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They are most assuredly 3rd.
sorry I hadn’t looked at the table closely - too painful
my point was that during a downturn season they are still comfortably in the CL places and still miles ahead of us
They are most assuredly 3rd.
I do hate the over emotional/insulting replies that are far too common on internet forums, including this one.
Anyway back to Ole, I'm part of the Ole in brigade for the reasons set out by @keeefy18 i.e. re balancing of the squad, phasing out of unsuitable players and more entertaining football plus the courage to give younger players a chance(I said at the start of the season, that putting his faith in rashford and martial and not replacing lukaku and Herrera would be his downfall, but credit to him for that).
I also like his record in the big games which is crucial for a manager at a big club. This is something that moyes and even poch were poor at. I think it tells a lot about a manager. I'm not so worried about the record against the smaller teams, that will come, yes we should have won most of those games, but Rome wasnt built in a day etc.
I think ole has done enough to be given more time. Will he lead us back to the promised land? I dont know but who else is there? Poch did well on a budget at spurs but so did Moyes at everton.
Yes that was how it was with SAF as well. A third spot was unheard of. Happened all the way back in early 2000s. But if you can’t appreciate that the clubs will have a downturn of fortunes for a multitude of reasons, you should talk to the fans of the club that’s probably going to win the league this year. Be sure to wear a hazmat suit and take a shower afterwards though.sorry I hadn’t looked at the table closely - too painful
my point was that during a downturn season they are still comfortably in the CL places and still miles ahead of us
A downturn season after 2 years of utter domination and in which they have lost a just a couple of their 56 defenders. I don't recall them losing any of their midfield or attacking talent for a prolonged period but I may be wrong.sorry I hadn’t looked at the table closely - too painful
my point was that during a downturn season they are still comfortably in the CL places and still miles ahead of us
I've changed my stance to Ole in til the end of the season. We're still in the top 4 race at least and still in the cups.
I think ole has done enough to be given more time. Will he lead us back to the promised land? I dont know but who else is there? Poch did well on a budget at spurs but so did Moyes at everton.
@Keefy18
Mate I commend you!
How you are able to keep responding to the same posters peddling the same uninformed opinions is beyond me.
And their opinions are not just uninformed, they lack any sort of understanding of the human elements of creating a football team.
I am always doing my best not to react to the those opinions, those that are driven through agenda and ego of not getting 'what they want'.
Of course we are alll entitled to our opinions, but at least when these people post so force fully, post respectfully, argue the argument, not the poster!
And yeah, if someone brings an opinion that has no basis in reality then of course its not easy to be respectful, but we all need to understand that people are different and have differnet levels of understanding.
I keep having to remind myself of my above comment when I go about my everyday life, just coming to the CAF seems to bring the worst types of posters who for whatever reasons come across to me of lacking any sort of critical thinking and understanding and are instead just driven by their egos ............
We need to stay with Ole for the next 2 seasons
We need to stay with Ole for the next 2 seasons, give him the time to really mould these players into what he wants. It’s been a very up and down season but we are 1 point from 4th with finally a settled first 11, promising youngsters getting game time the right way and players who have been here too long being moved on.
On top of this i’ve seen improvements in Martial, Fred, Pereria and Lindelof to name just 4 that previous managers couldn’t do.
The 3 players he’s brought in have all been a success in my opinion so I’m excited to see who else he brings in and I’m happy to hear that we arent going to bring players in for the sake of it anymore, hence the lack of midfielders this season. This attitude will hopefully help us negotiate for the players we want going forwards if other clubs know we will walk away if they ask over the odds.
Not everything is perfect but with some consistency, which will come with more experience, and Ole continuing to learn and trust his decisions more we’ll be in a much better place soon.
This. 100% this for why if you think rationally, and care for this club then you have no reason to want to interrupt Ole's work right now. It's not about being blind to the problems, but all about being thoughtful.Who really gives a shit if he doesn't? If he manages to rebuild the squad into a better balanced, younger and fitter squad then he's done great. Hopefully he manages to win a trophy along the way to shut up the turds. But to expect him to dominate the league is ridiculous. People still have this mad expectation that our Managers should wave a magic wand and turn a squad struggling to achieve Top 4 into a title contender in less than year. Bizarre.
As for people crying about how Ole In posters never criticise, what a load of shit. Everyone here acknowledges that currently Ole needs to find a way to beat deep defensive teams and improve on his match management. It's yet another sweeping statement by the drama queens on this forum who want a brand new toy every 12 months to keep their dicks hard. (am I doing this sweeping statement shit right?)
I don't think anybody disagrees with you on that. 2 seasons is the time that is reasonable to make us a stable, top-performing team. But as far as demonstrating progress - he needs to keep showing it and honestly, had he not shown enough progress (not in terms of meaningless stats, but steady improvement of the team, even if slow and inconsistent) — he would have been gone already. This myth that he has some kind of carte blanche is untrue. Had he not won some key games and shown improvement of young players – he would have been in big trouble already and maybe even gone.Ive always been Ole In, but the next 2 seasons is a bit much. He needs to demonstrate clear improvement next season to be given any more time after that.
Ok so if we have a bad month we sack him and replace him with who exactly? Then they have a bad spell and we replace them with who?No we don't, Ole needs to keep proving himself as he has done this past month, as every manager needs to. Manager's buy themselves time.
Most people don't want miracles, they know this squad should at minimum challenge for top 4 and shouldn't be anywhere near hanging around in 8th, now we are, the huge majority of fans will show patience.
Comparing Klopp to Ole is foolish, but there’s no telling some people.Ok so if we have a bad month we sack him and replace him with who exactly? Then they have a bad spell and we replace them with who?
How long do you give a manager to build their team? Good job Klopp was given some time.
Why? The point is managers need time, it’s not rocket science, but there’s no telling some peopleComparing Klopp to Ole is foolish, but there’s no telling some people.
Why? The point is managers need time, it’s not rocket science, but there’s no telling some people
All Competitions / First 53 Games Under Each Manager:
Manager Games Wins Draws Losses Win Rate GF GA GD Ole 53 28 11 14 52.8% 85 58 +27 Klopp 53 25 16 12 47.2% 91 61 +30 Pep 53 30 13 10 56.6% 112 58 +54 Poch 53 26 16 11 49.1% 95 53 +42
Thank you, my point exactly, people saying 1-2 seasons is too long to give a manager is crazy. Some people will only accept instant success but that’s not how the real world works.Highlighted by the below:
None of them had exactly mouth watering win rates, takes time especially when rebuilding squads. Granted Pep had very little rebuilding to do (he bought pretty much an entire new defense though). But the point is that if you want longer term success then you have to accept the short term will be bumpy.
Honestly some of these points are so asinine you just look like a wum. If you're not a wum you must be borderline delirious about Ole and lost in your own nostalgia.
Yeah I've totally loved watching our blistering "performances" against Wolves, Wolves, Everton, City, Huddersfield, Cardiff, Wolves, Palace, Southampton, West Ham, Rochdale, Newcastle, Bournemouth, Sheffield, Villa, Everton and Watford. Or in other words, in 17 of Ole's first 29 domestic matches as permanent manager. Take any of the "performances" in those 17 games and stack them up against what we've seen previously. The level has been as bad, if not worse, as Mourinho in full meltdown mode last season. As bad as it was at it's absolute worst under LVG. And as bad as it was under Moyes from start to finish. You'd have to be absolutely deranged to dispute that.
I long for the days of winning football matches convincingly against most of the bottom 12 teams in the league, as we did for the majority of Jose's reign.
Because these players were not 'past it' under LVG or Jose......? Are you actually for real? Matic had a great first season here under Jose, then his form fell off a cliff. Valencia was a solid right back during LVG's reign and again in the campaign we finished second.
Thank you, my point exactly, people saying 1-2 seasons is too long to give a manager is crazy. Some people will only accept instant success but that’s not how the real world works.
,,We analyze the performance effects of in-season manager changes in English Premier League football during the seasons 2000/2001–2014/2015. We find that some managerial changes are successful, while others are counterproductive. On average, performance does not improve following a managerial replacement. The successfulness of managerial turnover depends on specific highly unpredictable circumstances, as we illustrate through case-studies."
No we don't, Ole needs to keep proving himself as he has done this past month, as every manager needs to. Manager's buy themselves time.
Most people don't want miracles, they know this squad should at minimum challenge for top 4 and shouldn't be anywhere near hanging around in 8th, now we are, the huge majority of fans will show patience.
Ok so if we have a bad month we sack him and replace him with who exactly? Then they have a bad spell and we replace them with who?
How long do you give a manager to build their team? Good job Klopp was given some time.
It's never ole's fault.
Cardiff is shit
United is shit
120m isnt enough
Having martial isnt enough
Wait till he gets his first xi
120m spent. 8th after 20 games.
excuses, excuses, and more excuses
Jose talked of building a dynasty like Ferguson yet he absolutely flat out refused to drop any of the 3 for large periods of his tenure here. It's an absolute fact, our avg age of the team last season vs this season has done a 180. Ole is clearly focusing on youth and coaching these young lads for United's benefit for years to come, Jose wanted instant success with burned out talent that simply were not good enough. That's sh*t management whatever way its spun and he failed ultimately.
At what point in ANY of Moyes, LVG & Jose's tenure did our team look this promising long term?
Very true. Jose became a hostage of his own reputation. Everybody expected him to win the league in his second season, going head-to-head against "old rival" Pep. So he decided that he could chase two goals at the same time: achieve results short-term and bring youth up at the same time for the long-term. Which lead to all kinds of bad decisions, such as: rotating Martial and Rashford for the same spot and always starting Lukaku. And when it wasn't working he decided Sanchez was going to be a very expensive but quick fix. We all know how it all ended. Ultimately, by chasing two things, Jose failed at both.
Exactly. None of these wanted to do the hard work of taking short-term heat for the long-term benefit. Actually, in Moyes' case it was worse - he was plain incompetent and inadequate manager for what United needed.
But we are fifth now ahead of Sheffield?How do Ole's defenders rationalise us being behind Sheffield after 19 games?
On what planet is that an acceptable result after half a season?
What mental gymnastics will be employed to justify this shit underperformance?
rotating Martial and Rashford for the same spot and always starting Lukaku. And when it wasn't working he decided Sanchez was going to be a very expensive but quick fix.
Generally I totally agree with you, but in reality we have not yet secured 5th place in this round since Sheffield and Wolves have games in hand. Fortunately for us, they are playing Liverpool and Man City, today, so we have good chances of remaining on 5th.But we are fifth now ahead of Sheffield?
Your whole arguement just became obsolete.
Klopp finished 8,4,4 & 2nd in his first 4 seasons, Liverpool were already playing much better football than we are when Ole took over. Until last year he wasn’t doing a “tremendous” job, he was just about hanging onto his job by your standards.I’ll say it again, Klopp was 2nd and on 40 points by Christmas in his first full season, he wasn’t “given time”, he was doing a tremendous job.
And Ole, no, not a bad month, I didn’t say that at all. Last night with all the changes proved this squad should at bare minimum challenge for top 4, so that’s the standard he should meet to remain in the job presently.
Wait till you're late to work because your car broke down and you have no cash in your wallet.
Arrived at the office, told your boss your reasons and he said like this:
Your work is shit.
Your punctuality is shit.
Having 1000 quid salary isn't enough for you.
Basically you're shit.
Excuses, excuses, more excuses, get the feck out of here, son.
Thanks Henrick, that’s very interesting but not surprising. You just have to look at the cycle of managerial changes bottom half teams go through to see the overall negative impact it creates. That’s with the owners, players and fans. The only winners are the managers who are on this merry go round and pick up their pay offs.I like the way you are thinking Ollie Derbyshire! Here is something I've always found interesting: Sacking your manager is pointless and a result of bad luck and the stats prove it
Managers are not only sacked when their teams are at a low-ebb. They also tend to be sacked when their teams are being extraordinarily unlucky. The football consultancy 21st Club analysed the points earned by teams in the big five European leagues in the eight games before and after sacking a manager. In the eight games before a manager leaves, the team averages 0.8 points per game. In the eight subsequent matches, they average 1.2 points per game - a clear improvement. But based on expected goals - the quality and quantity of chances created and conceded - the team actually ‘deserved’ 1.2 points per game in the eight points before the manager left, exactly the same as they actually got under their new boss.
You should really read something like this as well, it seems to allign with the point you're making.
Studies on the effectiveness of managerial changes in professional football have been done for a variety of European countries, for example, Belgium, England, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Spain (see for a recent overview Van Ours and van Tuijl 2016).
Two Belgian studies, Balduck et al. (2010a, (2010b), find no performance effects of a coach replacement. Studying English football, Poulsen (2000) finds no effects of a managerial change while Dobson and Goddard (2011) find a negative effect, just after the replacement of a manager
Analyzing data from German football, Salomo and Teichmann (2000) find negative effects of a trainer-coach dismissal, while Hentschel et al. (2012) conclude that a coach change may have a positive effect on homogeneous teams but no effect for heterogeneous teams. De Paola and Scoppa (2011) find similar conclusions for Italian football, just like Tena and Forrest (2007) for Spanish football. Koning (2003), Bruinshoofd and ter Weel (2003), Ter Weel (2011), Van Ours and van Tuijl (2016) study the effects of the replacement of head-coaches in the highest professional football league of the Netherlands. They all find that this does not lead to better performance of the teams involved.
Wow. Your car break down? Really? We have a broken down squad? You're given 120m and you bought a broke down car?
120M is peanuts in today's game and you know it is.
You are trying to portray 120m as being able to fund a complete squad rebuild worthy to challenge for titles.
Please just give it a rest with this idiotic sentiment.
Depend on why you sack them. If you bring in someone better the results will improve. Expected goals is a bit silly to use since confidence often can go up with a new manager which improves efficiency. Normally managers gets sacked after poor results too rather than good.Thanks Henrick, that’s very interesting but not surprising. You just have to look at the cycle of managerial changes bottom half teams go through to see the overall negative impact it creates. That’s with the owners, players and fans. The only winners are the managers who are on this merry go round and pick up their pay offs.
120M is peanuts in today's game and you know it is.
You are trying to portray 120m as being able to fund a complete squad rebuild worthy to challenge for titles.
Please just give it a rest with this idiotic sentiment.
Klopp finished 8,4,4 & 2nd in his first 4 seasons, Liverpool were already playing much better football than we are when Ole took over. Until last year he wasn’t doing a “tremendous” job, he was just about hanging onto his job by your standards.
So if Ole finishes 5th, he should be sacked yeah? Then who do you get in? What if they don’t rate Maguire? James? Martial? What do we do, start again?