Pinchy
Blade, not Bladey.
I disagree with your first sentence by quite a long way.
Multiple times teams came to the Lane and shut up shop. We played patient possession football and eventually found a way through, and it often led to more than one goal in the end. This happened loads of times at home, it was great to watch and I enjoyed it. We got 90 points and should have gone up, not one team in the entire football league including all 3 champions got 90 points this season, there is no doubt we were monumentally unlucky to not go up last year. But because we didn't and the 'approach' didn't work it seems we need to forget the progress and go backwards.
This year it didn't work, and personally I attribute this to the lack of pace and decent ball players in midfield after the loss of Quinn and Williamson. All of a sudden McDonald doesn't have anyone reliable to pass to who he knows can accept a ball, control it and move it on. We simply didn't retain possession as well at home, and so teams didn't have to work as hard against us and the chances and goals dried up.
Get midfielders who can pass the ball, retain possession better then the opposition and it will lead to results. The second half at Yeovil surely is a recent enough example of why going back aimless isn't the way to do it. Pace and control are what's needed and don't talk to me about our players not being able to do it, as Yeovil displayed enough of pace and technique and they are put together on a fraction of what we are.
The other half of the problem was playing 2 target men up front. Porter and Ironside in the same team when we have Murphy with some pace stuck out on the wing? Just poor tactics and nothing to do with hoof vs passing. In fact the Yeovil game is a prime example of why a direct approach might not work even in this division. We had 2 big lads up front, who were ineffectual, and 2 wingers who actually played ok. Yet in the 2nd half even with prototypical target man Kitson up there we did nothing, because their physical centre halves lapped it up.
We don't have quagmire pitches any more, refs blow up for anything physical up front, direct play does not suit the modern game even in this league.
Worth considering that last time in this division, we had Brian Deane and Tony Agana, who coupled with players like Bryson allowed the direct stuff to work. If we can sign Deane and Agana again, it might be worth giving it a try - although I still don't think it would work long term, and we'd struggle in the Championship which has moved on a level, but I agree it might get us out of the division. The main question being - where do we find a new Deane and Agana?
For me, the way forward has to be with sound footballing principles top to bottom, and trying to go back to 1989 and hoping that approach works smacks of short-termism, and even then there is no guarantee it's going to cut it even in this division.
I'd love to give you two likes, Wilf. One for the generality of your post and another for 'prototypical'. I bet you like real ale as well.