McCarthy needs forwards to combine together.
For the sake of football aesthetics, I hope Wigan stay up and Wolves go down. In terms of the worse teams I have seen down the Lane, Mick McCarthy's men are second only to Aston Villa. While Villa showed absolutely no ambition, determination, or professional pride, at last they didn't kick, dive and complain like Wolves did.
There is nothing wrong with being the inferior team, putting men behind the ball, and looking to sneak a draw or win, but the constant fouling, complaining, time wasting and general thuggery is irksome in the least (but enough about Karl Henry). However, Wolves do have a decent team, some very decent players, and a manager who, while dour, refrains from the oft used tactic of blaming referees, opposition players, or plain old victimisation.
The Wolves crowd is for the main supportive, educated, and not liable to short-termism. People will point to the booing of their manager earlier in the season but given the outlays in the last couple of seasons they should be expecting more than a relegation dogfight every season.
Wayne Hennessey is a promising keeper, capable of great shot stopping but the odd lapse in concentration that experience will hopefully iron out. In defence they have the stoic Roger Johnson, Sebastien Bassong brings a bit of class on loan, and while the full backs could be generously called 'limited' they are honest pros and you wouldn't wish them ill. Stephen Ward, Kevin Foley, George Elokobi - you wouldn't boast to your mates that you met them in a club, but nor would you tell the papers you say them staggering around drunkenly.
In midfield there are a few villains - the aforementioned Henry has few fans, while Stephen Hunt can wind up opposition fans - but they also have good talent in Jaime O'Hara, a £5million buy from Tottenham, Nenad Milijas, Adam Hammill, Dave Edwards, and wing wizards Matt Jarvis and Michael Knightly, who seems to have out his injury nightmares finally behind him.
Upfront is the hard working Kevin Doyle, the underrated Steven Fletcher, and Sylvan Ebanks-Blake. That is a good team, but often Wolves fail to make the most of their resources, and nowhere is this more typified than in attack.
Doyle and Fletcher are very good strikers. The Irishman provides a tireless target man, someone ready to fight to hold the ball up, will challenge and chase the opposition centre backs, and can chip with goals (it's remarkable to think he is yet to get into double figures in any of his three seasons at Wolves). Fletcher has shown class ever since he made the move south of the border from Hibernian to Burnley. The Scotsman's left foot has a certain finesse about it, he is strong in the air, and has the invaluable ability to pop up in the right place in the right time. But these two rarely play together.
McCarthy is so set with his 4-5-1/4-1-4-1 formation that he is not making the best use of arguably his two best players. Doyle's scoring record may look poor but Wolves do not score many in general, and often Doyle is isolated and combating two centre backs. Is it any surprise that Wolves put up good shows against the top teams, who are expected to be on top, but when Wolves are expected to take the initiative against their relegation rivals they struggle?
McCarthy has installed a determined mentality amongst his team of battlers, but he struggles to introduce fluidity and adventure to his side, and their home record is especially poor - their 11 points from 12 home games is only one better than their away record. They can and must improve that record in their next two home games against local rivals WBA and fellow relegation candidates Blackburn. If they cannot break those two teams down then questions need to be asked about McCarthy's ability and ambition.
Wolves' faith in British talent is to be commended. The club has prudently improved the playing squad and stadium, and while their on-field attitude could do with some improving, there is much to admire about the team from the Black Country. However, if they continue to shun attacking football and fail to pick up points against teams in and around them McCarthy will have no reason to complain if they are relegated.
Showing posts with label EPL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EPL. Show all posts
Wednesday, 8 February 2012
Tuesday, 29 June 2010
Liverpool Fans Need to Calm Down
Now Roy Hodgson appears to be ready to sign a contract to become Liverpool manager, fans of the Anfield club need to adapt their expectations if they want the club to get out of the mess they are now in.
Did Rafa Benitez over-achieve in his six years in charge? A Champions League victory, an FA cup win, as well as another Champions League final appearance and a League Cup final loss, would point to a decent level of success. Finishing runners up in the Premier League in 2009 pointed to a club that, on the field at least, was heading in the right direction. However, failure to qualify for the Champions League in 2010, never mind failing to mount another title challenge, show that question marks still remain over Benitez's tenure.
The most remarkable point may be the Spaniard's own admission that Liverpool still needed half a dozen world class performers. For a new incumbent, this almost comes as standard as the new manager tries to extract the biggest transfer budget from the boardroom. For someone in their sixth year in the job, having spent many, many millions, you have to wonder what they have been playing at. Players like Babel, Lucas, Riera have failed to impress, while an even greater concern could be the lack of talent coming through the academy. While Arsenal poached Fabregas and turned him into a world class playmaker, players like N'gog, El Zhar and Nemeth have failed to offer any hint of potential. Yet Benitez continued with them.
Liverpool need investment, an investment of money AND time. Hodgson is an expert at training ground drilling, running through the same scenarios and plays to get a highly organised outfit. With the special talent of Torres and Gerrard, the loveable Londoner should get more out of the team than Rudderless Rafa, but to expect titles and trophies with the current playing squad is asking far too much.
In the long term, a season or two out of the spotlight may be beneficial. The Americans may be forced to drop their price, especially if RBS decide to exert some pressure. A lower price, new ownership, less pressure, and the boys in Red can start the climb back to glory.
Without the transfer budget to entice a top class manager, the last thing Liverpool needs is to start hiring and firing managers with a narrow, short term view. But if Hodgson is to succeed he needs patience from the fans and the belief of the players. While Roy may not lead them to the holy grail of a Premiership title, he can get the club back on the right track, ready for the next man
Did Rafa Benitez over-achieve in his six years in charge? A Champions League victory, an FA cup win, as well as another Champions League final appearance and a League Cup final loss, would point to a decent level of success. Finishing runners up in the Premier League in 2009 pointed to a club that, on the field at least, was heading in the right direction. However, failure to qualify for the Champions League in 2010, never mind failing to mount another title challenge, show that question marks still remain over Benitez's tenure.
The most remarkable point may be the Spaniard's own admission that Liverpool still needed half a dozen world class performers. For a new incumbent, this almost comes as standard as the new manager tries to extract the biggest transfer budget from the boardroom. For someone in their sixth year in the job, having spent many, many millions, you have to wonder what they have been playing at. Players like Babel, Lucas, Riera have failed to impress, while an even greater concern could be the lack of talent coming through the academy. While Arsenal poached Fabregas and turned him into a world class playmaker, players like N'gog, El Zhar and Nemeth have failed to offer any hint of potential. Yet Benitez continued with them.
Liverpool need investment, an investment of money AND time. Hodgson is an expert at training ground drilling, running through the same scenarios and plays to get a highly organised outfit. With the special talent of Torres and Gerrard, the loveable Londoner should get more out of the team than Rudderless Rafa, but to expect titles and trophies with the current playing squad is asking far too much.
In the long term, a season or two out of the spotlight may be beneficial. The Americans may be forced to drop their price, especially if RBS decide to exert some pressure. A lower price, new ownership, less pressure, and the boys in Red can start the climb back to glory.
Without the transfer budget to entice a top class manager, the last thing Liverpool needs is to start hiring and firing managers with a narrow, short term view. But if Hodgson is to succeed he needs patience from the fans and the belief of the players. While Roy may not lead them to the holy grail of a Premiership title, he can get the club back on the right track, ready for the next man
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