David Johnson wrote:
> Then you state
> "Villas Boas, a good track record? Total piffle. "
>
> Followed by
> "Porto?s success in Europe may have been what caught Mr
> Abramovich's eye, particularly the defeat of the two Moscow
> clubs, CSKA and Spartak."
>
> You have no comeback to your own statement because it
> contradicts what you say with regard to "good track record"
Where's the contradiction? I don't consider Porto's success in winning the Europa competition constitutes a good enough track record to be managing a club such as Chelsea.
Again, where's the contradiction?
Chelsea merry-go-round
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Re: James
Jeez, James, do you read your own posts?
Here you state
"I don't consider Porto's success in winning the Europa competition constitutes a good enough track record to be managing a club such as Chelsea."
Elsewhere you state
"I have to say that I had great hopes for AVB too."
Now look up the meaning of the word "contradiction"
Here you state
"I don't consider Porto's success in winning the Europa competition constitutes a good enough track record to be managing a club such as Chelsea."
Elsewhere you state
"I have to say that I had great hopes for AVB too."
Now look up the meaning of the word "contradiction"
Re: James
David Johnson wrote:
> Then you state re the campaign against Scolari
>
> "The "concerted campaign" you speak of exists only in your
> imagination."
>
> The I point out to you that this is clearly nonsense because
> rightly or wrongly, Scolari gave this as a reason for his
> departure. So obviously your statement "exists only in your
> imagination" is beyond question, wrong.
No, he didn't say that. He said that he had disagreements with 3 specific players, who the owner chose to listen to. He didn't ever claim there was a concerted campaign against him.
> Then you state re the campaign against Scolari
>
> "The "concerted campaign" you speak of exists only in your
> imagination."
>
> The I point out to you that this is clearly nonsense because
> rightly or wrongly, Scolari gave this as a reason for his
> departure. So obviously your statement "exists only in your
> imagination" is beyond question, wrong.
No, he didn't say that. He said that he had disagreements with 3 specific players, who the owner chose to listen to. He didn't ever claim there was a concerted campaign against him.
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Re: James
To help you out
http://bgafd.co.uk/forum/read.php?f=3&i=254863&t=254729
That's it now for me.
Cheerio!!
http://bgafd.co.uk/forum/read.php?f=3&i=254863&t=254729
That's it now for me.
Cheerio!!
Re: James
David Johnson wrote:
> Jeez, James, do you read your own posts?
>
> Here you state
>
> "I don't consider Porto's success in winning the Europa
> competition constitutes a good enough track record to be
> managing a club such as Chelsea."
>
> Elsewhere you state
> "I have to say that I had great hopes for AVB too."
>
> Now look up the meaning of the word "contradiction"
I don't see any harm in being an optimist. Roberto di Matteo is not qualified to be Chelsea manager either, but I have high hopes for him too.
Just because someone's under qualified for a role it doesn't mean that failure is inevitable. AVB's appointment was a gamble, given his youth and inexperience, but I genuinely had high hopes that he would succeed.
Just because someone's track record is lacking it does not mean that they can't do well. If you take a punt it might pay off and it might not. In AVB's case I had high hopes it would pay off.
> Jeez, James, do you read your own posts?
>
> Here you state
>
> "I don't consider Porto's success in winning the Europa
> competition constitutes a good enough track record to be
> managing a club such as Chelsea."
>
> Elsewhere you state
> "I have to say that I had great hopes for AVB too."
>
> Now look up the meaning of the word "contradiction"
I don't see any harm in being an optimist. Roberto di Matteo is not qualified to be Chelsea manager either, but I have high hopes for him too.
Just because someone's under qualified for a role it doesn't mean that failure is inevitable. AVB's appointment was a gamble, given his youth and inexperience, but I genuinely had high hopes that he would succeed.
Just because someone's track record is lacking it does not mean that they can't do well. If you take a punt it might pay off and it might not. In AVB's case I had high hopes it would pay off.
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Re: James
Okay, so "you had great hopes in AVB" because "he didnt have a good track record" and "you didn't consider Porto's success in winning the Europa competition constitutes a good enough track record to be managing a club such as Chelsea".
I bow to your superior logic.
Goodbye from me on this thread!"!!!!!!!
I bow to your superior logic.
Goodbye from me on this thread!"!!!!!!!
Re: James
David Johnson wrote:
> Okay, so "you had great hopes in AVB" because "he didnt have a
> good track record" and "you didn't consider Porto's success in
> winning the Europa competition constitutes a good enough track
> record to be managing a club such as Chelsea".
I had high hopes because I thought he was a bright up-and-coming manager who might really fit the bill. There were many things about him I saw as positive. The fact that he had little in the way of a track record - one very good season at Porto - meant that the appointment was obviously a gamble, but I thought it was a gamble worth taking.
> Okay, so "you had great hopes in AVB" because "he didnt have a
> good track record" and "you didn't consider Porto's success in
> winning the Europa competition constitutes a good enough track
> record to be managing a club such as Chelsea".
I had high hopes because I thought he was a bright up-and-coming manager who might really fit the bill. There were many things about him I saw as positive. The fact that he had little in the way of a track record - one very good season at Porto - meant that the appointment was obviously a gamble, but I thought it was a gamble worth taking.
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Re: Chelsea merry-go-round
Following on from my earlier post saying the so-called managerial merry-go-round at Chelsea wasn't all that unusual, I've done a bit of research.
Since Abramovich took over Chelsea in 2003 we've had 8 managers 3 of whom, (Avram Grant, Gus Hiddink and Robbie de Matteo) were/are caretaker managers. These are the figures for other major European clubs during the same time period:
Inter Milan - 6 managers
AC Milan - 3 managers
Roma - 9 managers
Juventus - 9 managers
Bayern - 8 managers
Dortmund - 5 managers
Schalke - 13 managers
HSV - 11 managers
Leverkusen - 7 managers
Benfica - 8 managers
Porto - 9 managers
Sporting - 7 managers
Barcelona - 4 managers
Real Madrid - 10 managers
Valencia - 8 managers
Atletico - 9 managers
Liverpool - 4 managers
Arsenal - 1 manager
Man United - 1 manager
Man City - 5 managers
Tottenham - 6 managers
PSG - 6 managers
Lyon - 4 managers
Bordeaux - 5 managers
Marseilles - 9 managers
Since Abramovich took over Chelsea in 2003 we've had 8 managers 3 of whom, (Avram Grant, Gus Hiddink and Robbie de Matteo) were/are caretaker managers. These are the figures for other major European clubs during the same time period:
Inter Milan - 6 managers
AC Milan - 3 managers
Roma - 9 managers
Juventus - 9 managers
Bayern - 8 managers
Dortmund - 5 managers
Schalke - 13 managers
HSV - 11 managers
Leverkusen - 7 managers
Benfica - 8 managers
Porto - 9 managers
Sporting - 7 managers
Barcelona - 4 managers
Real Madrid - 10 managers
Valencia - 8 managers
Atletico - 9 managers
Liverpool - 4 managers
Arsenal - 1 manager
Man United - 1 manager
Man City - 5 managers
Tottenham - 6 managers
PSG - 6 managers
Lyon - 4 managers
Bordeaux - 5 managers
Marseilles - 9 managers
"But how to make Liverpool economically prosperous? If only there was some way for Liverpudlians to profit from going on and on about the past in a whiny voice."
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Re: Chelsea merry-go-round
Statistically, one of us from bgafd.co.uk will be due the Chelsea hot seat soon enough. That would go some way to even up the "wankers on the pitch/wankers in the dugout" ratio.
alicia_fan_uk
alicia_fan_uk
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Bob
"Following on from my earlier post saying the so-called managerial merry-go-round at Chelsea wasn't all that unusual,"
Your statistics might support your own point, but I don't think that this is the point being discussed.
The point being made is that teams where there is a managerial merry-go-round lack consistency and are not as successful overall.
If you look at your list of teams that have had 8, 9,10+ managers during the period 2003- then you would see that these teams have hardly been successful in Europe in some cases by their own high standards e.g. Real Madrid.
Your statistics might support your own point, but I don't think that this is the point being discussed.
The point being made is that teams where there is a managerial merry-go-round lack consistency and are not as successful overall.
If you look at your list of teams that have had 8, 9,10+ managers during the period 2003- then you would see that these teams have hardly been successful in Europe in some cases by their own high standards e.g. Real Madrid.