Seems
these days people can’t even pass comment on our unappealing new kit without
being accused of being a Duchatelet apologist or a serial moaner, or even worse
some sort of inane ‘glass half-full/half-empty sort of a bloke’. Perhaps best
to stick to what we know and what from that we can reasonably infer. Suffice to
say that the exceptional level of criticism of our new owner isn’t down to a
number of us having some collective attack of the moaning minnies, it’s because
what is happening is unprecedented, an experiment which may or may not work
(even if we were able to agree on a definition of what constitutes it working
from our perspective as fans). Perhaps that’s bound to polarise opinions.
We
know that Bob Peeters is our new ‘head coach’. We all of course hope that he
proves to be a blinding success, but let’s park that for a minute. None of us
were surprised that the new guy is Belgian. So unless Duchatelet had some
change of heart when it came to the terms offered to the head coach, ie
dropping the elements that Sir Chris clearly found unacceptable, the
appointment was a matter of selecting a Belgian prepared to accept these terms
(on a one-year deal). I don’t know how many ‘candidates’ these parameters leave
you with, but it isn’t being unduly negative to point out that the pool of
talent meeting the criteria has to be significantly smaller than without such
restrictions.
We
know that Katrien Meire was quoted on the club site as saying that Jose Riga
was a “very serious candidate” for the post but that “with a number of strong
candidates we had a difficult decision to make to choose between them”. We also
know that Peeters was quoted on the club site as saying that “the owner
contacted me and asked if I was prepared to take the job”. The Red Robin rather
beat me to it in highlighting what might appear to be something of a
contradiction here. My dictionary definition of ‘candidate’ is “one who applies
to be chosen for an office, position”. If we feed in what Alex Dyer said in his
interview with the South London Press about how players since the takeover were
selected, what is reasonable to infer is that aside from Riga all other ‘strong
candidates’ were totally unaware that they were being ‘considered’. It’s
reasonable to state that in the real world they were not candidates at all.
I
have absolutely nothing against Belgians and really don’t care that Peeters
played for Millwall. It isn’t a Dennis Wise situation. But to say that Peeters’
task looks a tough one isn’t being negative. He will have to get the full
support of players old and new who will at least suspect that he didn’t choose to
sign them and who may not have a free hand when it comes even to picking the
team. I hope he has the character to achieve this.
I
don’t mind admitting that, irrespective of the circumstances of his
appointment, I did Riga a disservice in dismissing him as a ‘yes’ man when he
came in. He did as good a job as anyone could have done, by harnessing the team
spirit and by largely (but no, not completely) ignoring the players dumped on
us in January. In her statement of thanks to Riga Meire noted that “he faced an
extremely difficult job in keeping our club in the Championship, having to do
so with a number of our young academy players”. Just how does that square with
previous comments from the board to the effect that ‘we knew we had to
strengthen the team in January’ and the fact that we sold three first-choice
players that month? If the board want us to be positive can we please stop
being fed obvious b/s.
For
a sense of perspective on Riga, he didn’t ‘save us’ from relegation but made a
very important contribution to that end, as did the players. Perhaps his best
decision was to listen to Dyer (if the contents of his interview are to be
believed, and I have absolutely no reason not to) saying that there was enough
in the dressing room to avoid relegation and to make decisions that have ended
up enhancing his personal reputation as a manager (it will be interesting to
see how he fares at Blackpool, if that goes through). Whether these decisions –
and a feeling that he was more his own man than I hastily concluded – ended up
ruling him out of staying at Charlton only one person knows (and it isn’t Riga
himself).
On
the playing/staff front, we have seen Hamer and Dervite take up what were
obviously better options for them than we put in front of them (they, along
with the other departures – and of course the rightly revered Colin Powell – go
with our best wishes). We wait to see whether Morrison and/or Poyet will stay. We’ve
also seen enough reports/comments to suggest that an attempt to sign Barnsley’s
O’Grady have foundered on wages. It’s not unreasonable to infer from this that,
in line with the stated Duchatelet goal of getting us to (or as close as
possible to) a breakeven financial position asap (and possibly linked to this
the supposed vision that we are merely moving ahead of the curve when it comes
to an FPR-driven adjustment in Championship finances) we are offering deals to
players that compare poorly with at least the bulk of Championship teams, which
at least suggests that as and when these players have alternatives they will be
inclined to take them.
That,
like the parameters restricting the choice of a new head coach, restricts the
available pool of talent that we can compete for. The pool of course may end up
being big enough to produce at least a competitive Championship team/squad. The
signing of Zak Ansah may prove to be a case in point. I hope so.
All
of this isn’t being unduly negative, as the result of some personal bias
(anyone who actually did their homework on this blog – and I wouldn’t advocate
it as I trust we all have far better things to do with our time – would find
criticism from me of people leaving early, booing, howling at every misplaced
pass etc and of me for giving far too generous player ratings as I just want
them to be worldbeaters). As an Englishman (and Briton/European) and a football
fan of course I’m looking forward to the World Cup. Weeks of solid footie on
the box, bring it on. As for England, there are good grounds for optimism
regarding prospects over the next four years, given plenty of developing talent,
and of course I hope we do well in Brazil. Just suffice to say I’d want
substantially better odds than 25/1 to put money on us to win the thing as just
about every material factor argues against such an outcome. Can we win it? Of
course it’s possible. Just highly unlikely – and believe it or not the outcome
won’t be influenced by our level of optimism/pessimism pre-tournament. Equally,
if I were a Derby fan I’d probably still be feeling gutted over the
Championship play-off final but by now thoughts might be turning to the fact
that there’s every reason to believe they will be there or thereabouts at the
end of next season and that if promoted at the end of it they will probably be
in better shape to compete in the Premiership than if they went up.
Bookies
aren’t risk-takers; they only set the odds and offset in a fashion that
delivers acceptable returns. Before Peeters’ appointment I printed out a few
bits with a view to a post and never got around to it. One was that PaddyPower
had us at 40/1 to win the Championship, on a par with Sheff Wed, Brentford and
Birmingham and shorter odds than Millwall, Blackpool and Huddersfield
(Rotherham hadn’t made it into the Championship then). SkyBet had us at 40/1
(only Blackpool at 66/1 were longer odds), and on 14/1 to get promotion (here
too only Blackpool had longer odds). For relegation SkyBet had us at 9/4, the
same as Millwall and Huddersfield (Blackpool were 13/8). Since then nothing has
shifted. SkyBet has us joint-third favourites for relegation (with Huddersfield
and Millwall with Blackpool and Rotherham the shorter odds).
The
point isn’t that the bookies are geniuses and we’re sure to be headed for
another relegation struggle, but rather that there isn’t, as yet, good reason
to believe this won’t be the case. Peeters may prove to be an outstanding
manager, we may retain the waverers and sign a clutch of good new players and
have a great season. I hope for these things, but right now the evidence to
support such hopes is absent.
Something
else still absent. Lest it be forgotten, in late March Meire said in a ‘message
to Charlton fans’ that “since we arrived at the club in January we understood
the importance of interaction with Charlton supporters”, that “we (the board)
are keen to meet with supporters to hear their views and discuss a shared
vision for the future of this great club”, but also that “it is currently an
extremely busy time”. I may have missed something, there may be efforts
underway behind the scenes to convene meetings of which I am unaware. Otherwise
each passing day without the convening of meetings – most obviously with the Trust
but also other groupings, including the Royal Oak Group – only pushes us
further in the direction of concluding that genuine communication to address
fans’ concerns isn’t just not a priority but rather an unwanted inconvenience. No
amount of staged interviews will suffice.
Finally
(I’ve left this to last to ensure that anyone wishing to object had first to
suffer the ramblings above), to those who feel qualified to cast judgement on
who is and who is not an Addick, I’d like to state another two facts. First, I’ve
been a Charlton supporter all my conscious life and nothing will change that,
yet I don’t think for a moment that gives me any reason to talk in terms of who
is or is not an Addick. Second, some supporters, however many (clearly I am one
of them), felt disgusted and alienated by what has happened since the takeover.
We
need more Addicks, not less. I’m tempted to think (not on the basis of any
evidence it’s true) that one factor behind the previous owners’ evaporation of
commitment to us was disappointment over the crowd size on our return to the
Championship. We averaged 17,485 in the promotion season (with a high of
26,749). In the first year back in the Championship we managed an average of
18,499, despite higher away support and more attractive fixtures. Last season
we averaged 16,134 (with a top attendance of 23,600), or 59.5% of capacity. I
can’t say whether the new season ticket pricing arrangements will be the answer,
but any efforts to increase attendance are to be welcomed (we can’t ignore the
possible impact on floating fans of West Ham’s move). I just wonder why as
things stand such efforts are not extended to address other facts.
Exellent post BA as always
ReplyDeleteNot a regular Blog reader and first time I have read Blackheath Addick... You write a lot but I happily read through to the end. I agree with Swedeaddick Excellent post. I'll be looking out for more of them.
ReplyDeleteAlanFromParis
It's going to take a flurry of big signings to shift the Bookies odds and they don't look like coming. This model clearly isn't working when you can agree a fee for a player in your league but lose him on wages to one of a number of your competitors. You don't get promotion on the cheap or with a lack of playing continuity.
ReplyDeleteThank you for another insightful post. I am in complete agreement with your comments. It will be interesting to see if Blackpool, with Jose Riga at the helm, will do better than Charlton next season - defying those bookies odds! I myself was a Riga convert and reading between the lines of Alex Dyer's SLP interview, he was no "Yes man". Neither my nephew or I have renewed our season tickets as yet.
ReplyDeletebehind Enemy Lines
Thanks for the comments guys. As for the length of the post, nobody's ever accused me of being concise but I will try harder.
ReplyDeleteRe the promised meeting(s), it is worth having a look back at the Trust's assessment of a February Duchatelet press conference. "When asked about his ambitions for the club, Duchatelet gave an intruiging, lengthy and somewhat rambling answer" (so, not just me who goes on a bit). I'd appreciate some insight into just why he wants to be involved in football, what he thinks he brings to the party, and how this feeds into goals regarding us. I don't want more lines about 'our great club' or promises of this that and the other. Just openness and honesty to allow people we know have the interests of Charlton at heart to make assessments, to give us better reason to back the vision.
Good post. The new it is a bit like the one in your photo BA. I quite like the kit, but I still done't like what's happening at the club. It feels like this coming season is going to be another big struggle, there's no evidence yet to suggest otherwise, and the crowds won't return unless we're winning matches. That's basically all they really want to see.
ReplyDeleteIt is indeed anon, albeit in reverse. If I remember correctly we only had the red shoulders thing for a few years, just happened to be my first Charlton outfit Xmas prezzie. The new one may grow on me, like much else I hope so.
ReplyDeleteIf I could have got my act together, this is more or less what I'd have said to anybody willing to read/listen to my thoughts.
ReplyDeleteKeep it up BA.