Deadbat
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- Aug 6, 2009
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Midfielders
Michael Doyle Doyle had been much maligned by many since he joined United and whilst it is true to say his arrival has coincided with a poor spell in the Blades recent history, has he been that bad? No is the short answer. He has his limitation, lacking mobility and pace and at times this contributes to our lack of options of other players around him and can slow our play down. However how many really bad games has he had for United this season? Not many. He has been a 7/10 most weeks and been one of our better players in a lot of games. He started the season on the bench but was back in soon enough as the side lacked bite and scored the winning spot kick at West Ham complete with Cockney mocking celebration. The side were woefully inconsistent but he was one of our better players and if you go through my reports many of my ratings/marks for him are remarkably similar. He was one of few who could actually come out of decent and say he kept decent standard most weeks. He maybe ran out of gas as the season went on; as he was rested/did not start for quite a bit of the run in .Some cynics may say our best two performances of 2015 v Barnsley and Scunthorpe came when he was not in the side as we had more ‘legs’ in midfield but I could also point to some excellent displays in other games this season; Southampton comes to mind. He may have given us some much needed byte when it mattered in the Swindon games. His contract was up and he has been released. He has always cared about the club (his teary interview post Charlton) and I think he is gutted to have never led the team back up but ultimately we probably need a different type of player to progress. However there are a quite a lot of other players more responsible for us not going up the last few years than him. It is just circumstance with his contract ending/age and us needing to get more height and mobility that has seen him depart. Still probably fit enough to do a job at this level though and would expect him to turn up with another side at the Lane next season (Port Vale maybe?)
Grade C
Chris Basham Basham came from Blackpool and I must admit I did not know much about him. He had been at Bolton and then Bloomfield Road and was seen as a versatile player that could play right back, centre midfield or centre back. Quite a tall player, he started the season in central midfield but did not impress and was anonymous in many of the games. He was sloppy on the ball and his passing was poor. He was not very physical when in the challenge and for a tall man, his heading was poor. He also missed a number of goal scoring chances; which was to become a feature over the season. He seemed one of a number of poor signings as United struggled to start the season. He ended up on the bench before playing well when he returned at Bradford (his best game so far) on SKY and then a few injuries saw him go to centre back against Yeovil. He was excellent here and it seemed his best position and a series of really strong performances culminating in an inspirational display v Southampton saw him change the fans opinion. He remained at centre back much of the season and whilst his standards were not quite as high as earlier; he still was one of our better players. Not having a regular partner did not help and at times he did have some iffy games as we conceded a lot of aerial goals or on set plays. He had a few games back in midfield and actually did well there and many fans felt now that was his best position too! He ended up being needed in both areas but unfortunately ended up more at centre back so the height and strength we needed in central midfield was solely missing. Evidently he was excellent at Barnsley but then went back to centre back. Played midfield and did well v Swindon at the Lane but then ended up back at centre back. Overall after a shaky start he became one of our more consistent players. Not bad on the ball, competitive and a decent size, Basham was one of the few who could be happy with his season. The one knock was that he lacks pace…another ingredient we badly lack. Oh and he seemingly is destined to never score for the club. He missed a number of good chances, hit the woodwork numerous times and did everything but find the net. After Howard, Doyle and Murphy, played the most games this season and if he can nail down a regular positon; hopefully will be one we can count on next season.
Grade B-
Paul Coutts A player that Clough had chased for a while and it seemed he would never get back to the Derby first team after a number of injuries. He signed on a free on a 2 and a half year deal which seemed a little long considering his injury problems. He made his debut v Swindon and showed he was a mobile, neat and tidy sort of player but then after this I must say I was quite disappointed with him to say the least. He played central and wide but never convinced (admittedly I was not at Barnsley when he was apparently good). I recall him being decent v Oldham as a sub but struggling to name many stand out performances. He did ok for the second half of Swindon and was one of our better players but to see fit, athletic and fast players in opposition against him and our other midfielders was difficult to watch. Games passed him by and he looked slow (maybe never fully fit) with a poor touch and lacked strength, power or pace to go past players. He was billed as technically being very good but I never saw much of it. He was more mobile than maybe Baxter and a few others but that was about biggest compliment I could give him. Another slow, limited player for midfield who did not really offer much at all. Needs to get fully fit for next season and show us the player he has been when decent at PNE and also Derby.
Grade D-
Ryan Flynn Flynn was one of the players who seemed to turn his form around when Clough arrived. Teaming up with Brayford he was an integral part of our run to Wembley and climb up the league. Suddenly he had aggression, forward running and seemed to acquire some pace from somewhere. His confidence soared and it was seen as imperative we re-signed him. We did just before the end of the season. He did not start the season in quite the same vain and was dropped after a few games. He alternated between starting and on the bench as Campbell Ryce found himself in favour at times. Neither was consistent though and ended up alternating much of the time. Flynn did not have the same player behind him with Alcock rarely going forward. Ironically Flynn ended up at right back when we had a number of injuries. He did really well and some suggested that may be his best position. He did play well, mostly defending sensibly, getting forward when he could and certainly improved from his early season form. Positionally he got caught out a few times (Spurs equaliser) and he picked up an injury soon after. Brayford then came in, Campbell Ryce departed and we ended up with likes of Coutts and Baxter wide right before he came back in but was in and out due seemingly never staying fit. Did play well v Swindon at the Lane. It has been a bit of a stop start season and he certainly has not got back to form of end of last season (can say same about a few) but he did well at right back and you still feel he is the best we have in that right wing position when he does play. Hopefully he can get back to some more consistent form when teamed up regularly with Brayford and we have a more settled backline too to help both of them.
Grade C
Jamie MurphyLike Flynn finished the season flying, looking a goal threat, showing pace, trickery and always seemingly going at defenders putting them on the back foot. He was a revelation in the final few months. He signed an extended contract but actually had a slow start to the season and even he had a few games on the bench. Slowly got going and scored a wonderful winner against Gillingham at the death before scoring a few more individual goals, v Yeovil and then a stunner (eventually voted the goal of the season) at Doncaster. His form gradually picked up and he again looked our most impressive players causing major problems versus Premier League players in the games v Southampton and Spurs. He gave Kyle Walker a sorry time over two legs and was our man of the match in the home leg helping turn it around. Sadly teams knew he was our main threat and started to double up on him or force inside. However he still was a threat and scored some lovely finishes v Swindon, Bristol City and Notts County. He showed he was so cool when one on one often waiting for the keeper to go to ground and then dinking it over him. You had every confidence he would score when faced with such situations. Always looking to go at defenders the only time he struggled is when teams would double up or we did not get him the ball enough. Was rested a bit in the run in but came back for the playoffs. If we had more goal threats and better players round the team, then opponents could not just focus on him but at the moment they know he is our main threat. Lovely body control, glides over the pitch and a goal threat; it is sure if we do not go up next season then Murphy may move on regardless of his contract. He is definitely capable of playing a league above at least and I would not be surprised if the club has to field offers for him this summer. Rightly our player of the season. One of the few United players I really enjoyed watching and one of the few who was fairly consistent for the most part. Shame many others got nowhere near his standard.
Grade B+
Stephen McGinn a player Clough always says never moaned and was a good club man but he was well of the first team. He played four cup games but was less than impressive in all of those. He was always seen as a passer but was quite poor in retention. Slow and lacking mobility; he was a signing from the Weir era that played his best game in his first game (v Notts County) and was never close to being a regular. Joined Dundee, at first on loan but then permanently. Was not even a regular up there as he joined his brother Paul at Dens Park.
Grade E
Stephan Scougall one of the players who embodied the run to end the last season. Bright, positive and energetic. He was one of the key players scoring some vital goals and showing great pace and running with some lung bursting runs and dribbles from midfield. Still hard to see if he would be central midfield or off the striker but there was enough to suggest we had picked up a gem. This season sadly was a different story. He started the season poorly and many fans felt he should have been taken out of the firing line. It was felt he and Baxter were one too many small players. Scougall lacked the drive and goal threat of last season. He was eventually taken out of the side and was in and out as the team selections fluctuated week to week. He did finally score v Crewe, the winner, but assists and goals did not happen and games passed him by when he did play. He picked up an injury and was out for a few months after getting a kick against Preston in the cup. I cannot say we missed him as his impact in the second season was minimal. He did ok in a few substitute appearances towards the end of the season but then got injured after an ineffectual spell v Swindon and was done. It has been a wasted season and he has to improve massively if he wants to be a first team regular. Still has time on his side in terms of his age and 2 more years on United’s contract but sadly over the longer spell of this season compared to the last few months of the previous; he looked more like a Scottish Division One player than one who was capable of playing in the second tier of the English league.
Grade D-
James Wallace His mark may seem high for the few games he played but I am marking him on the games he did play rather than the injuries and waste of time he was much of the campaign. We signed him from Tranmere and a work colleague from Birkenhead said he was a crock and would never play. I thought there may have been some bitterness they had lost one of their best players but my mate was spot on. He played 7 league games. SEVEN. Actually in most of these games he was really good. He got up and down, liked a tackle, was an organiser and decent on the ball with a range of passes. He seemed a top player but often he never lasted 90 minutes and would regularly be seen limping off holding his hip, back, knee or thigh. He would play in the reserves and get injured and it seemed he would never be fit. A final injury when he seemed he may be on the way back in such a game saw his season effectively finished. There was talk he may return and had been training before game but he never did return. I hope he can come back and play as he does look a good player but history over last 3 seasons suggests not. He has made less than 20 starts in two seasons and the most appearances (not even starts) he has had in his whole career is 19. It is a gamble that has not come off sadly. Has another year on his contract and will be probably be given the summer to try and return but if he does not then it may be best for both parties to amicable separate.
Grade C-
Kieron Wallace Signed just after Che Adams signed from the same club Ilkeston. Soon after he was involved in the Spurs cup games and then started at Fleetwood. He was involved on and off around Xmas but I did not see anything better than what we had. I felt he looked quite slow, lacking technical ability and unsure what Clough had seen. An awful free kick and then telegraphed pass in a game he came on as substitute was the last we saw of him. Ended the season at non league Lincoln and even the fans there did not seem that impressed. Completely baffling decision to retain him for another year for me. Another that looks miles off being a regular at league level.
Grade E
Jason Holt I must admit I do not watch Scottish football and had never heard of Holt. I was even less impressed when I realised he was not even in the first team at Hearts. What concerned me as much was his stature. He was another tiny player adding to the set of them already at the club when this division and its recent history suggests height and brawn sadly does go a long way. He had a few ineffective sub appearances before playing well at Bristol City and assisting on the equaliser. He then got into the team a month or so later as poor form and injuries gave him a chance. He played in central midfield but a more advanced position than defensive. He scored a lovely curled effort v Scunthorpe and then scored again v Crewe too. He carried on such from with a great goal to seal the game at Oakwell and another ‘Johnny on the spot’ goal at Oldham and this was repeated v Bradford. He provided a real lift in that he would get beyond the strikers and also get into the box in Frank Lampard style of deep lying runs. He could also finish. However despite all these goals and this skill; I have to say in general play he was anonymous much of the time and many games (until he scored in some) I did not even know he was playing! It is an odd one as he has scored some important goals but I look at Baxter, Scougall, Coutts and others and they are all much of a muchness. I would even go as far to say that all those mentioned offer more than him. I personally would not sign him in the summer and it seems Clough has agreed as it seems he is now a free agent.
Grade C
Michael Doyle Doyle had been much maligned by many since he joined United and whilst it is true to say his arrival has coincided with a poor spell in the Blades recent history, has he been that bad? No is the short answer. He has his limitation, lacking mobility and pace and at times this contributes to our lack of options of other players around him and can slow our play down. However how many really bad games has he had for United this season? Not many. He has been a 7/10 most weeks and been one of our better players in a lot of games. He started the season on the bench but was back in soon enough as the side lacked bite and scored the winning spot kick at West Ham complete with Cockney mocking celebration. The side were woefully inconsistent but he was one of our better players and if you go through my reports many of my ratings/marks for him are remarkably similar. He was one of few who could actually come out of decent and say he kept decent standard most weeks. He maybe ran out of gas as the season went on; as he was rested/did not start for quite a bit of the run in .Some cynics may say our best two performances of 2015 v Barnsley and Scunthorpe came when he was not in the side as we had more ‘legs’ in midfield but I could also point to some excellent displays in other games this season; Southampton comes to mind. He may have given us some much needed byte when it mattered in the Swindon games. His contract was up and he has been released. He has always cared about the club (his teary interview post Charlton) and I think he is gutted to have never led the team back up but ultimately we probably need a different type of player to progress. However there are a quite a lot of other players more responsible for us not going up the last few years than him. It is just circumstance with his contract ending/age and us needing to get more height and mobility that has seen him depart. Still probably fit enough to do a job at this level though and would expect him to turn up with another side at the Lane next season (Port Vale maybe?)
Grade C
Chris Basham Basham came from Blackpool and I must admit I did not know much about him. He had been at Bolton and then Bloomfield Road and was seen as a versatile player that could play right back, centre midfield or centre back. Quite a tall player, he started the season in central midfield but did not impress and was anonymous in many of the games. He was sloppy on the ball and his passing was poor. He was not very physical when in the challenge and for a tall man, his heading was poor. He also missed a number of goal scoring chances; which was to become a feature over the season. He seemed one of a number of poor signings as United struggled to start the season. He ended up on the bench before playing well when he returned at Bradford (his best game so far) on SKY and then a few injuries saw him go to centre back against Yeovil. He was excellent here and it seemed his best position and a series of really strong performances culminating in an inspirational display v Southampton saw him change the fans opinion. He remained at centre back much of the season and whilst his standards were not quite as high as earlier; he still was one of our better players. Not having a regular partner did not help and at times he did have some iffy games as we conceded a lot of aerial goals or on set plays. He had a few games back in midfield and actually did well there and many fans felt now that was his best position too! He ended up being needed in both areas but unfortunately ended up more at centre back so the height and strength we needed in central midfield was solely missing. Evidently he was excellent at Barnsley but then went back to centre back. Played midfield and did well v Swindon at the Lane but then ended up back at centre back. Overall after a shaky start he became one of our more consistent players. Not bad on the ball, competitive and a decent size, Basham was one of the few who could be happy with his season. The one knock was that he lacks pace…another ingredient we badly lack. Oh and he seemingly is destined to never score for the club. He missed a number of good chances, hit the woodwork numerous times and did everything but find the net. After Howard, Doyle and Murphy, played the most games this season and if he can nail down a regular positon; hopefully will be one we can count on next season.
Grade B-
Paul Coutts A player that Clough had chased for a while and it seemed he would never get back to the Derby first team after a number of injuries. He signed on a free on a 2 and a half year deal which seemed a little long considering his injury problems. He made his debut v Swindon and showed he was a mobile, neat and tidy sort of player but then after this I must say I was quite disappointed with him to say the least. He played central and wide but never convinced (admittedly I was not at Barnsley when he was apparently good). I recall him being decent v Oldham as a sub but struggling to name many stand out performances. He did ok for the second half of Swindon and was one of our better players but to see fit, athletic and fast players in opposition against him and our other midfielders was difficult to watch. Games passed him by and he looked slow (maybe never fully fit) with a poor touch and lacked strength, power or pace to go past players. He was billed as technically being very good but I never saw much of it. He was more mobile than maybe Baxter and a few others but that was about biggest compliment I could give him. Another slow, limited player for midfield who did not really offer much at all. Needs to get fully fit for next season and show us the player he has been when decent at PNE and also Derby.
Grade D-
Ryan Flynn Flynn was one of the players who seemed to turn his form around when Clough arrived. Teaming up with Brayford he was an integral part of our run to Wembley and climb up the league. Suddenly he had aggression, forward running and seemed to acquire some pace from somewhere. His confidence soared and it was seen as imperative we re-signed him. We did just before the end of the season. He did not start the season in quite the same vain and was dropped after a few games. He alternated between starting and on the bench as Campbell Ryce found himself in favour at times. Neither was consistent though and ended up alternating much of the time. Flynn did not have the same player behind him with Alcock rarely going forward. Ironically Flynn ended up at right back when we had a number of injuries. He did really well and some suggested that may be his best position. He did play well, mostly defending sensibly, getting forward when he could and certainly improved from his early season form. Positionally he got caught out a few times (Spurs equaliser) and he picked up an injury soon after. Brayford then came in, Campbell Ryce departed and we ended up with likes of Coutts and Baxter wide right before he came back in but was in and out due seemingly never staying fit. Did play well v Swindon at the Lane. It has been a bit of a stop start season and he certainly has not got back to form of end of last season (can say same about a few) but he did well at right back and you still feel he is the best we have in that right wing position when he does play. Hopefully he can get back to some more consistent form when teamed up regularly with Brayford and we have a more settled backline too to help both of them.
Grade C
Jamie MurphyLike Flynn finished the season flying, looking a goal threat, showing pace, trickery and always seemingly going at defenders putting them on the back foot. He was a revelation in the final few months. He signed an extended contract but actually had a slow start to the season and even he had a few games on the bench. Slowly got going and scored a wonderful winner against Gillingham at the death before scoring a few more individual goals, v Yeovil and then a stunner (eventually voted the goal of the season) at Doncaster. His form gradually picked up and he again looked our most impressive players causing major problems versus Premier League players in the games v Southampton and Spurs. He gave Kyle Walker a sorry time over two legs and was our man of the match in the home leg helping turn it around. Sadly teams knew he was our main threat and started to double up on him or force inside. However he still was a threat and scored some lovely finishes v Swindon, Bristol City and Notts County. He showed he was so cool when one on one often waiting for the keeper to go to ground and then dinking it over him. You had every confidence he would score when faced with such situations. Always looking to go at defenders the only time he struggled is when teams would double up or we did not get him the ball enough. Was rested a bit in the run in but came back for the playoffs. If we had more goal threats and better players round the team, then opponents could not just focus on him but at the moment they know he is our main threat. Lovely body control, glides over the pitch and a goal threat; it is sure if we do not go up next season then Murphy may move on regardless of his contract. He is definitely capable of playing a league above at least and I would not be surprised if the club has to field offers for him this summer. Rightly our player of the season. One of the few United players I really enjoyed watching and one of the few who was fairly consistent for the most part. Shame many others got nowhere near his standard.
Grade B+
Stephen McGinn a player Clough always says never moaned and was a good club man but he was well of the first team. He played four cup games but was less than impressive in all of those. He was always seen as a passer but was quite poor in retention. Slow and lacking mobility; he was a signing from the Weir era that played his best game in his first game (v Notts County) and was never close to being a regular. Joined Dundee, at first on loan but then permanently. Was not even a regular up there as he joined his brother Paul at Dens Park.
Grade E
Stephan Scougall one of the players who embodied the run to end the last season. Bright, positive and energetic. He was one of the key players scoring some vital goals and showing great pace and running with some lung bursting runs and dribbles from midfield. Still hard to see if he would be central midfield or off the striker but there was enough to suggest we had picked up a gem. This season sadly was a different story. He started the season poorly and many fans felt he should have been taken out of the firing line. It was felt he and Baxter were one too many small players. Scougall lacked the drive and goal threat of last season. He was eventually taken out of the side and was in and out as the team selections fluctuated week to week. He did finally score v Crewe, the winner, but assists and goals did not happen and games passed him by when he did play. He picked up an injury and was out for a few months after getting a kick against Preston in the cup. I cannot say we missed him as his impact in the second season was minimal. He did ok in a few substitute appearances towards the end of the season but then got injured after an ineffectual spell v Swindon and was done. It has been a wasted season and he has to improve massively if he wants to be a first team regular. Still has time on his side in terms of his age and 2 more years on United’s contract but sadly over the longer spell of this season compared to the last few months of the previous; he looked more like a Scottish Division One player than one who was capable of playing in the second tier of the English league.
Grade D-
James Wallace His mark may seem high for the few games he played but I am marking him on the games he did play rather than the injuries and waste of time he was much of the campaign. We signed him from Tranmere and a work colleague from Birkenhead said he was a crock and would never play. I thought there may have been some bitterness they had lost one of their best players but my mate was spot on. He played 7 league games. SEVEN. Actually in most of these games he was really good. He got up and down, liked a tackle, was an organiser and decent on the ball with a range of passes. He seemed a top player but often he never lasted 90 minutes and would regularly be seen limping off holding his hip, back, knee or thigh. He would play in the reserves and get injured and it seemed he would never be fit. A final injury when he seemed he may be on the way back in such a game saw his season effectively finished. There was talk he may return and had been training before game but he never did return. I hope he can come back and play as he does look a good player but history over last 3 seasons suggests not. He has made less than 20 starts in two seasons and the most appearances (not even starts) he has had in his whole career is 19. It is a gamble that has not come off sadly. Has another year on his contract and will be probably be given the summer to try and return but if he does not then it may be best for both parties to amicable separate.
Grade C-
Kieron Wallace Signed just after Che Adams signed from the same club Ilkeston. Soon after he was involved in the Spurs cup games and then started at Fleetwood. He was involved on and off around Xmas but I did not see anything better than what we had. I felt he looked quite slow, lacking technical ability and unsure what Clough had seen. An awful free kick and then telegraphed pass in a game he came on as substitute was the last we saw of him. Ended the season at non league Lincoln and even the fans there did not seem that impressed. Completely baffling decision to retain him for another year for me. Another that looks miles off being a regular at league level.
Grade E
Jason Holt I must admit I do not watch Scottish football and had never heard of Holt. I was even less impressed when I realised he was not even in the first team at Hearts. What concerned me as much was his stature. He was another tiny player adding to the set of them already at the club when this division and its recent history suggests height and brawn sadly does go a long way. He had a few ineffective sub appearances before playing well at Bristol City and assisting on the equaliser. He then got into the team a month or so later as poor form and injuries gave him a chance. He played in central midfield but a more advanced position than defensive. He scored a lovely curled effort v Scunthorpe and then scored again v Crewe too. He carried on such from with a great goal to seal the game at Oakwell and another ‘Johnny on the spot’ goal at Oldham and this was repeated v Bradford. He provided a real lift in that he would get beyond the strikers and also get into the box in Frank Lampard style of deep lying runs. He could also finish. However despite all these goals and this skill; I have to say in general play he was anonymous much of the time and many games (until he scored in some) I did not even know he was playing! It is an odd one as he has scored some important goals but I look at Baxter, Scougall, Coutts and others and they are all much of a muchness. I would even go as far to say that all those mentioned offer more than him. I personally would not sign him in the summer and it seems Clough has agreed as it seems he is now a free agent.
Grade C