Deadbat
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2015/16 SUFC SCHOOL REPORT
As I have traditionally done at the end of the last few seasons; it is that time again when I write a review of the campaign and also compile a school report for the different sections of the club. I will look at how they have fared and what are the prospects for next season for each respective department of the club.
I will begin with the review and a breakdown of the board and manager/s.
Over the next few weeks I will add to this with breakdowns of the players/squad at the club and do the same. Will look at contract situation (may be wrong with some of these so again come in if I have got any wrong) and what might happen to each are of the team.
Feel free to add comments/disagree/debate.....after each post I make.
I have graded the board, the manager, players and the fans; in a traditional school report style of A+ to F- (every player who started at least one game).
However, I have had to grade players based on the games they did play so some players who played a lot more may still get a lower grade despite disproportionate number of games in comparison. Eg- Alex Baptise for 7 games to say Dean Hammond’s 28 games but may…ahem… get a better mark for his performances in these 7 games compared to Hammond over the course of the season. If that makes sense?
Of course whilst I have seen all the home games; I have only seen a few away so that needs factoring into my analysis.
If I have missed anyone then please say. Feel free to weigh in with critique, opinions and even in some cases agreements!
Season review
The previous season had ended with United making the play offs but a bizarre game at the County Ground saw United score five and still lose on aggregate. Still many felt McCabe would keep faith with Clough despite the season ending in failure and the manager being given a lot of resources and overloading an already large squad. I recall being in London with the family Spring Bank week when the news filtered through that Clough had gone. I was quite shocked. More so than Weir, Wilson and Adams before that. Fans were quite split on radio phone ins and forums on the internet with some feeling it was harsh considering the cup runs (another semi-final) and them only just being short of another trip to Wembley for the playoff final.
However, others pointed to the negative style of football and the fact we were some way off automatic promotion yet again. They felt Clough’s stubbornness where he fell out with several players and ended up with full backs at centre back in the crucial playoff games.
So the hunt for a new manager was on. Names such as Phil Parkinson and Karl Robinson were linked but it did seem the strong favourite was Nigel Adkins due to his previous promotion success at this level and he was eventually appointed to mostly positive feeling from fans. Despite a poor record at Reading he had done well at both Scunthorpe and Southampton and was regarded as a bit of a coup for the Blades. I do not recall many voicing their disapproval and even some of those that had been against the Clough dismissal were pleased with his replacement.
There was not much transfer activity as United had a bloated squad and many were under contract that could not be shifted on. Michael Doyle and Ben Davies both left on frees to go to Portsmouth whilst after a few weeks of speculation Billy Sharp returned to the Lane, along with another former Adkins favourite Martyn Woolford. Also coming in on a season loan was Connor Sammon with it having all the hallmarks of a Clough signing before he left due to their previous connections.
You felt sure a centre back would come in and the need for reinforcements was clear but Adkins said he was giving everyone a fresh chance. You felt this may be his first mistake as many had been here through the last few campaigns and not been able to get United up. A decent unbeaten pre-season with some good performances against likes of Newcastle and Hull, saw optimism amongst many fans and the bookmakers agreed instilling the Blades as pre-season favourites for the title. There was a new pitch at the Lane and Adkins positive interviews saw this positive feeling around the club.
August
A sunny August afternoon saw United go down to Gillingham and were wearing a bright new green away strip. George Long got the nod in goal but a disastrous opening saw the Blades three down by the half hour and the game gone. All three goals came from poor defending and goalkeeping from set plays and United looked in disarray. They had the much maligned McEveley and Collins at centre back and lost 4-0 in the end. The next few days saw Jamie Murphy sold to Brighton netting United over a million pounds but suddenly reality hit home that despite having a new manager the same poor players remained and now minus their best player. David Edgar came in on loan and Mark Howard was restored to the side.
A narrow win at Morecambe in the cup in the week was followed up by a decent performance with two Che Adams goals seeing off Chesterfield. They then won 3-1 at Peterborough with Connor Sammon impressive and followed it up with a comfortable win against Blackpool at the Lane with Billy Sharp getting off the mark. After a defeat at Fulham in the cup; the Blades won again at Swindon with another solid performance and United were right up near the top and looking good with Edgar making a difference to the rear-guard.
September
After beating Hartlepool in the Johnstone Paint Trophy; they were brought back down to earth by two defeats in a week at the Lane to Bury and Colchester as they shipped 6 goals and despite Sharp scoring two (missing one penalty), the poor defensive play came back to haunt the Blades. More poor defending saw United on course for a third straight defeat at Bradford on Sky but Baxter and Sharp inspired a comeback to net a point. They then beat Doncaster at the Lane with Sharp and Sammon amongst the goals before getting a draw at table topping Burton. It had been a mixed start but United were amongst the top 6.
October
A poor show at Port Vale saw the Blades beaten before they beat Notts County scoring five in the JPT. A late Collins header saw United just see off Rochdale in an exciting game where the Blades had been pegged back. A point at Oldham was followed up by a comfortable win against Fleetwood with loanee Dean Hammond making his debut but the stop-start season continued with two back to back defeats versus Millwall at the Lane in an early kick off and then at lowly Crewe in a really poor performance. For the first time manager Adkins was getting questioned over his team selection, tactics and performances.
November
Marc McNulty departed, another one going to Pompey, on loan before United had two mixed results in the cups; beating Worcester in the FA Cup but losing at Fleetwood in the JPT. United with Long back in goal; had not even got the last stages of this competition despite having six shots at it since coming down (in the same period Chesterfield and Barnsley have both got to the final). A draw at home to Southend saw the defensive shortcomings on show again. A decent point at Walsall was followed up by an awful display at Shrewsbury where United were 4-1 down and the crowd not happy. They then had seemingly done enough to beat Barnsley but a late goal denied them the win. Barnsley were bottom of the league (look what happened to them after this result).
December
Matty Done scored to help United beat Oldham in the FA Cup and then a more solid, if slightly more uncompromising Blades side beat Coventry with Sharp the hero again. They then got another 1-0 win at Scunthorpe (Sharp again) and an excellent performance saw them see off Bradford in front of 25,000 fans and united were right back in the promotion race. An odd game a few days later saw Peterborough snatch the three points as United conceded three again at home.
January
An unfortunate late defeat at Old Trafford in front of over 9,000 Blades fans saw United miss out on an exciting cup replay back at the Lane but only a few days later in Lancashire again, great fight back saw United get a point at Wigan with three late goals in a game that had seemed lost. A fortunate win at Colchester with a late Edgar goal was followed up with two draws against Swindon and Blackpool and united were now losing touch with the frontrunners.
February
February saw the inconsistency continue. A good Wigan side won at a canter at the Lane before United won a scrappy game at Doncaster with Adams converting. A shocking display at Bury saw the Blades lose 1-0 before a narrow win against Port Vale followed a few days later. A poor defeat at Rochdale ended the month.
March
Nigel Clough came back and saw his well-organised and methodical approach yield a sweet away victory over United as Adkins was now feeling the pressure as promotion seemed very unlikely with sixth place the best they could aim for. Alex Baptise made his full debut in a draw at Fleetwood; that only came about due to a late, late Adams penalty before a rare decent showing saw off Oldham at the Lane with United playing a new wing back system with Done and Brayford in such positions. However, a must win game at Millwall saw United surrender meekly and they needed a late Sharp winner to see off Crewe who had fought back from two down. A Sky tv game was perhaps United’s final chance to get into the top six but again they came up short and were out fought and out played.
April
Two excellent performances from United saw them beat Walsall and draw with Gillingham (they should have won this game). They then played equally well to easily beat Chesterfield and battled to a win at Shrewsbury and the faint hopes of a top six place remained. However, two limp performances followed which saw them draw with Barnsley and then lose at Coventry and another season in League One was confirmed.
May
The final game came at home to Scunthorpe, a side that still had a chance of the playoffs. United were easily beaten in a really poor showing that summed up the season.
Summary
If someone had said, we would finish ????? th in the League after Clough had been removed and Adkins had been brought in most if not all would have said that was totally unacceptable. They would be right. We did not make the wholesale changes we needed in the summer and opted to keep faith when many felt we needed to change so much of the side.
A shocking opening day was actually recovered from and United went on a good run but from October until maybe April United for the most part were not good enough. The defence remained porous, the midfield overrun and Sharp had little help up top. We struggled to put any kind of run together in terms of results or performance and quite quickly Adkins fell out of favour with many fans. His faith in many of the players who had been here last season saw us continue to ship goals and never look remotely like a serious promotion contender. It seemed from early on playoffs was the best we could hope for as sides like Gillingham, Walsall and Burton left us for dead.
We never had a settled side and relied too much on Sharp to score the goals. The midfield never provided or protected and you felt like we might concede whenever the opponent attacked.
Slowly Adkins started to clear out the dross as he realised what we could have told him earlier in the season as many departed either permanently or on loan but United’s inconsistency on the field remained. Adkins interviews in comparison became more predictable and even he did not know how to stop the rot.
His signings did not work (except Sharp) and his trusted lieutenant Hammond did not endear himself to fans with ill-disciplined and poor performances.
As the season came to an end; United found some form and performances but it was too little, too late and there were the first rumblings of whether Adkins may also be departing. The season petered out and there were few positive to take as a mostly poor division saw United so far off the pace yet again. With a stronger division next season and probably little funds for whoever is in charge, United face some strong questions as they move into their seventh season at this level.
As I have traditionally done at the end of the last few seasons; it is that time again when I write a review of the campaign and also compile a school report for the different sections of the club. I will look at how they have fared and what are the prospects for next season for each respective department of the club.
I will begin with the review and a breakdown of the board and manager/s.
Over the next few weeks I will add to this with breakdowns of the players/squad at the club and do the same. Will look at contract situation (may be wrong with some of these so again come in if I have got any wrong) and what might happen to each are of the team.
Feel free to add comments/disagree/debate.....after each post I make.
I have graded the board, the manager, players and the fans; in a traditional school report style of A+ to F- (every player who started at least one game).
However, I have had to grade players based on the games they did play so some players who played a lot more may still get a lower grade despite disproportionate number of games in comparison. Eg- Alex Baptise for 7 games to say Dean Hammond’s 28 games but may…ahem… get a better mark for his performances in these 7 games compared to Hammond over the course of the season. If that makes sense?
Of course whilst I have seen all the home games; I have only seen a few away so that needs factoring into my analysis.
If I have missed anyone then please say. Feel free to weigh in with critique, opinions and even in some cases agreements!
Season review
The previous season had ended with United making the play offs but a bizarre game at the County Ground saw United score five and still lose on aggregate. Still many felt McCabe would keep faith with Clough despite the season ending in failure and the manager being given a lot of resources and overloading an already large squad. I recall being in London with the family Spring Bank week when the news filtered through that Clough had gone. I was quite shocked. More so than Weir, Wilson and Adams before that. Fans were quite split on radio phone ins and forums on the internet with some feeling it was harsh considering the cup runs (another semi-final) and them only just being short of another trip to Wembley for the playoff final.
However, others pointed to the negative style of football and the fact we were some way off automatic promotion yet again. They felt Clough’s stubbornness where he fell out with several players and ended up with full backs at centre back in the crucial playoff games.
So the hunt for a new manager was on. Names such as Phil Parkinson and Karl Robinson were linked but it did seem the strong favourite was Nigel Adkins due to his previous promotion success at this level and he was eventually appointed to mostly positive feeling from fans. Despite a poor record at Reading he had done well at both Scunthorpe and Southampton and was regarded as a bit of a coup for the Blades. I do not recall many voicing their disapproval and even some of those that had been against the Clough dismissal were pleased with his replacement.
There was not much transfer activity as United had a bloated squad and many were under contract that could not be shifted on. Michael Doyle and Ben Davies both left on frees to go to Portsmouth whilst after a few weeks of speculation Billy Sharp returned to the Lane, along with another former Adkins favourite Martyn Woolford. Also coming in on a season loan was Connor Sammon with it having all the hallmarks of a Clough signing before he left due to their previous connections.
You felt sure a centre back would come in and the need for reinforcements was clear but Adkins said he was giving everyone a fresh chance. You felt this may be his first mistake as many had been here through the last few campaigns and not been able to get United up. A decent unbeaten pre-season with some good performances against likes of Newcastle and Hull, saw optimism amongst many fans and the bookmakers agreed instilling the Blades as pre-season favourites for the title. There was a new pitch at the Lane and Adkins positive interviews saw this positive feeling around the club.
August
A sunny August afternoon saw United go down to Gillingham and were wearing a bright new green away strip. George Long got the nod in goal but a disastrous opening saw the Blades three down by the half hour and the game gone. All three goals came from poor defending and goalkeeping from set plays and United looked in disarray. They had the much maligned McEveley and Collins at centre back and lost 4-0 in the end. The next few days saw Jamie Murphy sold to Brighton netting United over a million pounds but suddenly reality hit home that despite having a new manager the same poor players remained and now minus their best player. David Edgar came in on loan and Mark Howard was restored to the side.
A narrow win at Morecambe in the cup in the week was followed up by a decent performance with two Che Adams goals seeing off Chesterfield. They then won 3-1 at Peterborough with Connor Sammon impressive and followed it up with a comfortable win against Blackpool at the Lane with Billy Sharp getting off the mark. After a defeat at Fulham in the cup; the Blades won again at Swindon with another solid performance and United were right up near the top and looking good with Edgar making a difference to the rear-guard.
September
After beating Hartlepool in the Johnstone Paint Trophy; they were brought back down to earth by two defeats in a week at the Lane to Bury and Colchester as they shipped 6 goals and despite Sharp scoring two (missing one penalty), the poor defensive play came back to haunt the Blades. More poor defending saw United on course for a third straight defeat at Bradford on Sky but Baxter and Sharp inspired a comeback to net a point. They then beat Doncaster at the Lane with Sharp and Sammon amongst the goals before getting a draw at table topping Burton. It had been a mixed start but United were amongst the top 6.
October
A poor show at Port Vale saw the Blades beaten before they beat Notts County scoring five in the JPT. A late Collins header saw United just see off Rochdale in an exciting game where the Blades had been pegged back. A point at Oldham was followed up by a comfortable win against Fleetwood with loanee Dean Hammond making his debut but the stop-start season continued with two back to back defeats versus Millwall at the Lane in an early kick off and then at lowly Crewe in a really poor performance. For the first time manager Adkins was getting questioned over his team selection, tactics and performances.
November
Marc McNulty departed, another one going to Pompey, on loan before United had two mixed results in the cups; beating Worcester in the FA Cup but losing at Fleetwood in the JPT. United with Long back in goal; had not even got the last stages of this competition despite having six shots at it since coming down (in the same period Chesterfield and Barnsley have both got to the final). A draw at home to Southend saw the defensive shortcomings on show again. A decent point at Walsall was followed up by an awful display at Shrewsbury where United were 4-1 down and the crowd not happy. They then had seemingly done enough to beat Barnsley but a late goal denied them the win. Barnsley were bottom of the league (look what happened to them after this result).
December
Matty Done scored to help United beat Oldham in the FA Cup and then a more solid, if slightly more uncompromising Blades side beat Coventry with Sharp the hero again. They then got another 1-0 win at Scunthorpe (Sharp again) and an excellent performance saw them see off Bradford in front of 25,000 fans and united were right back in the promotion race. An odd game a few days later saw Peterborough snatch the three points as United conceded three again at home.
January
An unfortunate late defeat at Old Trafford in front of over 9,000 Blades fans saw United miss out on an exciting cup replay back at the Lane but only a few days later in Lancashire again, great fight back saw United get a point at Wigan with three late goals in a game that had seemed lost. A fortunate win at Colchester with a late Edgar goal was followed up with two draws against Swindon and Blackpool and united were now losing touch with the frontrunners.
February
February saw the inconsistency continue. A good Wigan side won at a canter at the Lane before United won a scrappy game at Doncaster with Adams converting. A shocking display at Bury saw the Blades lose 1-0 before a narrow win against Port Vale followed a few days later. A poor defeat at Rochdale ended the month.
March
Nigel Clough came back and saw his well-organised and methodical approach yield a sweet away victory over United as Adkins was now feeling the pressure as promotion seemed very unlikely with sixth place the best they could aim for. Alex Baptise made his full debut in a draw at Fleetwood; that only came about due to a late, late Adams penalty before a rare decent showing saw off Oldham at the Lane with United playing a new wing back system with Done and Brayford in such positions. However, a must win game at Millwall saw United surrender meekly and they needed a late Sharp winner to see off Crewe who had fought back from two down. A Sky tv game was perhaps United’s final chance to get into the top six but again they came up short and were out fought and out played.
April
Two excellent performances from United saw them beat Walsall and draw with Gillingham (they should have won this game). They then played equally well to easily beat Chesterfield and battled to a win at Shrewsbury and the faint hopes of a top six place remained. However, two limp performances followed which saw them draw with Barnsley and then lose at Coventry and another season in League One was confirmed.
May
The final game came at home to Scunthorpe, a side that still had a chance of the playoffs. United were easily beaten in a really poor showing that summed up the season.
Summary
If someone had said, we would finish ????? th in the League after Clough had been removed and Adkins had been brought in most if not all would have said that was totally unacceptable. They would be right. We did not make the wholesale changes we needed in the summer and opted to keep faith when many felt we needed to change so much of the side.
A shocking opening day was actually recovered from and United went on a good run but from October until maybe April United for the most part were not good enough. The defence remained porous, the midfield overrun and Sharp had little help up top. We struggled to put any kind of run together in terms of results or performance and quite quickly Adkins fell out of favour with many fans. His faith in many of the players who had been here last season saw us continue to ship goals and never look remotely like a serious promotion contender. It seemed from early on playoffs was the best we could hope for as sides like Gillingham, Walsall and Burton left us for dead.
We never had a settled side and relied too much on Sharp to score the goals. The midfield never provided or protected and you felt like we might concede whenever the opponent attacked.
Slowly Adkins started to clear out the dross as he realised what we could have told him earlier in the season as many departed either permanently or on loan but United’s inconsistency on the field remained. Adkins interviews in comparison became more predictable and even he did not know how to stop the rot.
His signings did not work (except Sharp) and his trusted lieutenant Hammond did not endear himself to fans with ill-disciplined and poor performances.
As the season came to an end; United found some form and performances but it was too little, too late and there were the first rumblings of whether Adkins may also be departing. The season petered out and there were few positive to take as a mostly poor division saw United so far off the pace yet again. With a stronger division next season and probably little funds for whoever is in charge, United face some strong questions as they move into their seventh season at this level.