Stebop
Member
- Joined
- Nov 2, 2009
- Messages
- 108
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- 678
‘Yeah, but can he do it at a big club?’
‘I don’t understand why Arsenal/Spurs/West Ham didn’t give him the job!’
Now we’re the current media darlings, I’ve started to notice these views popping up in some shape or form in a number of pundit and non-Blades supporter reviews of our season.
I think what pisses me off about this the most is it not only belittles our hard-earned status and what we’ve got going on right now, but it also suggests Chris Wilder sees United as a necessary stop on his inevitable career path to manage some bland London club or other who’ve won more trophies.
So to address those points - yes, he can do it at a big club. We are that big club, and we’re growing at a rate of knots cheers! We’ll be a bigger club - financially, in overall fanbase, worldwide status and player calibre - at the end of this season than before we started it. Imagine how big we’ll be given the current trajectory in five years’ time, especially if we do manage to snag a Champions League spot or five. Obviously we’ll never be MASSIVE, but we’ll be pretty big!
Secondly - let’s say those teams did ‘give him the job’, why would he take it? Given everything he’s built here already, the rewards he’s reaping, and barring International ambitions, isn’t he already in his dream job?
He's a childhood Blades fan, loves the city, surrounded by his friends and family, likes nipping down his local for a pint or five whenever we're not playing on a Saturday, has an established bus route for getting his haircut in Town, he's now a millionaire by all accounts, and he'll comfortably be a multi-millionaire by the time he retires. The ownership dispute is over and Prince is investing in players who've played Champions League football. We're currently pushing for Champions League football with a squad who've barely played above Championship level. What are we gonna be pushing for by the end of next season?
Why would he go to Arsenal, Spurs, Man Utd even? What's the point? He doesn't need the money, he's building a legacy at the Lane, he has a chance to BURY Wednesday and their share of the available Sheffield fanbase for generations. We've got a cracking stadium already which can be expanded upon, and while the training facilities already seem good bar location, we’re apparently looking to develop those.
I guess I can see why some people who don’t ‘get us’ may think he'll have his head turned by one of their hallowed teams coming in for him, but think about this for a moment - would you? You're presented with a chance to continue the successful legacy of a club you don't support and have no connection to, versus the chance to write a historic new chapter at a club you've loved since you were a kid, and potentially leave a legacy beyond anything that’s gone before. You're literally standing at the precipice of this and decide to jack it in and start again somewhere else?
Regardless of how it works out for Sander Berge, signing him stuck a huge F-off marker in the ground to show where Wilder and the board see us being NOW and going forward. Plenty of pundits and other team’s supporters have again misread the signing as some strange anomaly. I think Sander and his people can just read the direction of travel far better than any of them.
Call me a soppy sod, but I’m struggling to spot another team in England right now who can match what’s happening at the Lane - be it authenticity, player commitment and character, connection with the fans, sporting values, feelgood factor, or sheer potential - and I reckon Wilder might be a soppy sod too!
Anyway, nice to get that off my chest - next rant will be the ‘they’ll struggle next season’ fallacy!
‘I don’t understand why Arsenal/Spurs/West Ham didn’t give him the job!’
Now we’re the current media darlings, I’ve started to notice these views popping up in some shape or form in a number of pundit and non-Blades supporter reviews of our season.
I think what pisses me off about this the most is it not only belittles our hard-earned status and what we’ve got going on right now, but it also suggests Chris Wilder sees United as a necessary stop on his inevitable career path to manage some bland London club or other who’ve won more trophies.
So to address those points - yes, he can do it at a big club. We are that big club, and we’re growing at a rate of knots cheers! We’ll be a bigger club - financially, in overall fanbase, worldwide status and player calibre - at the end of this season than before we started it. Imagine how big we’ll be given the current trajectory in five years’ time, especially if we do manage to snag a Champions League spot or five. Obviously we’ll never be MASSIVE, but we’ll be pretty big!
Secondly - let’s say those teams did ‘give him the job’, why would he take it? Given everything he’s built here already, the rewards he’s reaping, and barring International ambitions, isn’t he already in his dream job?
He's a childhood Blades fan, loves the city, surrounded by his friends and family, likes nipping down his local for a pint or five whenever we're not playing on a Saturday, has an established bus route for getting his haircut in Town, he's now a millionaire by all accounts, and he'll comfortably be a multi-millionaire by the time he retires. The ownership dispute is over and Prince is investing in players who've played Champions League football. We're currently pushing for Champions League football with a squad who've barely played above Championship level. What are we gonna be pushing for by the end of next season?
Why would he go to Arsenal, Spurs, Man Utd even? What's the point? He doesn't need the money, he's building a legacy at the Lane, he has a chance to BURY Wednesday and their share of the available Sheffield fanbase for generations. We've got a cracking stadium already which can be expanded upon, and while the training facilities already seem good bar location, we’re apparently looking to develop those.
I guess I can see why some people who don’t ‘get us’ may think he'll have his head turned by one of their hallowed teams coming in for him, but think about this for a moment - would you? You're presented with a chance to continue the successful legacy of a club you don't support and have no connection to, versus the chance to write a historic new chapter at a club you've loved since you were a kid, and potentially leave a legacy beyond anything that’s gone before. You're literally standing at the precipice of this and decide to jack it in and start again somewhere else?
Regardless of how it works out for Sander Berge, signing him stuck a huge F-off marker in the ground to show where Wilder and the board see us being NOW and going forward. Plenty of pundits and other team’s supporters have again misread the signing as some strange anomaly. I think Sander and his people can just read the direction of travel far better than any of them.
Call me a soppy sod, but I’m struggling to spot another team in England right now who can match what’s happening at the Lane - be it authenticity, player commitment and character, connection with the fans, sporting values, feelgood factor, or sheer potential - and I reckon Wilder might be a soppy sod too!
Anyway, nice to get that off my chest - next rant will be the ‘they’ll struggle next season’ fallacy!