Cerberus Blade
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Sep 2, 2015
- Messages
- 13,631
- Reaction score
- 20,992
Before the Stoke game, Wilder was asked by that new presenter on FH, you know, the one who asks lots of questions,
"Could Stoke be the model for a club like Sheffield United?"
He was referring to the fact that Stoke are not a "big" club (in his perception) but had spent the past 10 years in the top flight of English football.
I thought Chris's response was very interesting...he said...
"A lot needs to happen off the pitch for that to happen"
He turned this into a general comment, rather than a comment specifically about Sheffield United. He talked about other clubs "like your Bournemouth's and your Swansea's" (I thought there was only one Bournemouth and one Swansea?). But, apart from his confusing use of plurals, what he was saying was very clear to me...You need the whole club to be pulling in the same direction to have any chance of that - and - you need them upstairs to be prepared to invest in the team to have a chance of getting there and staying there.
I then started to think about the present situation we have with The Prince and McCabe. That seems to have gone very quiet doesn't it? Or have I missed something? The last thing I read, The Prince was calling McCabe a "dog". I thought about that this week after reading about the Khashoggi murder. It was said that one of the ring leaders in the Khashoggi case called for the hit squad to, "bring me the head of the dog".
These Arab chappies are fond of calling people "dogs" when they don't like them aren't they? I remember reading such curses as "infidel dogs" in comic strips as a child. It was usually spouted at the archetypal white soldier by some beardy Arab bloke with a tea towel on his head and a scimitar in his hand. For sure though, it's not a sign of good relations when an Arab calls you "a dog".
Whether this has got anything to do with McCabe talking about, "When the big dog comes knocking" I've really no idea? But that's another thing altogether.
The main thing I took from what Wilder said was that it's far too early to be confident that Sheffield United could get themselves into a Stoke-like situation. In fact, he even spoke of his target for this season as being 50 points - I'm pretty sure it isn't. But, I can understand why he might want to diffuse conversations about being a top tier club.
He's doing everything he can, on very modest resources, to try and get us there. But it must seem like a strange task at times, because he's leading us to a place where we have absolutely no chance of surviving whilever the current boardroom impasse continues.
"Could Stoke be the model for a club like Sheffield United?"
He was referring to the fact that Stoke are not a "big" club (in his perception) but had spent the past 10 years in the top flight of English football.
I thought Chris's response was very interesting...he said...
"A lot needs to happen off the pitch for that to happen"
He turned this into a general comment, rather than a comment specifically about Sheffield United. He talked about other clubs "like your Bournemouth's and your Swansea's" (I thought there was only one Bournemouth and one Swansea?). But, apart from his confusing use of plurals, what he was saying was very clear to me...You need the whole club to be pulling in the same direction to have any chance of that - and - you need them upstairs to be prepared to invest in the team to have a chance of getting there and staying there.
I then started to think about the present situation we have with The Prince and McCabe. That seems to have gone very quiet doesn't it? Or have I missed something? The last thing I read, The Prince was calling McCabe a "dog". I thought about that this week after reading about the Khashoggi murder. It was said that one of the ring leaders in the Khashoggi case called for the hit squad to, "bring me the head of the dog".
These Arab chappies are fond of calling people "dogs" when they don't like them aren't they? I remember reading such curses as "infidel dogs" in comic strips as a child. It was usually spouted at the archetypal white soldier by some beardy Arab bloke with a tea towel on his head and a scimitar in his hand. For sure though, it's not a sign of good relations when an Arab calls you "a dog".
Whether this has got anything to do with McCabe talking about, "When the big dog comes knocking" I've really no idea? But that's another thing altogether.
The main thing I took from what Wilder said was that it's far too early to be confident that Sheffield United could get themselves into a Stoke-like situation. In fact, he even spoke of his target for this season as being 50 points - I'm pretty sure it isn't. But, I can understand why he might want to diffuse conversations about being a top tier club.
He's doing everything he can, on very modest resources, to try and get us there. But it must seem like a strange task at times, because he's leading us to a place where we have absolutely no chance of surviving whilever the current boardroom impasse continues.