Well done Hughes

blueinsa said:
de niro said:
so now you are saying you too would have wenger over hughes?

Yes.

Tell you what mate, what about Hiddink, would love to hear your views on him ;-)

a failure, could even get russia to the world cup, they have loads more people to choose from, about 200 million or summat.
 
bizzbo said:
GStar said:
If you'd read my posts instead of presuming you'd have seen me say i'm in that 99.9%... But there was a lot of "suggestions" in the papers this and last season.

You've jumped the gun hugely and taken from my posts insinuations that simply weren't there... No wonder theres rarely decent debate on here nowadays, people can't bloody read! The irony is, from what you've said, we have a very similar stance regarding Hughes.

I don't think I jumped the gun, and I did read the whole of your post. Your stance might be identical to mine, but it was that specific argument you used to support it that I took issue with. It gets people's backs up, as it is an arrogant way of characterising dissenting views as the result of ignorance. The issues it suggests have also been done to death over the last 12 months, which makes it doubly ironic that you suggest so many people are ignorant. I suggested you withdraw it as, regardless of rest of your postings, regardless of the reasonableness of your stance, it was an unreasonable, unhelpful argument.

I've posted more than once and i've explained what i've said... you're right it probably isn't the best argument. I never suggested anyone was ignorant.

You're probably right that it isn't somethign we need to go over again though.
 
de niro said:
blueinsa said:
Yes.

Tell you what mate, what about Hiddink, would love to hear your views on him ;-)

a failure, could even get russia to the world cup, they have loads more people to choose from, about 200 million or summat.

pmsl....you win mate.
 
That first half performance said it all for me, not the misplaced passes, from both sides, but the fact that our players had clearly been told to sit back and just hoof the ball long to adebayor and absorb any pressure. It was simply shocking and the sort of negative, safety first aspect of hughes and his coaches. Just look at Liverpool's team, a team under pressure, a half fit gerrard and that was it...the poor ngog on his own upfront, the dutch geezer with no end product on the left and the hard working but limited dutch player on the right, two workhorses in midfield, a defensively suspect young left back and an out of form centre half at right back. We should have been at them from the start, forget that it is away from home, play the opposition, not the history, ground , reputation etc...When we did actually score from the disinterested ade, we then upped the tempo and played with the sort of verve which the players are capable of, with both bellamy and swp moving inside to link up play, which is what they should be doing and not waiting for it on the wings as instructed because it won't come to them. Lescott played well, but hang on he wasn't up against anyone and i thought toure was the weakest link until he went off....put him at right back and let ned and lescott form a good partnership in the middle..i'm sure lescott would be happier playing alongside him...and as for bridge, a bridge to far i think..
 
Nils said:
That first half performance said it all for me, not the misplaced passes, from both sides, but the fact that our players had clearly been told to sit back and just hoof the ball long to adebayor and absorb any pressure. It was simply shocking and the sort of negative, safety first aspect of hughes and his coaches. Just look at Liverpool's team, a team under pressure, a half fit gerrard and that was it...the poor ngog on his own upfront, the dutch geezer with no end product on the left and the hard working but limited dutch player on the right, two workhorses in midfield, a defensively suspect young left back and an out of form centre half at right back. We should have been at them from the start, forget that it is away from home, play the opposition, not the history, ground , reputation etc...When we did actually score from the disinterested ade, we then upped the tempo and played with the sort of verve which the players are capable of, with both bellamy and swp moving inside to link up play, which is what they should be doing and not waiting for it on the wings as instructed because it won't come to them. Lescott played well, but hang on he wasn't up against anyone and i thought toure was the weakest link until he went off....put him at right back and let ned and lescott form a good partnership in the middle..i'm sure lescott would be happier playing alongside him...and as for bridge, a bridge to far i think..

good post mate.
 
GStar said:
Wenger was managing in Japan when Arsenal snapped him up; he began at Nancy (who were relegated under his guide) ...it took him four years to win a trophy.

We don't need to highlight Fergison's baron spell at the begining of his reign in England.

it took Ancelotti 6 years to win a trophy...

So not all the top managers win trophies right off the bat.

Yes it too Wenger 4 years to win the French Ligue 1 title. Previous 3 years at Nancy was his 'learning curve' from which he progressed and progressed very well

Ancelotti had a 6 year 'learning curve' which included a promotion and an intertoto cup along the way. In my view these are minor achievements alongside the big prizes.

You can highlight Taggerts lean spell if you wish since it doesn't detract from the point I was making of real achievements earlier in his career. Great managers achieve and win things - but not every year and not all the time.

I did at no stage say great managers win things 'right off the bat'. There is a 'learning curve' every great manager goes through.

It just doesn't usually stretch to 10 years.
 
Nils said:
That first half performance said it all for me, not the misplaced passes, from both sides, but the fact that our players had clearly been told to sit back and just hoof the ball long to adebayor and absorb any pressure. It was simply shocking and the sort of negative, safety first aspect of hughes and his coaches. Just look at Liverpool's team, a team under pressure, a half fit gerrard and that was it...the poor ngog on his own upfront, the dutch geezer with no end product on the left and the hard working but limited dutch player on the right, two workhorses in midfield, a defensively suspect young left back and an out of form centre half at right back. We should have been at them from the start, forget that it is away from home, play the opposition, not the history, ground , reputation etc...When we did actually score from the disinterested ade, we then upped the tempo and played with the sort of verve which the players are capable of, with both bellamy and swp moving inside to link up play, which is what they should be doing and not waiting for it on the wings as instructed because it won't come to them. Lescott played well, but hang on he wasn't up against anyone and i thought toure was the weakest link until he went off....put him at right back and let ned and lescott form a good partnership in the middle..i'm sure lescott would be happier playing alongside him...and as for bridge, a bridge to far i think..
Spot on especially regarding Toure, Bridge & tactics.
 
BobKowalski said:
GStar said:
Wenger was managing in Japan when Arsenal snapped him up; he began at Nancy (who were relegated under his guide) ...it took him four years to win a trophy.

We don't need to highlight Fergison's baron spell at the begining of his reign in England.

it took Ancelotti 6 years to win a trophy...

So not all the top managers win trophies right off the bat.

Yes it too Wenger 4 years to win the French Ligue 1 title. Previous 3 years at Nancy was his 'learning curve' from which he progressed and progressed very well

Ancelotti had a 6 year 'learning curve' which included a promotion and an intertoto cup along the way. In my view these are minor achievements alongside the big prizes.

You can highlight Taggerts lean spell if you wish since it doesn't detract from the point I was making of real achievements earlier in his career. Great managers achieve and win things - but not every year and not all the time.

I did at no stage say great managers win things 'right off the bat'. There is a 'learning curve' every great manager goes through.

It just doesn't usually stretch to 10 years.

In the interest of fairness, Mourinho wins when he takes control of an existing title contending team.
Ancelotti won things when he joined Milan, an existing title contending side... not at Juve, another title contending side
Wenger won the title with Monaco, a bigger achievement, but still with a 7 time French league winning team.

Hughes, hasn't ever been given the oppourtunity at a "title contending side"... we're still not one this season, although its another debate as to whether we should be.

Where i personally think Hughes will fall down is that; the great managers seem to breed confidence into their squads, they make sure that, first and foremost, the players enjoy their "job", are able to express themselves and realise their potential. I get the impression Hughes is a bit too regimented in his ways and that he rules with fear as opposed to respect.
 

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