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Valentine's Day Massacre or Romeo and Gillingham? (Let's play football managers.)
#1
The trouble with football managers is that they are too much the same. They accept their own limited lifespan at clubs, they operate within very limited tactical confines, they will recite the same set of values to the media (even in broken English) and, in an environment which presents an appearance of rapid change, by reinforcing their own homogeneity, they become bastions of conservatism. And they are not the only collaborators. Interview any player and he will testify how much a new manager has been a new broom, brightened the whole atmosphere, lifted the club even when he has started out on a losing run. The old manager, who months earlier had been the equivalent of Red Bull, went through the traditional reverse stages from boring smoothie to flat lemonade with the top left-off ………. And in the background, willing to collaborate with any new vichy regime are the fans, who shell out on a regular basis to check out whether changes at the top represent revolution, or the status quo. But as they have only ever seen the status quo they are all too keen to confuse it with revolution and collaborate through their debit cards with an endless cycle of change that inevitably becomes more or less the same thing.

Take our 92 Premier and EFL clubs, add in 24 from the National League if you like ….. now find one of those 116 that plays a tactically very different game from the rest. Does anyone field two 6’5” strikers, wide men who sling in crosses all the time, two rampant wide defenders who’ll do much the same when given the chance, a lone centre back, who operates behind a mobile version of Vinny Jones tackling everything that moves? Does anyone play a back five and hoof long balls forward at every opportunity? Does anyone play a sweeper? Does anyone send their keeper up for every corner and free-kick? Does any team never commit a deliberate foul? Or never argue with the referee? Does anyone really kick anything that moves, is any team going down theatrically every time anyone has the ball in the opposition box? Is there a team known for its long-range shooting, its dead-ball precision? Is anyone out there trying to make total football viable? Who is not playing a pressing game and instead leaves players upfield and is putting in challenges only when the opposition nears the danger area?

Of course teams do play in slightly different ways, but in truth the range of acceptable game plans is ever-narrowing and under media scrutiny the ability to put tactical plan and result together to transform them into cause and effect is only going to become more acute. For football managers that means matching up your opponent’s 4-3-3, it means ensuring your players run as many miles as the opposition during a game, it means making your tackle count – well count, pass-completion, your players know what’s expected …….. In the end it’s a very similar product in a different coloured box. And if your players are enjoying themselves you might get a winning record and be up the league and your opponent for a series of infinitessimal differences, or even totally random reasons, will be losing quite a lot with players who aren’t enjoying that experience ……… And once you know you are likely to win or lose you do whichever MORE.

Last season Leicester proved that you could beat teams of far better players with 40% possession or less, but not only can’t they replicate that, having become infatuated with their ability to improve their team on paper with better players, but also all their opponents are determined to prove their original philosophy was correct by implementing it more efficiently this time round. And when tiny differences are identified, like Sean Dyche doesn't change his team, we stand open-mouthed at the outrageous originality of such an unimaginable approach.

Tuesday night in Gillingham will be red bricks in February. 48 will abandon St Valentine to flood down from Chesterfield. Musselburgh's legacy to Pennock will add a teaspoon of extra muscle to the Division One stew, Mr Caldwell might perhaps try to sprinkle a bit of piquant passing on top. Whether the result will be poisonous only time will tell. Roses will always do on Valentine's Day, and if they're rejected they'll be welcome on our grave.
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#2
I can remember us going to Gillingham in the 70's or early 80's? We were top or near the top of the league and got bounced 10-0. Jim Brown was in goal and I think he was injured but played on because we had no sub keepers in those days. Why would I not be surprised if we don't get close to that scoreline tonight even with a fit keeper? Most modern day formations start with the same number ie 4, 424, 4231, 433, 4132. Theres a good reason for that especially with slow defenders.
Whilst ever Cauldwell sticks with 3 at the back it could well be Tuesday night in Kent = Valentines Day massacre.
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#3
1-1 draw. It's a long shot but if we beat Bury on Saturday and other results go our way there is a chance a small chance but none the less a chance.
CHESTERFIELD PREDICTION LEAGUE WINNER 2015/2016

More to Football than the Premier League and SKY
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#4
I cant remember the last time we scored an injury time goal to gain points so there's a positive step for you .I can remember losing points to last gasp goals plenty of times especially under Wilson.
Can anyone remember when this last happened ?
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#5
A long long time ago Jamie Hewitt scored in the last minute against Middlesborough, it didn't win points but its the last one I can remember.
Just to throw a big dampener on things, if the rumours about why Hird has been dropped are true then we really are in deep shit. You really have to feel sorry for the player, why the hell not let him go somewhere on loan last week if we had no intention of triggering his contract renewal?
Yet another nail in our coffin.
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#6
Hird's been a good player for us and could do a good job elsewhere, but we are going to need to re-build. He and Evatt are a partnership made in hell. Anderson's a loanee. We don't want Raglan apparently and Caldwell is not even interested in bringing him back to have a looksee. That's why I want us to play Maguire, see if he has got it now and work out what kind of partner if any he'll need OR make the decision that he isn't ready yet - rather than faff around humming and haaaing about promise.

If you look at the way Exeter rose from bottom of Division 2 to promotion challengers of course there's a chance BUT there needs to be the unfulfilled talent available (which Exeter did have).

I'll take and even praise a fairly lucky point away, but it is wins we need and the teams around us seem to be looking for wins and getting their noses in front in games. Our team looks random-select and I'd be very surprised if we could get it together to beat Bury.
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#7
(15-02-2017, 02:17)bluepooch Wrote: I cant remember the last time we scored an injury time goal to gain points so there's a positive step for you .I can remember losing points to last gasp goals plenty of times especially under Wilson.
Can anyone remember when this last happened ?

I remember we played Southend at home and I remember Scott Boden scoring a last minute winner in injury time to win 2-1. I think the season was 2010/2011 i'm not sure.
CHESTERFIELD PREDICTION LEAGUE WINNER 2015/2016

More to Football than the Premier League and SKY
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