Who do you want as new boss? 16:26 - Dec 9 with 24559 views | magicdaps10 | One name, no explanations etc just one name.......i will start. BRENDAN RODGERS. | |
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Who do you want as new boss? on 16:50 - Dec 9 with 3356 views | ChrisSCFC |
Who do you want as new boss? on 16:50 - Dec 9 by acejack3065 | Ron Atkinson |
He could whip Gomis into shape. | | | |
Who do you want as new boss? on 16:54 - Dec 9 with 3332 views | eddie71 |
Who do you want as new boss? on 16:47 - Dec 9 by nantywatcher | Sean Dyche |
Decent shout, I would prefer Eddie Howe but he isnt going to come. [Post edited 9 Dec 2015 16:55]
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Who do you want as new boss? on 16:55 - Dec 9 with 3306 views | FearOfAJackPlanet | Nigel Pearson | |
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Who do you want as new boss? on 16:55 - Dec 9 with 3304 views | pencoedjack | Bergkamp | | | |
Who do you want as new boss? on 16:58 - Dec 9 with 3278 views | Borojack |
More faces than the town clock some on here | |
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Who do you want as new boss? on 17:00 - Dec 9 with 3261 views | QuakerJack |
Who do you want as new boss? on 16:58 - Dec 9 by Borojack | More faces than the town clock some on here |
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Who do you want as new boss? on 17:35 - Dec 9 with 3151 views | clement | | |
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Who do you want as new boss? on 17:50 - Dec 9 with 3091 views | Oldjack | Nigel Pearson | |
| Prosser the Tosser dwells on Phil's bum hole like a rusty old hemorrhoid ,fact
You Greedy Bastards Get Out Of OUR Club!
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Who do you want as new boss? on 17:59 - Dec 9 with 3066 views | bluenile | Bielsa | |
| Open the ipod bay doors Hal |
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Who do you want as new boss? on 18:16 - Dec 9 with 3025 views | bluenile | Bielsa is the most original, different, singular, person that I’ve ever met,” recalled one of his former players, Ander Herrera, the Manchester United midfielder who played under Bielsa at Athletic Bilbao. “He’s got an amazing mind, an incredible intellectual capacity outside football. Nothing is ever left to chance; everything is studied to the finest details. Everything he does or says, he does it for a reason. He knows what every player can and can’t do. He makes sure that everyone is on their toes, from the man who cuts the grass to players. I’ve seen him speaking to the groundsman for 45 minutes. I’m sure he would have studied ground keeping before that chat. He demands of others what he demands of himself. I’ve never seen coaching staff work as hard as under him. He’d go crazy if a cone was half a metre the wrong way.” Bielsa’s exacting demands were legendary. “When he got the Chile job in 2007, he gave the Chilean Football Association a list of 30 or 40 things which had to be right,” explains Diego Forlan. “He said: ‘if you want me to come then this has to be right’. There weren’t conditions attached to his contract, but about the conditions so that he could make the perfect football team. He improved Chile in four years there and helped them towards the team that they’ve become now, the South American champions. He is completely obsessed by football.” Bielsa inspires awe among fellow coaches. Pep Guardiola drove 300 kilometres to meet him in his home city of Rosario. The meeting lasted 11 hours as they discussed tactics, techniques, and positions which, at one point, featured Guardiola’s friend marking a chair in Bielsa’s home. As Pep took notes, Bielsa told him that 'teams can play badly or well, but talent depends on the inspiration and effort depends on each one of the players: the attitude for them is non-negotiable’. Before he left, Bielsa said to him: “Why do you, as someone who knows all about the negative things that go on in the world of football, including the high level of dishonesty of some people, still want to return and get involved in coaching? Do you like blood that much?” “I need that blood,” replied Guardiola. Guardiola would use many of Bielsa’s ideas when he became a manager of Barça B in 2007, including never giving a one-on-one interview to a journalist as it was wrong to give priority to a big television company over a small newspaper. He said it invoked favouritism. Bielsa had been a moderate footballer but retired at 25 and concentrated on coaching. After working with youth players, he took Newell’s Old Boys, the team he’d supported as a child, from Rosario, to the league title. He took Newell’s to the final of the Copa Libertadores two years after taking charge. It was his first job. After a spell coaching in Mexico - and he’s now being linked with the Mexico job — he returned to Argentina in 1997, managed Espanyol in Spain in 1998 before taking control of the Argentina team, where he was in charge for six years. In 2007 he took over Chile and masterminded their first ever win over neighbours Argentina. He also led them to the 2010 World Cup after they’d missed out on two previous finals.He was loved in Chile for the attacking football his teams played, but resigned because of the politics above him. Next stop was Athletic Bilbao, where he signed the young Herrera, but let him stay at Zaragoza until the end of the season to battle relegation. Herrera joined Athletic in 2012 and what a first season he had. The Basques reached the final of the Europa League,beating Manchester United home and away en route by playing some of the best football seen at Old Trafford. “Everything came together on the night,” recalled Herrera, one of the star Athletic players. “We were winning 2-0 and Bielsa would not let us stop. We thought he wanted to close down the game. No, Bielsa wanted a third and a fourth. He could live with conceding a goal from a counter attack because that meant we’d have been attacking. He’s a football romantic, Bielsa. He thinks that football should be a spectacle.” Athletic won 3-2 playing great football. “It was a watershed for Bielsa,” recalled Herrera. “He was a lover of Barcelona’s style and a lot less of Madrid. He knew Barça speculated more. He’s meticulous, honest, studious. He lives for football. “Bielsa’s personal style was direct. If we didn’t do well, he’d tell you to your face straight. Players appreciated that, though at the time it could bother you. If he didn’t take a shine to you, you would be in for a month of suffering. Every training session, he’d be on your back. He’d insult me in every training session until I improved.” Marseille offered him a new contract worth 25% more than his current deal. Bielsa, in a letter circulated by the Argentinian media, put his side of the story across, claiming the club had changed agreed conditions in his contract, saying that trust had gone and that he’d written his resignation letter before the Caen defeat. OM countered it, releasing a statement accusing him of holding the club hostage and putting his “personal interests well above those of the institution”. Bielsa will find work at a high level again and, wherever he goes, it’s not going to be dull. This is a man who, confronted by angry fans at his Argentina home, grabbed a hand grenade and threatened to pull out the pin. “He was murder to live with in the days before the game,” smiled Herrera. “He was nervous, a perfectionist. He made us play football in a form Athletic had not played before. Football needs him.” Oh! One name??................Bielsa [Post edited 9 Dec 2015 18:20]
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| Open the ipod bay doors Hal |
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Who do you want as new boss? on 18:16 - Dec 9 with 3025 views | Glyn1 | John Carver - he's gained relevant experience by keeping Newcastle up last season. | |
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Who do you want as new boss? on 18:20 - Dec 9 with 3017 views | thomasJack | Antonio Conte | |
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Who do you want as new boss? on 18:51 - Dec 9 with 2925 views | bermudajack |
Who do you want as new boss? on 18:20 - Dec 9 by thomasJack | Antonio Conte |
Bielsa sound intreaguing to me... Probably be the Rangers manager Wharburton tho | |
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Who do you want as new boss? on 18:59 - Dec 9 with 2899 views | monmouth |
Who do you want as new boss? on 18:51 - Dec 9 by bermudajack | Bielsa sound intreaguing to me... Probably be the Rangers manager Wharburton tho |
Bielsa sounds a total nutter. There is shirley no way that Huw Jenkins would go for that cv. | |
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Who do you want as new boss? on 19:13 - Dec 9 with 2840 views | attila_the_hun |
Who do you want as new boss? on 16:50 - Dec 9 by acejack3065 | Ron Atkinson |
Ron Atkinson | |
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Who do you want as new boss? on 19:17 - Dec 9 with 2663 views | Trefor_Giddings | Oscar Garcia | |
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Who do you want as new boss? on 19:19 - Dec 9 with 2647 views | LeonisGod | PEP GUARDIOLA | | | |
Who do you want as new boss? on 19:28 - Dec 9 with 2595 views | costalotta |
Who do you want as new boss? on 18:16 - Dec 9 by bluenile | Bielsa is the most original, different, singular, person that I’ve ever met,” recalled one of his former players, Ander Herrera, the Manchester United midfielder who played under Bielsa at Athletic Bilbao. “He’s got an amazing mind, an incredible intellectual capacity outside football. Nothing is ever left to chance; everything is studied to the finest details. Everything he does or says, he does it for a reason. He knows what every player can and can’t do. He makes sure that everyone is on their toes, from the man who cuts the grass to players. I’ve seen him speaking to the groundsman for 45 minutes. I’m sure he would have studied ground keeping before that chat. He demands of others what he demands of himself. I’ve never seen coaching staff work as hard as under him. He’d go crazy if a cone was half a metre the wrong way.” Bielsa’s exacting demands were legendary. “When he got the Chile job in 2007, he gave the Chilean Football Association a list of 30 or 40 things which had to be right,” explains Diego Forlan. “He said: ‘if you want me to come then this has to be right’. There weren’t conditions attached to his contract, but about the conditions so that he could make the perfect football team. He improved Chile in four years there and helped them towards the team that they’ve become now, the South American champions. He is completely obsessed by football.” Bielsa inspires awe among fellow coaches. Pep Guardiola drove 300 kilometres to meet him in his home city of Rosario. The meeting lasted 11 hours as they discussed tactics, techniques, and positions which, at one point, featured Guardiola’s friend marking a chair in Bielsa’s home. As Pep took notes, Bielsa told him that 'teams can play badly or well, but talent depends on the inspiration and effort depends on each one of the players: the attitude for them is non-negotiable’. Before he left, Bielsa said to him: “Why do you, as someone who knows all about the negative things that go on in the world of football, including the high level of dishonesty of some people, still want to return and get involved in coaching? Do you like blood that much?” “I need that blood,” replied Guardiola. Guardiola would use many of Bielsa’s ideas when he became a manager of Barça B in 2007, including never giving a one-on-one interview to a journalist as it was wrong to give priority to a big television company over a small newspaper. He said it invoked favouritism. Bielsa had been a moderate footballer but retired at 25 and concentrated on coaching. After working with youth players, he took Newell’s Old Boys, the team he’d supported as a child, from Rosario, to the league title. He took Newell’s to the final of the Copa Libertadores two years after taking charge. It was his first job. After a spell coaching in Mexico - and he’s now being linked with the Mexico job — he returned to Argentina in 1997, managed Espanyol in Spain in 1998 before taking control of the Argentina team, where he was in charge for six years. In 2007 he took over Chile and masterminded their first ever win over neighbours Argentina. He also led them to the 2010 World Cup after they’d missed out on two previous finals.He was loved in Chile for the attacking football his teams played, but resigned because of the politics above him. Next stop was Athletic Bilbao, where he signed the young Herrera, but let him stay at Zaragoza until the end of the season to battle relegation. Herrera joined Athletic in 2012 and what a first season he had. The Basques reached the final of the Europa League,beating Manchester United home and away en route by playing some of the best football seen at Old Trafford. “Everything came together on the night,” recalled Herrera, one of the star Athletic players. “We were winning 2-0 and Bielsa would not let us stop. We thought he wanted to close down the game. No, Bielsa wanted a third and a fourth. He could live with conceding a goal from a counter attack because that meant we’d have been attacking. He’s a football romantic, Bielsa. He thinks that football should be a spectacle.” Athletic won 3-2 playing great football. “It was a watershed for Bielsa,” recalled Herrera. “He was a lover of Barcelona’s style and a lot less of Madrid. He knew Barça speculated more. He’s meticulous, honest, studious. He lives for football. “Bielsa’s personal style was direct. If we didn’t do well, he’d tell you to your face straight. Players appreciated that, though at the time it could bother you. If he didn’t take a shine to you, you would be in for a month of suffering. Every training session, he’d be on your back. He’d insult me in every training session until I improved.” Marseille offered him a new contract worth 25% more than his current deal. Bielsa, in a letter circulated by the Argentinian media, put his side of the story across, claiming the club had changed agreed conditions in his contract, saying that trust had gone and that he’d written his resignation letter before the Caen defeat. OM countered it, releasing a statement accusing him of holding the club hostage and putting his “personal interests well above those of the institution”. Bielsa will find work at a high level again and, wherever he goes, it’s not going to be dull. This is a man who, confronted by angry fans at his Argentina home, grabbed a hand grenade and threatened to pull out the pin. “He was murder to live with in the days before the game,” smiled Herrera. “He was nervous, a perfectionist. He made us play football in a form Athletic had not played before. Football needs him.” Oh! One name??................Bielsa [Post edited 9 Dec 2015 18:20]
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With Leon stepping up to number 2 | | | |
Who do you want as new boss? on 19:30 - Dec 9 with 2578 views | attila_the_hun |
Who do you want as new boss? on 17:35 - Dec 9 by clement | |
nah he'd never leave Exeter | |
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Who do you want as new boss? on 19:32 - Dec 9 with 2560 views | Pinky |
Who do you want as new boss? on 19:30 - Dec 9 by attila_the_hun | nah he'd never leave Exeter |
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Who do you want as new boss? on 19:33 - Dec 9 with 2552 views | RockAndBaconRoll | Rodgers.but someone said Oscar Garcia and he would be a good fit. Quique Sanchez Flores I like too | | | |
Who do you want as new boss? on 19:39 - Dec 9 with 2507 views | Pinky |
Who do you want as new boss? on 19:33 - Dec 9 by RockAndBaconRoll | Rodgers.but someone said Oscar Garcia and he would be a good fit. Quique Sanchez Flores I like too |
Lucien Favre as a realistic(ish) option. Marcelo Bielsa as a Christmas-come-early option. Whatever happens, I trust the board to make the right decision. Even though we've sacked Laudrup and Monk, you can't really say either was a bad choice. Laudrup got us the cup and Garry gave us a great season last year. Sometimes, though, you've got to make the call as they have done today. Have we asked Graeme Jones yet? | | | |
Who do you want as new boss? on 19:39 - Dec 9 with 2503 views | JACKMANANDBOY | | |
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