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It seems the mandate was along the lines of 'if in doubt, spend it'.I read that as he chucked him under the bus. Is he actually being complimentary about him saying he was chucked in when he shouldn't have been?
Not sure i agree TBH. A £23m players should be ready to play.
I'll watch this later
It also had a hugely damaging effect on my respect for him as a person and as a proud Sheffield lad.He is - I agree.
But he quit when the going got tough and that had a hugely damaging effect on the club and the squad.
It's almost like there's blame for lots of people. Like lots of people performed poorly and made mistakesI think its becoming clear from some of Slav's comments - signings promised and training facilities being an absolute shambles. Can't really say more than that but if you go back and read between the lines there's lots of stuff that wilder said when he was at the club that the prince didn't like, because it was true (and has come out as true since), some of the things that the prince has defended has also been proved to be a real bending of the truth...
And then if you follow some of the ITK journalists, some of the ITK people on here, some people on Social media, they all say the same things.
Don't also forget that Wilder didn't have 100% say on the bigger transfers... no manager in the top league seems to when there is so much cash involved.
If you feel like the heart and soul has been ripped out of the club since Wilder left, then you're probably on to something... If you feel like Wilder is to blame for all of where we are right now, then good luck to you in life.
He really didn't have much of an idea how to build from a position of strength which probably will mark him as a very good manager rather than a great one.TBF the Premier League is almost like a different game. We are not a Premier League set up in most ways so a bit harsh to give Wilder all the blame for that. I still think he did a great job in getting the team there and the first season was amazing. It's just such a shame that he/we couldn't go again and that the relegation season was just so damaging.
In other words, he was lucky for a while, then his luck ran out.Wilder was untouchable. An unblemished and meteoric rise in stature and reputation over a 4 year period and very much a darling of the media.
Astute in the transfer market, genuinely innovative tactics, excellent all round manager and unbelievable results
For whatever reason, he lost his way, lost his nerve, maybe believed his own hype, and failed spectacularly in the last part of his tenure.
As a result now, outside of Sheffield, he's seen as someone who's wasted a fucking ludicrous sum of money making a team worse, been unable to adapt to adverse circumstances or show flexibility and ultimately threw in the towel when the going got tough
This has decimated his reputation as a top tier manager, and he'll need to rebuild. Listening to some of his comments about Covid/fans etc, whilst he mentioned fault still dont think he's fully shouldered responsibility for the demise, fall from grace and smouldering wreck he left behind
I'm sure he'll rebuild, and have a career as a decent championship level manager, but don't think he'll ever have it as good again. Not to sully his first few years, but he was very much right man, right place, right time.
How we doing this season with fans?Three reasons we went down last season, covid /no fans, no Henderson, no JOC. Fans in the ground, comfortable mid table finish
What ability to spot gems? Sold DCL,Ramsdale,Brooks,Adams for peanutsWilder gave us 4 fabulous seasons
then someone gave him money which he had no idea how to spend it
big flaw for a prem manager
If only hed trusted his ability to find a gem
He really didn't have much of an idea how to build from a position of strength which probably will mark him as a very good manager rather than a great one.
You could strongly make a case it was his competitively assembled promotion team that finished 9th really. 9 of the 11 were already fixtures there plus Lundstram replaced Duffy making 10.
Then, as much as he can point to Mousse getting 6 and McBurnie likewise, McBurnie got 7 goals in 3434 PL mins, Mousset 6 in 1521 PL mins, I'm not convinced they added much more than what was already in place.
The desire to replace Billy was another theme, yet Sharp, the top scorer of the promotion season, notched 6 in 1,775 PL minutes. In fact his overall 9 in 2,190 also got us progress in Cups whilst Mousse extends to 1,716 mins and McBurnie to 3,774 mins without adding any further goals.
In other words:
McBurnie cost us 17m, scored a PL goal every 5.5 matches and a goal in all competitions every 6 matches.
Mousset cost us 10m, scored a PL goal every 2.8 matches and a goal in all competitions every 3.2 matches.
Meanwhile Sharp, who was already here, scored a PL goal every 3.3 matches and a goal in all competitions every 2.7 matches.
So if we'd have done a Norwich, statistically, I don't see things having panned out much differently, but we would have been 100m to the good.
It might have been better, if some deals were beyond us, just sticking with what we had and keeping the cash, rather than go down the list and take players so far down they weren't worth signing.
Rather than feel threatened by it, he should have been open to strengthening the recruitment team. You could make a case the quality of the loans this time outstrips the arrivals during any window since promotion. If only he'd have been more open minded.
I'm not sure on the latter point regarding still being in the PL because O'Connell's absence would have had to have been treated differently, where the system unravelled without him. But we couldn't have been worse last year that's for sure.So based on the statistics, if we'd stuck with the old guard right through the side, and played Mcgoldrick and Sharp up front, we'd probably have got in to Europe and still been in the Premier League now.
That shows how astonishingly good that side was that came through the divisions.
In other words, he was lucky for a while, then his luck ran out.
Unfortunately, those in charge didn’t have the nous to realise that before he frittered away enough money to endanger the clubs future
Spot on imho.Wilder was untouchable. An unblemished and meteoric rise in stature and reputation over a 4 year period and very much a darling of the media.
Astute in the transfer market, genuinely innovative tactics, excellent all round manager and unbelievable results
For whatever reason, he lost his way, lost his nerve, maybe believed his own hype, and failed spectacularly in the last part of his tenure.
As a result now, outside of Sheffield, he's seen as someone who's wasted a fucking ludicrous sum of money making a team worse, been unable to adapt to adverse circumstances or show flexibility and ultimately threw in the towel when the going got tough
This has decimated his reputation as a top tier manager, and he'll need to rebuild. Listening to some of his comments about Covid/fans etc, whilst he mentioned fault still dont think he's fully shouldered responsibility for the demise, fall from grace and smouldering wreck he left behind
I'm sure he'll rebuild, and have a career as a decent championship level manager, but don't think he'll ever have it as good again. Not to sully his first few years, but he was very much right man, right place, right time.
and the 2nd season ......... ?![]()
Ahead of Harris?
Harris had 9 and half seasons in top division. Bassett had 4
We need the SJ team to show some of the unity, fight and swagger that Chris and his team bought. That is what gets fans excited at BDTBL, not the passing about within our own 18 yard box from a goal kick.
This sums his time up with us perfectlyI think the Wilder debate has been done over that many times. It’s people’s opinions, my opinion is he fully screwed up his last season and hurt his legacy with the signings/ interviews / public ownership fall out.
But when Wilder was good and motivated I wouldn’t choose any other man to be in charge of my football club.
It was a bit like when we finished well under Clough and had a good cup run. It was all geared up for a winning next season and the preseason just got too weird.Spot on imho.
He's clearly a good manager as his record shows as he climbed the leagues over a number of years, often dealing with difficult financial circumstances.
Time will tell but I guess the question will remain that can he manage higher up with a budget until he proves otherwise.
Whatever, it was a fantastic ride albeit too short.
A mention needs to go to Alan Knill for the system and some changes that were made.
However, time to move on and those who can't cope with his departure, need to stop looking for sticks to beat the club with.
Teams in our level of wealth have to do it all the timeWhat ability to spot gems? Sold DCL,Ramsdale,Brooks,Adams for peanuts
Just like Dr Frankenstein, Wilder created a patchwork monster, that eventually destroyed itself. It seems to have also destroyed his own reputation...Wilder is lucky he never had to to face the angry mob.I think the Wilder debate has been done over that many times. It’s people’s opinions, my opinion is he fully screwed up his last season and hurt his legacy with the signings/ interviews / public ownership fall out.
But when Wilder was good and motivated I wouldn’t choose any other man to be in charge of my football club.
Great Post.It was a bit like when we finished well under Clough and had a good cup run. It was all geared up for a winning next season and the preseason just got too weird.
A few things I just simply didn't understand why Chris didn't do things differently because it was well within his capabilities to have done so:
1. His original plan was to have Freeman challenge Duffy. He wanted more creativity. So with Lundstram playing up, with his 3 month purple patch over, why did he send Freeman to Forest? Why did he not just go back to plan A and Play Freeman behind the strikers as originally intended? Why did the solution have to be just signing new players?
2. Why did he not change the system when O'Connell was out? It was obvious Bryan and Robinson were no more then stop gaps. He'd played other formations, and not 3 at the back, before he came to us. Why did he not develop one of those and park the 3 with JOC out?
3. Why did he insist on spending so much on fees leaving little left for other things? Having a 30m pound Chris Wilder Training Complex and Academy would have been a far better legacy than hoping Brewster, McBurnie, Berge etc turn it around to recapture some value. It seemed saving face became more important than the long term of the club.
4. Similarly, as a new found PL team with more pull than many, how come we didn't get any decent Bosman's? Did our net just not stretch wide enough? Why did we not use up all our loan options in the final year yet end up short on midfielders and lacking in defence?
5. Why did he show such little understanding around COVID? Bleating to the media about the training ground and roof seemed wilfully blind with a number of major income streams compromised. This seemed a far cry from not tipping up the owner in search of cash that he previously mentioned.
Simple stuff really that was bread and butter to Chris. I felt quite let down because everything suggested that he'd handle those situations well. At some point his focus got lost. I don't dislike Chris. He did very well overall, but if he'd shown more maturity and resilience in the face of adversity he could have created a 10 year legacy. Look at his mate Dyche. He has a tiny squad, makes just one or two key additions each window and that's it. He embraces their limitations. He doesn't bleat about them.
We've always lacked that killer instinct that lets you go on and achieve50 years ago today under Harris we were unbeaten in 7 (W6, D1) , proudly and deservedly top of the league! Still finished a respectable 10th and played some nice football.
"that’s why it hurts so much that he repeatedly offered to quit and eventually did. It was like how I assume your dad waking out on you as a kid feels"Wilder gave us something we never had. The whole country was talking about us. We lived in a bubble where we would never be without Wilder as manager. It was incredible. I think that’s why it hurts so much that he repeatedly offered to quit and eventually did. It was like how I assume your dad waking out on you as a kid feels.
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