I've
found myself in recent days checking the club site more often than I can
remember. I wasn't entire sure why. It wasn't to stay on top of developments in
the U21s' clash with the Spanners, nor was it to put in my belated vote for the
January poll that's still showing ('Are you looking forward to this season's FA
Cup campaign?' - yes, no or undecided; do you really want to know?). Instead it
was probably the feeling that after Saturday's result and what had gone before,
plus what is coming up, we might get confirmation of some material development,
possibly related to Ms Meire. Nothing yet, so we're still in the dark regarding
our owner's prevailing mood and thoughts (let's not ennoble these by labelling
them a strategy). But is there some tentative evidence that he may finally be starting
to listen?
My
first reaction to the news that Nebojsa Vignjevic would not after all be
replacing Karel Fraeye as interim/permanent head coach/bell-boy was that
perhaps Duchatelet had indeed listened to others and changed tack. This was
before the reports emerged that the switch back to Jose Riga may have been down
to Vignjevic simply turning down the opportunity. Maybe it will all come out in
the wash; perhaps Vignjevic saw enough of the immediate response from Addicks -
and let's face it nobody in their right mind who gave priority to us avoiding
relegation would have considered the man, unless of course the available talent
pool is strictly limited to network employees - to realise that there was
nothing in it for him, at least for now. But just possibly the implications (ie
stupidity) of appointing Vignjevic were made plain to Duchatelet and he
listened.
Then
the new signing. At one level depressing and easy to dismiss, another Standard
Liege reject about to make the switch to the US to milk his remaining career years
and instead pushed in our direction. But that is unfair, at least until we've
seen what the guy can do. We've only recently been told by Richard Murray of
the three types of player that our owner favours (domestic youth, young
overseas players, and domestic seasoned lags), which fits with his strange
(sorry, visionary) thinking. Quite clearly signing Jorge Teixeira, a
29-year-old on a four-and-a-half-year deal doesn't fit. Now I can't rule out
the possibility that the move to us is somehow entwined with Duchatelet's
dealings with Standard Liege, just as whatever happens to Tony Watt may be, or
that Teixeira just came top in the latest spreadsheet exercise from the
player-selection cronies. But on the face of it, from what Teixeira and Riga
have said, it looks like a case of an incoming manager pointing out an
available player who he feels will do a good job for us and the owner backing
that judgement and shelling out a not immaterial fee (especially in the context
of two other centre-halves having only recently been brought in, albeit one on
a short-term loan). Strange indeed if true - but welcome.
The
benefit of the doubt as far as I'm concerned was lost some time back and at
best it is premature to conclude that things have indeed taken a material turn
for the better. No question that the move which would strengthen that feeling
is if Meire is moved on (anywhere away from us). We know she's not the
decision-maker and her departure could end up meaning nothing; but, especially
if a change came in advance of this Saturday's protests, it might, just might,
indicate at least a willingness to respond to the club's customers' wishes.
I
guess my thinking is that although a change of ownership is probably the only
positive eventual outcome for us, let's keep our eyes on the prize, ie just
what it is that we want. I don't think it's an exaggeration to suggest that by
early February we should know whether we are still in a relegation fight but
with a realistic chance of success, or whether we should be resigned to another
spell in the third flight. By then the transfer window will have closed (don't
ask me about the timings for loan signings) and we will have played three
crucial games: Blackburn at home, Rotherham away, and Bristol City at home. The
former and the player moves in and out of the club should give some insight as
to our owner's priorities and perhaps Riga's influence; the latter will tell us
about whether the players are up for the fight (obviously last Saturday's
outcome casts fresh doubt on this) and, depending on the results, whether there
is still a fight to be had.
We
do after all have a very hard run-in. After this coming series of three we
have, through to early March, five games against middling opposition (Cardiff,
Fulham, Preston, Reading and Brentford), then MK Dons. Thereafter in our final
10 games we are up against at least seven with promotion
expectations/ambitions. Sure, in the closing stages it is even more the case
that anyone can beat anyone; but if we're still in the bottom three after
playing MK Dons on 8 March we would surely be set for the drop.
By
this stage of the season no team is not where they deserve to be. Relegation is
by no means nailed on, but obviously Riga/Fraeye and Hull/Huddersfield (and Colchester) need
to become the watershed if it is to be avoided. I'd suggest that the next three
matches set the scene. I'm not convinced they are must-win games (or say two
out of three), that may be asking too much too soon. Rather we cannot afford to
lose to either Rotherham or Bristol City, need to pick up at least one win, and
over and above all else need to show that we are turning a corner, laying the
base for a real run at the following five games and then to be in with a
realistic chance for the tough final 10.
If
the players turn out not to be, collectively, up for it, so be it; the cause is
lost. But in line with some of the comments after a previous post I'd agree
that there's no excuse for the supporters not playing their part, for now at
least, when it comes to the relegation issue. I'm not privy to the protest
plans for Saturday and appreciate why some elements are being kept secret for
now. But I would welcome CARD and all associated with it building on the pledge
not to hold a pre-match demonstration on Saturday by calling on supporters to
back the team 100% inside the ground and through the game, and to state this openly
in advance of the game, so that the players can feel confident that the first
mistake won't open the floodgates for protests.
Again
in line with the comments, we can't look back on this stage of the season and
conclude that we did not do all we could to help the team avoid relegation -
and consequently for the second time in three years achieve that objective despite
the actions of the board. There is after all still that dilemma at the heart of
the protests, as evident from the recent Trust statement following the
inaugural meeting of CARD. Those in CARD were described as having come together
"to formulate plans to step up protests aimed at forcing the owner Roland
Duchatelet to put the club up for sale". It went on to say that "the
immediate objective for the group ... is to force significant changes in its
(the club's) senior management", which I assume means the departure of
Miere. Now that's fair enough, no contradiction in assisting in her going and
the ultimate goal of a change of ownership, as long as there's no loss of focus
regarding the latter.
The
statement concluded with "at this stage, CARD simply wants to assure
Charlton fans that they are working together to try to bring a swift and
positive end to the current crisis at the club". Now that's a bit
ambiguous. Does an end to the crisis mean avoiding relegation or getting new
ownership (provided of course that the incoming is not an asset-stripper and/or
advocates a move away from The Valley)? I'm inclined to assume it means the
latter, as this is the root of the problem, the former just the symptom. But
perhaps here too there is no contradiction. After all, if Duchatelet would not
even deign to meet Peter Varney's potential investor, the chances of any actual
sale of the club in the near future are pretty remote. And as outlined before
it's quite likely that relegation would not force a sale, rather just more
severe belt-tightening (and a marked downgrading of the players to complement
the youngsters).
Arguably
our best chance of being sold on is to stay up, and in doing so to confront
Duchatelet with the continuing dilemma of having to fund a level of losses he
isn't comfortable with (perhaps even over the medium term cannot afford) to try
to compete, without a realistic hope of promotion and all that entails, rather
than a possibly significantly lower running loss (I only say possibly as who
knows if that could be achieved given the likely attendances) while we all wait
for the tomorrow when financial fair play changes the picture (and in the
interim bask in the delight at watching those Premiership stars of the future
rather than support a team). Who knows, but it might be another argument in
favour of driving home the 'support the team, not the regime/roar the team,
roast the regime' message, making it absolutely plain that once inside the
ground supporting the team is paramount.
There
will be time enough to protest across the board in the event we lose the
relegation fight. And surely it doesn't need to be added that however high the
emotions run there is simply no excuse for aggression (let alone violence), or
racism/sexism. None of that is a part of the Charlton we want back.