The reaction looked brutal on the telly as LvG walked off. Booing seemed to start before the final whistle too.
Seems like we say it after nearly every game, but that was the worst performance of the season. We're not even playing LvG's style of football now. I can't even figure out what type of football we are trying to play. Have the team broken away from him, or has LvG just completely run out of ideas? Perhaps a mixture of both...
This far into the tenure, it's getting worse and worse, not better. There are no positive signs that it will improve. LvG seemed to stumble on a formula that started to work last season, and even in the games we lost in the 2nd half of the season, we looked to be moving towards something positive after the horrible 3-5-2/4-4-2 diamond experiments. Then in the summer, the reset button was pressed. New approach, new formation, and a style of play that nobody really seems to fit in to. That hasn't worked, so it looks like the reset button has been pressed again, and the players just look utterly bemused. We don't keep the ball, we don't play on the counter, we just lumber about, committing fouls, hoofing the ball and looking like we have no idea how to string 3 passes together. It's often like we are relying on DDG to be the playmaker, pick out a forward in the left channel and hopefully wriggle through. The last 3 or 4 games has been the most bizarre style of football we've ever played, including the aimless toilet football we played under Moyes.
Amongst all the cons, there are no pros. Perseverance seems pointless. I don't hate LvG, infact I quite like him as a personality, infinitely more than I liked Moyes. But the football... What is it? What is he trying to do? Over 18 months in to the job and he still hasn't settled on a formation, an approach, a way of playing, a way of getting the best out of key players. We look in the same position we were in at the start of 14/15 when we'd failed to win the first 3 games. 77 games he's managed, and he's no closer to finding success.
The players deserve a fair share of the blame too, but it falls on the manager to stand up and guide this team. Afterall, this is his team, an eye-watering expensively assembled team.