What is clear is that there is a real feeling amongst the support base
right now. What that feeling is, is a completely different matter and
not one easily explained, but there's certainly not that buzz that has
accompanied the past couple of seasons and it has led to supporters
predicting a season where we'll struggle to match previous achievements.
There's very few supporters predicting the top three finish that they
may have done a year ago. Indeed, it would appear that the majority are
predicting "top half" with some even suggesting things lower down. The
bubbly has definitely not been stuck in the fridge in anticipation of
the year ahead.
It's certainly understandable why supporters are feeling this way.
We've had a team which has just fallen ever so short in the past couple
of seasons, and it's inevitable that supporters will look for how we can
improve on those perceived shortcomings and weren't expecting a Summer
where we recruited more goalkeepers than outfield players.
But it has to be said that we are not alone in feeling this way.
Looking around the web, these feelings are mirrored at all three of last
season's losing Play Off teams, and those teams that you'd expect to
kick on for this season. With the exception of Notts County. Negativity
isn't the word, it's more disappointment that teams haven't recruited
over the Summer to the extent that supporters wanted. Clearly, financial
common sense has hit home at many clubs this Summer.
So far as for judging where Dale will finish this season, it's been a
case of asking myself whether we are a better or worse side than last
season, and that for me is the key thing. For all the disappointments
that we've not recruited a Stephen Foster style defensive lynchpin to
tighten up our back line or signed that 6'3 striker, who's equally as
good in the air as on the floor, and can add 15 to 20 goals a season,
have we gone from being a side that has comfortably made the Play Offs
over the last two seasons to one who is no longer good enough to do so?
I'd have to say the answer to that is no.
From a goalkeeping point of view, we've drafted in Kenny Arthur plus
the young lad from Leeds. This position has been a bone of contention
for many supporters, who felt that Sam Russell had been good enough. But
there is only so many times you can get away with describing a keeper as
unlucky as his shots get parried to opposition strikers.
Time will show whether Athur is an improvement in that area, but it
was our own goalkeeping coach who has recommended Arthur having worked
with him previously which speaks volumes to me. Add to that the
disappointment shown by the Flag waves at his departure from the Crown
Ground.
Defensively, we are down simply on numbers having lost four defenders
at the end of last season. But three of those four contributed in total
one league start last season, and arguably we'd already made one
replacement for them by signing Craig Dawson late last season. Perhaps
if we'd drafted him into the club in June, there'd be a different
mindset amongst the fanbase.
Much will depend on how Dawson fares in the opening weeks of the
season whilst McArdle is out injured, and then whether Keith Hill can
work on the partnership of the young Irisheffieldman and Stanton. Both
are fine players individually, but their pairing can be certainly
tweaked to the benefit of the team.
From a midfield point of view, I can only see improvement. Jonah and
Toner developed a good partnership last season and the addition of Jason
Kennedy can only see that central midfield pairing taken to the next
level. Throw into that the encouraging displays in pre-season from
Callum Byrne who looks to be another one from the Chris Beech conveyor
belt, and it's no wonder Clark Keltie is stuck out in the cold.
Out wide, we will be once again be spoilt for choice more so than any
club in the division. If anything, we'll be boosted as the suggestions
are that Kallum Higginbotham has been returning to the sort of form that
excited us all back in 2007-8, after suffering from the difficult second
album syndrome last season. I know its a footballing cliché, but if he
can maintain that form, it will be like signing a new player as his
contribution in 2008-9 was negligible.
Higginbotham's return to form, plus the availability of the ever
reliable Buckley, Thompson and Rundle puts us in a position where
Hilcroft can select two from four possible wingers, with no concerns at
all about who he picks. Furthermore, with the seven sub rule for the
2009-10 season, this might even become an extra weapon to his armoury
and an advantage over his peers as we pinpoint the 65 minute mark to
throw on two new wingers to terrorise weary full backs.
Up front is something of an enigma for Dale. If you asked the
supporters, what position do we need to strengthen, a great percentage
would cite up front as being the priority, with Glenn Murray never
really being replaced in the eighteen months since his departure. This
despite the fact that the league table suggests that goal scoring has
been our greatest asset throughout the Hilcroft era.
We have the return of Jon Shaw who will at least give us something
different, though history would suggest that the management are not the
greatest fans of any of the combinations involving Dagnall, Le Fondre
and Shaw, and hence we've seen forward pairings with Thompson or Buckley
used as the "big man" up front. Whatever we go with up front, we won't
suffer for the loss of Lee Thorpe and we'll continue to score goals
aplenty.
So overall looking at the squad, despite being slightly down on
numbers, it's only really at the back where we have suffered in terms of
personnel, but as mentioned, we've pretty much lost non contributing
players so major injury crisis aside, it shouldn't affect us to the
level that some have predicted.
So are we worse off than we were last season when we made the Play
Offs? Most certainly not, and that's why I have us down for another Play
Off position for my prediction. At the very, very, very least, we are
just as good as we were last season when we finished 6th.
Now it's not all a case of pretending everything is wonderful in the
Dale camp. There are concerns about the finances at the club. The budget
has been cut dramatically over the Summer, with the budget provided to
the management probably taking into account more revenue from season
ticket sales than what we have sold and the income from the new shirt
sales which will hopefully be a great surprise in everyone's Christmas
stocking this year.
Will further cuts be required? Probably not, but our resolute will no
doubt be tested over the season with bids for some of our young
starlets, especially with so many of them out of contract at the end of
this coming season. Will the board sit tight and risk the players
running their contracts down? History suggests to the contrary, and it
also suggests that when our prize assets are indeed sold that Keith Hill
isn't exactly given a king's ransom to play with.
Finances will also hit us at key areas like the January transfer
window. Most Dale fans are now more financially realistic than in
previous years, and now rightfully see the transfer windows as times to
retain the squad rather than strengthen. For some of our peers, it will
be that opportunity to add to their squad and an advantage they will
hold over us.
Amongst the concerns over lack of recruitment, one thing that has not
been considered by many is the way young players are handled at
Spotland. Twelve months ago, the likes of Will Buckley and Joe Thompson
were hardly considered by anyone. Buckley had only had one league start
to his name, and Thompson was universally derided at every opportunity.
A year later, and arguably Buckley has been moulded into our most
influential player and Thompson may well have to produce a season
culminating in winning goals which secure us the league title and the FA
Cup, followed by winning the Eurovision song contest with the FA Cup
final song that he wrote for the squad to earn any sort of recognition
in certain quarters, but both have been developed from fringe players to
become important first team players, and its that commitment to making
our own players better players which has been the hallmark of the
Hilcroft era.
Who's to say that those improvements won't continue, and similar
development of the myriad of young players that we have at the club? By
the end of 2010, it might be a Brizzle, or a Brown or a Byrne or even a
Higginbotham that has us so excited and worried about being picked up
the circulating higher division vultures?
We have a settled squad, one which is marginally better than it was
last season (and certainly not weaker) and perhaps we are now better
equipped to dealing with situations like our captain missing half the
season through injury, and whilst we'd all like another couple of
players in the squad (with "we" including both the board and the
management) to help push to that next level, realistically we have to
make the best of what we have, without putting the future of the club at
risk.
This squad has proved itself to be more than just capable of
competing in this division, with away victories at two of the top three
sides last season, and whilst the cover within the squad might be
slightly thinner, it still remains and there is always an answer to
"What happens if.......".
For us not to make the Play Offs again this season, look at our peers
and ask yourself, have we become a worse side over the Summer than
Shrewsbury, than Morecambe, than Bradford, than Dagenham etc. There's
very few teams who I would say have strengthened with many visibly
weaker than last time round.
So all in all, it will be Play Offs again for Dale this season.
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