Transfer window-closed or not?

Transfer window-closed or not?

Birmingham Mail column Weds Aug 7th 2018

The whole transfer window situation is confusing to say the least. The Premier League and English Football Leagues windows close at 5pm on August 9th.

However all other countries transfer windows do not close until August 31st so while English clubs cannot buy a player they can still sell them to any club where the transfer window has not closed.

Having said that, the Championship window closes on August 9th but clubs can still loan a player up until August 31st with a ring fenced agreement to make it a permanent deal when the window re-opens in January. Now I might appear thick but does that not mean the window in reality does not close on August 9th but closes on August 31st?

EFL clubs voted for the window to close on August 9th because they and I quote CEO Shaun Harvey who said "This new approach will give Clubs and managers the stability they crave earlier in the season whilst also providing the flexibility to add to their squads after the traditional deadline until the end of month if required."??

Of course the Championship clubs can loan a player without any agreement to make it permanent deal up until August 31st.

 

The new season- and expectations

The new season- and expectations

My Birmingham Mail column-Weds Aug 7th 2018

Starting the season with high hopes, dreams and wishes are the staple pre-season diet of most football fans and rightly so. After reviewing and dissecting the season that has just finished the close season long drawn out weeks, days and hours are spent looking forward to the new season.

I know that within a couple of weeks of the season ending I start missing the games, the weekly emotional roller coaster ride and all the drama that goes with being a local football supporter almost to the point of masochism.

The wait for the fixture list to come out, checking the dates of the local ding dong derby games and the daily check to see who our team has bought in the summer transfer window is all part of the multi-colour tapestry of being a fan.

The conversation in the pubs, clubs, offices and factories usually revolves around who our team needs to buy and where they will finish in the league in the forth-coming season. Sometimes, sadly, it’s also about how long the manager will have before he is sacked.

I would love our three teams to win promotion and compete with the best teams and get the profile the Premier League offers, I am fed up with this are being a football wasteland. Having said that the championship is a fantastic competition with half the teams at least fancying their chances of winning automatic promotion with 75% of the teams in the division believing that the playoffs are a realistic goal. First step is for all our teams to be competitive this season and be in the mix come May.

However what can be in short supply is realism when it comes to expectations for the new season.

There is no problem with wanting, hoping and wishing your team will win a game a cup or promotion is what we all do and rightly so. However expecting it can lead to disappointment and as a consequence of that anger can take over as the over-riding emotion.

The reaction to the opening games of the new season from some fans beggars belief. If you lose it you are not certs for relegation if you win you are not guaranteed promotion. It’s the same as publishing the Championship league table after one, two, three or four games; absolute nonsense that will have no bearing on the way it will look on the final day of the season.

Over the 46 games there will be highs and lows and ups and downs for all our teams and that is part of being a supporter. The secret is not to get to carried away by the highs and not to get to down with the lows

Thankfully most supporters around these parts are wise enough to set realistic expectations.

If you take away hopes, dreams and wishes what do you have left? Oh yes I know, the Premier League.

 

The World Cup-No hype this time-Sterling

The World Cup-No hype this time-Sterling

 

My last Birmingham Mail column of the season on June 6th

It is a sign that a major tournament is close when our national newspapers start printing negative stories about players who will represent England. It really is a truism that we “build them up only to enjoy knocking them down again”. On the end of it this time is Raheem Sterling who has been heavily criticised for having a tattoo of a firearm on his leg. To be honest I don’t like the prevalence of tattoos on footballers anyway and probably one of a gun is not the smartest thing to do.

However when you hear why he had it done it is easier to understand he said “"When I was 2 my father died from being gunned down to death I made a promise to myself I would never touch a gun in my life time, I shoot with my right foot so it has a deeper meaning and is still unfinished,". That explanation, if he needed to give one, should be enough but oh no! The holier than thou brigade are demanding he be dropped from England World Cup squad if he doesn’t have it removed etc.

Now had he been caught with a real gun in his possession I would also be shouting for him to be dropped from Gareth Southgate’s World Cup squad? But for having what is described as “body art” no way- it’s time for some people to get a grip and give the boy a break.

It is his body and if he wants to cover it with lots of tattoos then that is his choice and as long as they are not homophobic or racist then we really should leave the young man alone.

I would much rather see him criticised for his pathetic dive that earned him a yellow card during England’s friendly with Nigeria. I found that more reprehensible than a tattoo of a gun. Talented as he so obviously is Sterling has a history of diving and it is probably part of his footballing mind-set to cheat the opposition and referee whenever he can to win a penalty.

However Video Assistant Referee replays in the World Cup will mean he has to change that mentality and change it quickly or he could find himself banned for crucial England games.

While talking about the World Cup I see a lot of criticism of the England Head Coach Gareth Southgate because he did not appear to be excited about the tournament during his press conferences. From that I assume they mean he is not banging the drum about how well they are going to do etc.

He is spot on to not feed the media with headlines as we have had all that pre-tournament hype and ballyhoo far too many times and yet subsequently failed to deliver when the action got underway. He came across to me as cautiously optimistic that they would give a good account of themselves. It is his job to prepare the players to perform as best as they can and not to be a World Cup marketing executive for the media.

Personally and like most supporters I can see them qualifying from the group stages and, to be honest, so they should along with Belgium, however I am not quite so optimistic from thereon in. I believe reaching the quarter finals is the best we can hope for but would not be surprised to see them go out in the round of sixteen.

I really hope I am wrong and that the team surprises me and everyone else who will be rooting for them in front of TV sets all over the country.  

The amount of players coming into the Premier League from, what would have been in the past been called lesser footballing nations, have in fact ended up strengthening those national teams which is why in my opinion there are so few easy games internationally. Just look at how well Iceland did in Euro 2016!

Most of their best players are playing in the best/toughest league in the world The Premier League while others are in the German Bundesliga, Spain’s La Liga or France’s Ligue 1.

This has not only strengthened their national teams but in my opinion has contributed to weakening the England team.

If as expected England get through the group then they will face either Columbia, Japan, Poland or Senegal. On the face of it Japan look the weakest but even they have players playing in England, Germany, Spain and France.

You don’t have to be a genius to see that the strongest teams are Brazil, France, Germany and Spain. In my opinion the winner will be one of these four and I am going for Brazil and if not them then France.

If picking a winner was only this easy sadly it isn’t and as we know only too well in football anything can happen and usually does. Good luck to Gareth Southgate and the England squad. As one who watched England win the World Cup in 1966 (On the telly) I can say without any fear of argument it’s been far too long sadly I fear the wait will continue for some time yet especially while the love of money continues to dominate every decision made in the game in this country.

The richest domestic game in the world! but not for the fans!

The richest domestic game in the world! but not for the fans!

Steve Bruce is preparing his players for the richest domestic game in world football the Championship Playoff Final on Saturday as his Aston Villa team face Fulham for the right to play in the Cash Cow that is the Premier League. It is worth around a guaranteed minimum of 160 million pounds for the winning team even if you don’t win a point, a throw in or a corner in the Premier League.

I am sure most of the player’s agents and wives will already be thinking about Premier League wages with the agents preparing to ask for new deals for their players.

However that all becomes secondary to fans, players, coaches and manager as the occasion and challenge gets closer by the day. For the supporters it’s certainly about the glory of reaching the Premier League to play against the best teams in the country. On the day they won’t care a jot that a win would see them promoted to become Premier League bit part player for the top six teams in fact just an extra in the soap opera that is the top flight league. Because winning promotion is success and they will celebrate that together on and off the pitch.

I have covered 3 play-off finals at the Millennium- in 2001 I saw Walsall beat Reading then in 2002 I saw my own team Blues beat Norwich and then 2003 I saw Wolves beat Sheffield United 3-0.

At Wembley in 1993 I watched West Brom beat Port Vale while I also saw West Brom Lose to Derby County in 2007.

The Championship Play-off Final is indeed a wonderful emotional roller coaster ride of an occasion that you never forget especially when your team wins. However Wembley or the Millennium are the loneliest of places on earth for losing teams.

In my broadcasting career I have witnessed both sides of that particular coin. In 2002 the delirious joy of Blues fans after beating Norwich and then in 2007 when Baggies fans left the stadium in tears after a dismal defeat to Derby.

It’s a lot less stressful to be promoted automatically especially as Champions as I am sure Wolves fans will agree however to do it through the play off final is a far more enjoyable occasion for supporters even if they suffer loads of stress, nerves and emotional overload.

But there are no guarantees that a team will win the final so I would imagine Steve Bruce would rather be mowing his lawn having won automatic promotion than going through the emotional wringer he most certainly will on Saturday; unless his team wins then the champagne will be flowing.

However for any team the real problems start when you win promotion especially through the playoffs because you are weeks behind every other team in recruitment for the Premier League.

What I have never got to grips with is that winning promotion through the play offs gets you a trophy but winning automatic promotion in second place doesn’t?

Respect is a two way street

Respect is a two way street

It was more than interesting to hear a former player talking about West Ham showing James Collins no respect by telling him he was not getting a new deal at the club by e mail.

Now I agree this is no way to do it and you should always look someone in the face when you are telling them bad news.

However to hear footballers talk about respect when most don’t respect their clubs, their team mates of even the clubs fans makes me cringe.

As soon as there is a sniff of more money, and despite being under contract, they begin a campaign to weasel their way out of clubs. That shows scant respect for their club or their own integrity as they were more than happy to sign the contract in good faith.

As we have seen at Chelsea players can just down tools and get managers the sack where is the respect in that?

People say that’s the “game” today and yes I understand that even though I don’t necessarily agree with it.

Players also cheat each other, supporters, and referees while spending 90 minutes trying to win penalties and get opposition players sent off-yes I know that’s the game today!! But for the love of God will someone please tell me where the respect in in that behaviour.

So when ex-players and ex-managers start bleating about players not been shown respect pot kettle and black springs to mind.