An open letter to the players, the management and the board

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Vassilis

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An open letter to the board, manager and players of Sheffield United.


I doubt anyone connected to the club will read this, but such is my frustration, I’ve taken to posting on a forum which I regularly visit, but rarely post on. Who knows who might read this. I doubt many people will, but I’m doing this mostly as a cathartic exercise to vent some of the huge amount of frustration I'm feeling as a Sheffield United supporter.


I’ve just got back from Bramall Lane, where I’ve witnessed one of the worst displays from a Sheffield United side in my 23 years of going to live games. I’ve lived through some bad United teams in time - Heath, Adams, Blackwell and Robson to name but a few, but at least those teams were terrible in a league above the current crop.


So limp is this ‘team’, that I can only think of one poorer display, and that was when United lost at home to Hartlepool under David Weir. Not that long ago, and we all know how that ended.


As a fan I look for someone to blame. ‘Bad luck’ is not a strong enough excuse for a decade of slow, ugly decline which has only been punctuated by fleeting romances with domestic cup competitions. So I’m directing this at those who I believe are culpable, to different extents, for the state Sheffield United finds itself in.


TO THE PLAYERS


You, the players, perhaps know better than anyone the anger which is being felt by fans of Sheffield United - it can’t be nice to be booed off the pitch so often in a season. We see players who we know can play better. Indeed, of the eleven which started the match against Burton Albion tonight, all but three (Done, Adams, Long) have played the much of their career at a level above League One. Yet we see you being outfoxed, outfought and outplayed by supposedly inferior players.


We accept that you are just earning a living and trying to make as much money as you can in a relatively short career. I doubt many fans would do any differently were we fortunate enough to be blessed with the same talent as you do.


So what should be your motivation? Most of you are not supporters of the Blades and nearly all of you have not been here long enough to have forged any meaningful a affection for the club, despite badge thumping celebrations and headline-making soundbites.


So perhaps your motivation should be this. Sheffield United is a proud club, with a number of great teams through the years. I was lucky enough to catch Deane, Agana et al perform and I won’t ever forget the how watching the Warnock’s triple assault team and promotion-winning side made me feel.


However, you’re on the verge of being synonymous with abject failure, some would argue you already have made that particular bed. You’re associated with one of the darkest periods in the club’s history. Is that how you want to look back at your career, no matter how financially successful it was?


All we ask is for effort and pride. In return, we promise to give you support both home and away. And when the day comes that you leave Sheffield United, you’ll know you will always be cheered when you return.


THE MANAGEMENT


Even if you do sometimes sound like some Silicone Valley, $50-an-hour motivational speaker, I believe you’re a good guy Mr Adkins.


You’ve been given a good job. A very good job. However we accept you’ve been lumbered with a bloated, imbalanced and in places limited squad. However, it is still a remarkably talented squad and we rightfully believe you should be doing better.


Most of the fans are willing to give you time, I believe. That said, the signings you’ve made this season have been overwhelmingly poor, with none, other than Billy Sharp, making a meaningful contribution to this team.


Your approach to games has been baffling at best and infuriating at worst. Fans would accept losing if it was in a manner which got us excited, but to not meaningfully test a goalkeeper when 17,000 have paid no small sum to watch the team perform is shameful. I accept the performance to an extent depends on the players, but the motivation, fitness, formation and tactics of the team has a much greater bearing on proceedings - and those are factors you have full control over.


Something is rotten in the squad, I believe. If it is a player or a group of players or a culture within the squad, we want you to be brave enough to cut it out no matter what the cost, because it is pulling the whole club down.


I am fed up with seeing over-paid, under-motivated players turn out for the club. We would much prefer to see a young player signed from a lower league come and try to be a success. That player would be given more time and celebrated should he succeed. I appreciate that you won’t always get it right with these kinds of players, but we’d like to see you try and get it right.


You have been given a well-paid job, in a vibrant city, with faithful support and more financial power than most managers could dream of. We now expect you to help steer the club to a more steady, secure place.


THE BOARD


This club has had 12 different managers in less than a decade. None of them have brought success. Are they all bad managers? I doubt it. The buck has to stop with you, the board. Your constant hiring and firing of managers has brought nothing but instability to the club. If you take the decision to appoint a manager (a) do the necessary homework to ensure he is the right man and (b) be brave enough to stick with him long enough to have a meaningful impact on the long-term future of this club. You only need to look at those clubs who have granted managers time to build a team to see how this can be successful.


Danny Wilson, Nigel Clough and Chris Morgan were not bad managers. I take your point with David Weir though.


The club has remarkable support considering its modest position in the football pyramid. We understand that this provides important revenue streams and helps sell the club as ‘big’ to players and sponsors. But this could all change and probably will should we stay in this position, playing the way we’re playing. We’re already not as attractive now as we were four or five years ago.


I ask for more consideration when it comes to appointments, both on and off the field. I appreciate that total financial transparency is not realistic, but I ask that the clubs treats its fans the way they should be treated. After all, the club is not the ground, the players, the brand, the assets or the fans, it’s a mixture of them all, but without the fans, the club is nothing.


Thanks to anyone who has read this far.


Up the Blades.
 

An open letter to the board, manager and players of Sheffield United.


I doubt anyone connected to the club will read this, but such is my frustration, I’ve taken to posting on a forum which I regularly visit, but rarely post on. Who knows who might read this. I doubt many people will, but I’m doing this mostly as a cathartic exercise to vent some of the huge amount of frustration I'm feeling as a Sheffield United supporter.


I’ve just got back from Bramall Lane, where I’ve witnessed one of the worst displays from a Sheffield United side in my 23 years of going to live games. I’ve lived through some bad United teams in time - Heath, Adams, Blackwell and Robson to name but a few, but at least those teams were terrible in a league above the current crop.


So limp is this ‘team’, that I can only think of one poorer display, and that was when United lost at home to Hartlepool under David Weir. Not that long ago, and we all know how that ended.


As a fan I look for someone to blame. ‘Bad luck’ is not a strong enough excuse for a decade of slow, ugly decline which has only been punctuated by fleeting romances with domestic cup competitions. So I’m directing this at those who I believe are culpable, to different extents, for the state Sheffield United finds itself in.


TO THE PLAYERS


You, the players, perhaps know better than anyone the anger which is being felt by fans of Sheffield United - it can’t be nice to be booed off the pitch so often in a season. We see players who we know can play better. Indeed, of the eleven which started the match against Burton Albion tonight, all but three (Done, Adams, Long) have played the much of their career at a level above League One. Yet we see you being outfoxed, outfought and outplayed by supposedly inferior players.


We accept that you are just earning a living and trying to make as much money as you can in a relatively short career. I doubt many fans would do any differently were we fortunate enough to be blessed with the same talent as you do.


So what should be your motivation? Most of you are not supporters of the Blades and nearly all of you have not been here long enough to have forged any meaningful a affection for the club, despite badge thumping celebrations and headline-making soundbites.


So perhaps your motivation should be this. Sheffield United is a proud club, with a number of great teams through the years. I was lucky enough to catch Deane, Agana et al perform and I won’t ever forget the how watching the Warnock’s triple assault team and promotion-winning side made me feel.


However, you’re on the verge of being synonymous with abject failure, some would argue you already have made that particular bed. You’re associated with one of the darkest periods in the club’s history. Is that how you want to look back at your career, no matter how financially successful it was?


All we ask is for effort and pride. In return, we promise to give you support both home and away. And when the day comes that you leave Sheffield United, you’ll know you will always be cheered when you return.


THE MANAGEMENT


Even if you do sometimes sound like some Silicone Valley, $50-an-hour motivational speaker, I believe you’re a good guy Mr Adkins.


You’ve been given a good job. A very good job. However we accept you’ve been lumbered with a bloated, imbalanced and in places limited squad. However, it is still a remarkably talented squad and we rightfully believe you should be doing better.


Most of the fans are willing to give you time, I believe. That said, the signings you’ve made this season have been overwhelmingly poor, with none, other than Billy Sharp, making a meaningful contribution to this team.


Your approach to games has been baffling at best and infuriating at worst. Fans would accept losing if it was in a manner which got us excited, but to not meaningfully test a goalkeeper when 17,000 have paid no small sum to watch the team perform is shameful. I accept the performance to an extent depends on the players, but the motivation, fitness, formation and tactics of the team has a much greater bearing on proceedings - and those are factors you have full control over.


Something is rotten in the squad, I believe. If it is a player or a group of players or a culture within the squad, we want you to be brave enough to cut it out no matter what the cost, because it is pulling the whole club down.


I am fed up with seeing over-paid, under-motivated players turn out for the club. We would much prefer to see a young player signed from a lower league come and try to be a success. That player would be given more time and celebrated should he succeed. I appreciate that you won’t always get it right with these kinds of players, but we’d like to see you try and get it right.


You have been given a well-paid job, in a vibrant city, with faithful support and more financial power than most managers could dream of. We now expect you to help steer the club to a more steady, secure place.


THE BOARD


This club has had 12 different managers in less than a decade. None of them have brought success. Are they all bad managers? I doubt it. The buck has to stop with you, the board. Your constant hiring and firing of managers has brought nothing but instability to the club. If you take the decision to appoint a manager (a) do the necessary homework to ensure he is the right man and (b) be brave enough to stick with him long enough to have a meaningful impact on the long-term future of this club. You only need to look at those clubs who have granted managers time to build a team to see how this can be successful.


Danny Wilson, Nigel Clough and Chris Morgan were not bad managers. I take your point with David Weir though.


The club has remarkable support considering its modest position in the football pyramid. We understand that this provides important revenue streams and helps sell the club as ‘big’ to players and sponsors. But this could all change and probably will should we stay in this position, playing the way we’re playing. We’re already not as attractive now as we were four or five years ago.


I ask for more consideration when it comes to appointments, both on and off the field. I appreciate that total financial transparency is not realistic, but I ask that the clubs treats its fans the way they should be treated. After all, the club is not the ground, the players, the brand, the assets or the fans, it’s a mixture of them all, but without the fans, the club is nothing.


Thanks to anyone who has read this far.


Up the Blades.
 
Well said and reflects my views but we the fans I think supported both the Clough and Adkins appointments. May be the board have more inside knowledge in football than the fans but can we realty criticise either of these appointments except with the benefit of hindsight and I am sure they were not the "cheap option". The board also tried the "un-proven yet highly thought of" David Weir but that did not work out. If we get rid of NA who do we appoint in his place?
 
They took ages in consideration before the appointment of David Weir. They got it wrong with that one also. You know that saying about monkey's, typewriters and Shakespeare?
 
An open letter to the board, manager and players of Sheffield United.


I doubt anyone connected to the club will read this, but such is my frustration, I’ve taken to posting on a forum which I regularly visit, but rarely post on. Who knows who might read this. I doubt many people will, but I’m doing this mostly as a cathartic exercise to vent some of the huge amount of frustration I'm feeling as a Sheffield United supporter.


I’ve just got back from Bramall Lane, where I’ve witnessed one of the worst displays from a Sheffield United side in my 23 years of going to live games. I’ve lived through some bad United teams in time - Heath, Adams, Blackwell and Robson to name but a few, but at least those teams were terrible in a league above the current crop.


So limp is this ‘team’, that I can only think of one poorer display, and that was when United lost at home to Hartlepool under David Weir. Not that long ago, and we all know how that ended.


As a fan I look for someone to blame. ‘Bad luck’ is not a strong enough excuse for a decade of slow, ugly decline which has only been punctuated by fleeting romances with domestic cup competitions. So I’m directing this at those who I believe are culpable, to different extents, for the state Sheffield United finds itself in.


TO THE PLAYERS


You, the players, perhaps know better than anyone the anger which is being felt by fans of Sheffield United - it can’t be nice to be booed off the pitch so often in a season. We see players who we know can play better. Indeed, of the eleven which started the match against Burton Albion tonight, all but three (Done, Adams, Long) have played the much of their career at a level above League One. Yet we see you being outfoxed, outfought and outplayed by supposedly inferior players.


We accept that you are just earning a living and trying to make as much money as you can in a relatively short career. I doubt many fans would do any differently were we fortunate enough to be blessed with the same talent as you do.


So what should be your motivation? Most of you are not supporters of the Blades and nearly all of you have not been here long enough to have forged any meaningful a affection for the club, despite badge thumping celebrations and headline-making soundbites.


So perhaps your motivation should be this. Sheffield United is a proud club, with a number of great teams through the years. I was lucky enough to catch Deane, Agana et al perform and I won’t ever forget the how watching the Warnock’s triple assault team and promotion-winning side made me feel.


However, you’re on the verge of being synonymous with abject failure, some would argue you already have made that particular bed. You’re associated with one of the darkest periods in the club’s history. Is that how you want to look back at your career, no matter how financially successful it was?


All we ask is for effort and pride. In return, we promise to give you support both home and away. And when the day comes that you leave Sheffield United, you’ll know you will always be cheered when you return.


THE MANAGEMENT


Even if you do sometimes sound like some Silicone Valley, $50-an-hour motivational speaker, I believe you’re a good guy Mr Adkins.


You’ve been given a good job. A very good job. However we accept you’ve been lumbered with a bloated, imbalanced and in places limited squad. However, it is still a remarkably talented squad and we rightfully believe you should be doing better.


Most of the fans are willing to give you time, I believe. That said, the signings you’ve made this season have been overwhelmingly poor, with none, other than Billy Sharp, making a meaningful contribution to this team.


Your approach to games has been baffling at best and infuriating at worst. Fans would accept losing if it was in a manner which got us excited, but to not meaningfully test a goalkeeper when 17,000 have paid no small sum to watch the team perform is shameful. I accept the performance to an extent depends on the players, but the motivation, fitness, formation and tactics of the team has a much greater bearing on proceedings - and those are factors you have full control over.


Something is rotten in the squad, I believe. If it is a player or a group of players or a culture within the squad, we want you to be brave enough to cut it out no matter what the cost, because it is pulling the whole club down.


I am fed up with seeing over-paid, under-motivated players turn out for the club. We would much prefer to see a young player signed from a lower league come and try to be a success. That player would be given more time and celebrated should he succeed. I appreciate that you won’t always get it right with these kinds of players, but we’d like to see you try and get it right.


You have been given a well-paid job, in a vibrant city, with faithful support and more financial power than most managers could dream of. We now expect you to help steer the club to a more steady, secure place.


THE BOARD


This club has had 12 different managers in less than a decade. None of them have brought success. Are they all bad managers? I doubt it. The buck has to stop with you, the board. Your constant hiring and firing of managers has brought nothing but instability to the club. If you take the decision to appoint a manager (a) do the necessary homework to ensure he is the right man and (b) be brave enough to stick with him long enough to have a meaningful impact on the long-term future of this club. You only need to look at those clubs who have granted managers time to build a team to see how this can be successful.


Danny Wilson, Nigel Clough and Chris Morgan were not bad managers. I take your point with David Weir though.


The club has remarkable support considering its modest position in the football pyramid. We understand that this provides important revenue streams and helps sell the club as ‘big’ to players and sponsors. But this could all change and probably will should we stay in this position, playing the way we’re playing. We’re already not as attractive now as we were four or five years ago.


I ask for more consideration when it comes to appointments, both on and off the field. I appreciate that total financial transparency is not realistic, but I ask that the clubs treats its fans the way they should be treated. After all, the club is not the ground, the players, the brand, the assets or the fans, it’s a mixture of them all, but without the fans, the club is nothing.


Thanks to anyone who has read this far.


Up the Blades.

Send it to the club.
 
Excellent post Vassilis

As for the club reading it, print it out, stick it in an envelope and post it to the club for the attention of McCabe or Phipps

If you also send an email to info@sufc, you will most likely get a response from a very helpful chap. And from experience, he passes things on to the management and people at the top of the tree
 
An open letter to the board, manager and players of Sheffield United.


I doubt anyone connected to the club will read this, but such is my frustration, I’ve taken to posting on a forum which I regularly visit, but rarely post on. Who knows who might read this. I doubt many people will, but I’m doing this mostly as a cathartic exercise to vent some of the huge amount of frustration I'm feeling as a Sheffield United supporter.


I’ve just got back from Bramall Lane, where I’ve witnessed one of the worst displays from a Sheffield United side in my 23 years of going to live games. I’ve lived through some bad United teams in time - Heath, Adams, Blackwell and Robson to name but a few, but at least those teams were terrible in a league above the current crop.


So limp is this ‘team’, that I can only think of one poorer display, and that was when United lost at home to Hartlepool under David Weir. Not that long ago, and we all know how that ended.


As a fan I look for someone to blame. ‘Bad luck’ is not a strong enough excuse for a decade of slow, ugly decline which has only been punctuated by fleeting romances with domestic cup competitions. So I’m directing this at those who I believe are culpable, to different extents, for the state Sheffield United finds itself in.


TO THE PLAYERS


You, the players, perhaps know better than anyone the anger which is being felt by fans of Sheffield United - it can’t be nice to be booed off the pitch so often in a season. We see players who we know can play better. Indeed, of the eleven which started the match against Burton Albion tonight, all but three (Done, Adams, Long) have played the much of their career at a level above League One. Yet we see you being outfoxed, outfought and outplayed by supposedly inferior players.


We accept that you are just earning a living and trying to make as much money as you can in a relatively short career. I doubt many fans would do any differently were we fortunate enough to be blessed with the same talent as you do.


So what should be your motivation? Most of you are not supporters of the Blades and nearly all of you have not been here long enough to have forged any meaningful a affection for the club, despite badge thumping celebrations and headline-making soundbites.


So perhaps your motivation should be this. Sheffield United is a proud club, with a number of great teams through the years. I was lucky enough to catch Deane, Agana et al perform and I won’t ever forget the how watching the Warnock’s triple assault team and promotion-winning side made me feel.


However, you’re on the verge of being synonymous with abject failure, some would argue you already have made that particular bed. You’re associated with one of the darkest periods in the club’s history. Is that how you want to look back at your career, no matter how financially successful it was?


All we ask is for effort and pride. In return, we promise to give you support both home and away. And when the day comes that you leave Sheffield United, you’ll know you will always be cheered when you return.


THE MANAGEMENT


Even if you do sometimes sound like some Silicone Valley, $50-an-hour motivational speaker, I believe you’re a good guy Mr Adkins.


You’ve been given a good job. A very good job. However we accept you’ve been lumbered with a bloated, imbalanced and in places limited squad. However, it is still a remarkably talented squad and we rightfully believe you should be doing better.


Most of the fans are willing to give you time, I believe. That said, the signings you’ve made this season have been overwhelmingly poor, with none, other than Billy Sharp, making a meaningful contribution to this team.


Your approach to games has been baffling at best and infuriating at worst. Fans would accept losing if it was in a manner which got us excited, but to not meaningfully test a goalkeeper when 17,000 have paid no small sum to watch the team perform is shameful. I accept the performance to an extent depends on the players, but the motivation, fitness, formation and tactics of the team has a much greater bearing on proceedings - and those are factors you have full control over.


Something is rotten in the squad, I believe. If it is a player or a group of players or a culture within the squad, we want you to be brave enough to cut it out no matter what the cost, because it is pulling the whole club down.


I am fed up with seeing over-paid, under-motivated players turn out for the club. We would much prefer to see a young player signed from a lower league come and try to be a success. That player would be given more time and celebrated should he succeed. I appreciate that you won’t always get it right with these kinds of players, but we’d like to see you try and get it right.


You have been given a well-paid job, in a vibrant city, with faithful support and more financial power than most managers could dream of. We now expect you to help steer the club to a more steady, secure place.


THE BOARD


This club has had 12 different managers in less than a decade. None of them have brought success. Are they all bad managers? I doubt it. The buck has to stop with you, the board. Your constant hiring and firing of managers has brought nothing but instability to the club. If you take the decision to appoint a manager (a) do the necessary homework to ensure he is the right man and (b) be brave enough to stick with him long enough to have a meaningful impact on the long-term future of this club. You only need to look at those clubs who have granted managers time to build a team to see how this can be successful.


Danny Wilson, Nigel Clough and Chris Morgan were not bad managers. I take your point with David Weir though.


The club has remarkable support considering its modest position in the football pyramid. We understand that this provides important revenue streams and helps sell the club as ‘big’ to players and sponsors. But this could all change and probably will should we stay in this position, playing the way we’re playing. We’re already not as attractive now as we were four or five years ago.


I ask for more consideration when it comes to appointments, both on and off the field. I appreciate that total financial transparency is not realistic, but I ask that the clubs treats its fans the way they should be treated. After all, the club is not the ground, the players, the brand, the assets or the fans, it’s a mixture of them all, but without the fans, the club is nothing.


Thanks to anyone who has read this far.


Up the Blades.
That's the best post I have read on this site,a very considered one it would be good for all parties to receive and take on board every word,well done Vassilis
 
No evidence for Morgan being "not a bad manager". Otherwise good post.
 
Send it!
I don't know who to, but someone more important than us needs to see it.
 
If one of McCabes companies were falling through't floor would he neglect it like he appears to neglecting SUFC?

Beware the trapdoor.

image.jpeg
 

Excellent post.

Never in all my time supporting the Blades have I felt so disconnected to everyone at the club from the boardroom down.

Usually I feel I can relate to the manager, or the spirit or attitudes of the players. We don't even have that any more. We have a manager who speaks in cliches most of the time and a set of players who seem to reach new, unimaginable lows as a collective on a monthly basis.
 
Dear mister McCabe . While your sat in Brussels. Stroking your white cat and counting up the value ofyour. Worldwide investments ,power stations ,coffee chain ,rainbow stores China ,top spring ,hotels ,northern powerhouse, Thorpe park .football clubs , ,or looking at you private 150 m family property trust ,just think you've managed to drag the mighty blades down to the gutter ,but hey kev you still own the freehold ,yours two foot
 
I fully support the comments made in the open letter and I have been supporting the blades for 60 years.
 
I've happily been using Hoofy to describe the twat for a while but I like that one. BTB from now on it is.

You got your wish he's long gone and so are we. Did you honestly not enjoy the back end of the season he took over from Robson? Or the year after when we were winning most week and came so close to automatic promotion. The season after wasn't great but it was nowhere near as bad as this. Like warnock, McCabe made a huge mistake pulling the trigger with Blackwell. I don't think we'd have been relegated to league one if we hadn't have sacked either of them.
 
1st visit to the lane this season.
Frankly over the past 6-7 years I've found better things to do with my time.
The demise seems so more apparent when you go infrequently.
I came expecting a fragile defence (yep, nervous, but not that bad on the night).
I expected a far more disgruntled audience. They were quiet but didn't really turn until Basham and Done fluffed late headers. I am amazed it took that long.
There No.21 bossed midfield. Duffy, I think. Coutts, Edgar and then Basham couldn't touch him. That's the worst contribution from a centre midfield pairing I've seen for a long time.
What amazed me though was how overweight and unfit several players were. Recovering from injury or carrying an injury. That don't rub. We have reserves and juniors riding the crest of a wave at the moment, so there is no excuse carrying players. Stick them in.
I agree whole heartedly with your post V.
I would pay good money to watch a team of tryers. I don't pay good money or more to the point, waste my time watching freeloaders.
I liked the Clough appointment. He brought some much needed discipline both on the pitch and behind the scenes and for about 14 months during the cup runs I thought he was creating something special. Sadly, it didn't materialise. Culminating in a limp and passionless play-off semi final defeat at home to Swindon which I put down to his negative tactics and lack of adventure.
On the other hand I have worried since the outset with Adkins appointment. His rhetoric doesn't instill confidence in both fans and I would guess players neither. I saw a man last night who seemed resigned to failure. A lonely figure on the sideline whose tactics needed changing after 25 mins and whose substitutes weren't tactical but more of a telling off for players who frankly didn't pull their weight.
The good thing with failure is that you tend to see a clear out. I think this summer will be the biggest test United have faced since the 80's. Let's hope the manager earns his stripes, the board are resolute and the fans regain their faith.
 
You got your wish he's long gone and so are we. Did you honestly not enjoy the back end of the season he took over from Robson? Or the year after when we were winning most week and came so close to automatic promotion. The season after wasn't great but it was nowhere near as bad as this. Like warnock, McCabe made a huge mistake pulling the trigger with Blackwell. I don't think we'd have been relegated to league one if we hadn't have sacked either of them.

1. Yes, when he took Robson's team and got them fit enough to perform for more than the 60 minutes Robson could I enjoyed it immensely. Happy to see him given the job on that basis.
2. No. The season when we had the best paid and best squad in the division and he insisted on all his away days being the dullest "must not lose" team I could recall was horrible. We should have pissed the division even with his signing of Hendo.
3. Should have gone when he offered to resign after the Burnley fiasco at Wembley.

Set us firmly on the downward path in my view.
 
Well said and reflects my views but we the fans I think supported both the Clough and Adkins appointments. May be the board have more inside knowledge in football than the fans but can we realty criticise either of these appointments except with the benefit of hindsight and I am sure they were not the "cheap option". The board also tried the "un-proven yet highly thought of" David Weir but that did not work out. If we get rid of NA who do we appoint in his place?



I wasn’t thrilled by the appointment of Clough but was willing to give him a go. My preferred option at the time was Dean Smith. I was however thrilled with the Adkins appointment and whilst in hindsight we might have been better sticking with Clough, I firmly believe Nigel Adkins is a good manager and, given a proper opportunity can get us firing next season if he’s backed to do the re-build properly.


Poor player recruitment, regular changes in management and footballing ethos, failure to land preferred targets and most of all failure to retain better players are the main reasons for me as to why we find ourselves in the mess we do. Year by year we sell our best player and weaken the side a little more. I just hope we can clear the decks and bring in say 9 or 10 players in the summer and that amongst those there will be some gems who can help restore some pride in this club.
 

Great post, covers just about all my frustrations from this season.
 

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