Saddlers Slipping into trouble

Saddlers Slipping into trouble

My Birmingham Mail Column Weds Apr 25th 2018-Part 2

Over the past few months a lot of focus has been on the relegation problems faced by the Baggies and Blues as well as Villa’s hopes of winning promotion to the Premier League. However while all that has been taking the attention Walsall have been clipping into relegation trouble in League One and are in serious danger of dropping out into League Two.

With 3 games to go they, along with Oldham, are on 48 points - just one point above the trapdoor. Since the turn of the year they have lost 11 from 19 games winning just 5 and it’s got progressively worse with 8 defeats and just 2 wins from their last twelve games. That dismal run has seen them quietly drop from mid-table into the relegation mix.

The teams occupying the 4 relegation spots are Bury who are bottom and already relegated. The come MK Dons on 42, Northampton 46 and Rochdale 47. How tight is that? This Saturday they take on Northampton at Bescot in a must win game. Northampton will have a massive say in the outcome because they face Oldham at home on the last day of the season.

Walsall are a smashing club with some amazing people working at Bescot but without the finance and resource of a lot of other clubs in League One. As with West Brom it looks from the outside like they waited too long to make a change of manager-while hoping things would change.

Dean Keates only taking over on March 16th by then it looked like losing had become a habit for the players. I am told by various managers that it can be difficult to change that mentality overnight especially if the quality of the squad is not good enough both in terms of ability and also attitude.

Good luck to Dean Keates in his battle to avoid the drop.

Classless Klopp

Classless Klopp

My Birmingham Mail column Apr 25th 2018- Part One

Over the years I have heard more than my fair share of rubbish from various managers and I suspect one or two reading this will be saying “yes! And you’ve spoken more than your fair share as well”. Seriously though I was absolutely amazed at the post match mutterings of Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp because his team were unable to beat West Brom..

According to him it was everybody else’s fault apart from his! The groundsman was at fault for not watering the pitch at half time? The referee was at fault, Even Albion were at fault for not letting them win when Darren Moore’s team didn’t need the points as they were all but relegated? A waste of points he said!

It really disappointed me to hear his comments mostly because he is one of my favourite managers ,I love his passion and sense of humour and was really hoping he would be the man to steer Liverpool to the title.

However, In my opinion, a person’s class best manifests itself when they have to handle disappointment; on this occasion Jurgen showed little class whatsoever with not no praise for the opposition whereas Darren Moore oozed class with his comments.

The pitch was to dry? That really is laughable and embarrassing because the first thing that struck me was that the pitch certainly wasn’t too dry in December when the Baggies drew nil-nil at Anfield? Nor in January when Albion won 3-2 there in the FA Cup? By the way that was the only time they have lost at home this season.

The referee Stuart Atwell should have awarded them a penalty and should have sent off Baggies defender Hegazi for allegedly punching a Liverpool player.

It’s an overdose of sour grapes from a man whose team could not find the answers to win in an eleven v eleven game but needed the referee and groundsman on his side as well.

He also said that the best teams should always win? Are you sure Jurgen? Because if you are right then Manchester City would never lose a game.

He even has a snipe at Albion’s way of playing by saying that if the Premier League was about “set pieces” Albion would not be relegated.

There is no right or wrong way of playing this fantastic game most managers or coaches just play the way they need to play to get a positive result. Every game poses different questions for a manager. He will come up against different styles, formations, pitches, etc. and it’s then down to his coaching ability to prepare his team to answer those questions.

He would have had detailed report after detailed report from his staff about the way the Baggies play. He obviously wasn’t as prepared as he should have been so perhaps start looking in the mirror before blaming everyone else for your team’s failure to win.

For me it sums up what is wrong with the game and the attitude of the so called bigger clubs who believe every other team should play the way that will allow the bigger clubs to win. The reality is if you try to out pass and out play these teams you will more than likely get beat so you need a plan that doesn’t allow them to settle comfortably into their rhythmic was of playing. That usually means 90 minutes of hard work from every single player to frustrate and stop the so called better players from expressing themselves. Set pieces and counter attacks being your best bet for a goal.

I hear that Jurgen was looking forward to playing against Roma in the Champions league last night because they play it on the ground and don’t just rely on set pieces-yet another classless pop at West Brom.

 

No end of season feel about either end of the Championship table!

No end of season feel about either end of the Championship table!

It may be all over for West Brom and Wolves but both Villa and Blues have plenty to play for. Despite Steve Bruce understandably saying they have to keep going while the second automatic spot is still mathematically possible with three games to go. Realistically it looks like the playoffs so finishing 3rd or 4th would guarantee being at home game in the second leg.

It’s the richest mini competition in world where 3rd placed take on the 6th placed team and the 4th placed team facing the 5th placed for a place in the final where the reward is a guaranteed minimum 160 million pounds which includes parachute payments when and if a team is relegated back to the Championship.

At the other end of the table Blues have 2 home games against Sheffield United and Fulham and an away game at QPR to save themselves from the drop into League One. The team below them, Barnsley have a game in hand and are just two points behind Garry Monks men. The two home games are absolutely crucial although with every point a prisoner anything from QPR, who by the way have the best home record outside the top half of the table, would be a massive bonus.

You don’t have to be a genius to see that it will be team from Barnsley, Blues, and Bolton who will drop out although having said that Reading are only 3 points better off and could easily slip into trouble.

It’s going to be a nervous nail-biting time for Blues fans and I have already finished with my hands and am starting on my toes.

EFL and PFA player of the season votes!

EFL and PFA player of the season votes!

Votes on anything be it best restaurant, favourite breed of dog or player of the season are subjective and end up being all about personal opinion. You know the saying “one man’s meat is another man’s poison”. However I find it hard to understand how Wolves midfielder is not the EFL Championship player of the season. He has been far and away the stand out player in the competition having played 39 games scoring 6 goals. However it his influence on the team and he has done more than any other player to steer Wolves to the title and into the Premier League. He is Wolves orchestra leader the one that glues it all together and makes them tick in my opinion.

It is perfectly understandable how a lot of attention has also been on Fulham’s 17 year old sensation Ryan Sessegnon who has played 43 games scoring 14 goals. And yes I can see the two players would be the two uppermost in everyone’s mind when it comes to end of season awards. He is a major talent and looks set for a very successful career at club and international level.

Yes there are arguments for both players but I am not just looking at ability but the way they influence the team’s performances and success.

Many think that Tom Cairney has been a bigger influence on the Fulham team’s great results over the season although he is not as pleasing on the eye and as exciting or individualistic as Sessegnon is.

It appears it was a three horse race between Ruben Neves, Ryan Sessegnon and Tom Cairney for the EFL Player of the season award and yet Cairney surprisingly did not make the EFL team of the season although rightly so Neves did- You couldn’t make it up.

By the way Ryan Sessegnon is in the short list for the PFA Young Player of the season and so is 24 year old Harry Kane but 21 year old Neves isn’t?

I speak to many people in the game and they all say without doubt that Neves is the best player in the Championship so how he has not won the EFL Player of the Season award beggars’ belief.

West Brom-too many ifs and buts!

West Brom-too many ifs and buts!

 

West Bromwich Albion have no one to blame for relegation other than themselves after making decisions that have proven to be catastrophic for the club. Sadly those to blame are no longer at the club and are probably admiring their bank balances while Baggies fans weep at a season that could have been so different.

Chief executive Martin Goodman, chairman John Williams and technical director Nick Hammond have all been unceremoniously blamed and sacked for the situation at the club than has resulted in what looks like certain relegation to the championship.

You have to question the appointment these men who may be good businessmen but obviously had no association with or feeling for West Bromwich Albion prior to their appointment. It is a football club first and a business second for the fans but for directors it’s the other way round.

Now we have the appointment of Giuliano Terraneo as technical director to oversee the appointment of a new Head Coach as well as the restructuring of the squad ready for the championship.

Giuliano is a former goalkeeper who played in Italy for a number of clubs, He has been a technical director in Italy and Turkey but has no experience whatsoever of the English game and especially the toughest league of all the Championship. I wish him every success in his role as we need the Baggies back in the top flight. However I wonder how he will go about sourcing players that can achieve promotion in the championship. I genuinely hope my fears are unfounded and that he can achieve success with the club.

CEO Mark Jenkins didn’t take long after his return to the club before parting company with Alan Pardew but, as I have said previously in this column, he was given too much time when it was obvious that he was failing spectacularly to get the team winning games.

It did look at one time as if “Nero was fiddling while Rome burned” with the club just moving from one defeat to another.

The appointment of U23s coach Darren Moore as caretaker Head Coach looks as if it could be a master stroke. Two games with one win and one draw-the win coming at Old Trafford against second in the Premier League Manchester United. United had the better players but Albion had the better team and that is down to “Big Dave”.

I know him very well and he will manage exactly the same way as he played, giving 100% for the cause. He is one of the nicest guys in the game with a warm friendly personality. However anyone on or off the pitch who mistakes that for weakness will find out very quickly and to their cost that he is no pushover. He will demand 100% commitment and work ethic from his players and will expect them to come off the pitch with nothing more to give. In return he will organise them and ensure that every player knows exactly what his job is and what is expected from them.

I hope Mark Jenkins recognises what an asset he has in Darren and assuming the players show the same effort and desire they have shown in his first two games then he might be worth considering for the job on a full time basis. He has the players on his side I am not sure the previous two people in charge could say the same. It is not the chairman who sacks managers or Head Coaches; sure they might pull the trigger but the truth is that in 99 times out of a 100 it’s the players who get managers the sack.