 5 games). Unsurprisingly Sammon didn't get off to the best of starts, scoring 2 in 16, however Clough said he was happy because of his work rate (even keeping Nathan Tyson out of the starting 11 who had a better strike rate). Sammon finished the season with 9 goals from 47 appearances. At the end of the season Derby finished 10th, Clough again citing progress and knowing what he needed to do to improve the squad however in September the following season he was sacked with Derby in 14th - the club appointed McLaren and Derby finished 3rd.
In 5 seasons under Clough, Derby finished no higher that 10th, if league position is the only barometer of success (as some have claimed) is this successful when another manager came in and achieved 3rd place instantly? So it must follow that it isn't always the case that sticking with a manager is always preferable.
My opinion is that I don't see anything in NC's time at Sheffield United, or at any of his previous clubs, to indicate that he does learn from his mistakes; or that when he identifies a problem he does anything to address it. As for who could replace NC, previous posters have listed potential candidates (Adkins, Lambert, Wharbuton, Evans, etc) all of whom come with baggage, and the pro's and cons of each are discussed in other threads however, every single one of them has a track record of getting teams promoted from League 1.
I'm sorry, but from my perspective I think most fans who want Clough to go have put forward a great deal of considered thinking as to why Clough should go (poor transfers, dire playing style, lack of any real progress, lower points per game return, player fall outs, inability to select a consistent team, dreadful handling of the media, stubborn refusal to admit mistakes, etc. etc.). I would argue that those who want Clough to stay purely cite that sticking with a manager is always preferable (agree if the manager is any good) and that he will learn from this season and improve next season - however, where is the considered thinking that this will be the case, on what basis are we to believe Clough will learn his lessons and change?.
Clough has ended this campaign saying that we have made progress and we need to bring in 3-4 players, with the focus being on the centre halves.
At the end of the 2011/12 season Clough was Derby manager, fans were pissed off that they had only finished 12th, however, Clough stated that 12th was satisfactory, they had improved, and what they needed for the following season was more firepower. So to address the firepower issue Clough signed Conor Sammon, whose record at Wigan was played 32 scored 1 (his career average was less than a goal every 5 games). Unsurprisingly Sammon didn't get off to the best of starts, scoring 2 in 16, however Clough said he was happy because of his work rate (even keeping Nathan Tyson out of the starting 11 who had a better strike rate). Sammon finished the season with 9 goals from 47 appearances. At the end of the season Derby finished 10th, Clough again citing progress and knowing what he needed to do to improve the squad however in September the following season he was sacked with Derby in 14th - the club appointed McLaren and Derby finished 3rd.
In 5 seasons under Clough, Derby finished no higher that 10th, if league position is the only barometer of success (as some have claimed) is this successful when another manager came in and achieved 3rd place instantly? So it must follow that it isn't always the case that sticking with a manager is always preferable.
My opinion is that I don't see anything in NC's time at Sheffield United, or at any of his previous clubs, to indicate that he does learn from his mistakes; or that when he identifies a problem he does anything to address it. As for who could replace NC, previous posters have listed potential candidates (Adkins, Lambert, Wharbuton, Evans, etc) all of whom come with baggage, and the pro's and cons of each are discussed in other threads however, every single one of them has a track record of getting teams promoted from League 1.
All advertisments are hidden for logged in members, why not log in/register?