The
khazi reading keeps throwing up timely gems. The front cover of Voice of the Valley No 56, which was published in the
wake of the January 1995 board meeting which saw the removal of Roger Alwen as
chief executive and chairman, with Richard Murray elevated to managing director
and Martin Simons made chairman, has a photo of Murray and Simons and an apt
caption of the former saying to the latter "well, at least no-one can say
you couldn't organise a p***-up in a brewery!" I think it's safe to say
that no current or future publication or report dealing with the Duchatelet
regime will say the same about them.
This
blog seldom if ever contains information not already published elsewhere and I have no
inside track on exactly why Chris Wilder and the regime (sorry to be pedantic
but I still balk at the regime being synonymous with my club) could not agree
terms. From what's been written elsewhere it's reasonable to believe that the
outcome was down to the latter refusing to put in writing assurances over
control (presumably related to transfers, possibly also team selection) which
he may or may not have been given verbally by our owner, and/or the possibility
that Sheffield Utd would be coming in for him (as is now being assumed
following the sacking of Nigel Adkins). If he ends up at Bramall Lane and a
club that he obviously has a deep affection for (and an area that requires no
family relocation), the spin will no doubt move in that direction. And unless
Wilder comes out and says why a deal was not concluded we can only guess, as we
cannot take anything said by Duchatelet or Meire at face value.
If
it transpires that Wilder refused to accept what the regime was offering, we
have to infer/guess which party was being unreasonable. Of course this is not
the first time that the regime has offered a contract which has been deemed unacceptable.
Sir Chris couldn't agree to the terms offered to him, and we know that had
nothing to do with money. So it's not unfair to conclude that there are some
aspects of the terms that the regime offers, aspects which relate to control,
which Wilder and Powell found unacceptable yet Riga, Peeters and Luzon did not.
Points towards the idea that if you're a network man you know and accept what
this entails; if you're not, and you're not desperate, you don't sign. So far,
to the best of my knowledge, under Duchatelet the head coach/manager job has
been offered to only two non-network guys and they both refused the terms, while
the regime did not feel able to alter the terms sufficiently to persuade them
to sign.
What
might constitute 'unreasonable'? I think it goes without saying that no head
coach/manager, English or not, with any self-respect would accept any
interference on team selection. Of course an owner, CEO etc might express an
opinion, even call it helpful advice. But actually go beyond that?
Unacceptable. On transfers, there are two sides of the coin. No manager can
have any sort of a veto on sales; a (sane) owner/CEO acts in the best interests
of the club and sometimes that means selling a player a manager would like to
keep - in which case a manager may point out the consequences of the sale, what
it could mean for the team, indicate whether a replacement needs to be brought
in from outside, or indeed quit. But what is both optimum and acceptable when
it comes to transfers in? I've never been involved in football so can't say
from first-hand experience what is normal, but surely a manager has to have
more than just a voice in decisions. A player the manager wants may of course
prove to be more expensive than the budget allows, may not want to come etc.
But if the manager can be overruled and have players he does not want forced on
him, he is nothing more than a first-team coach. Some may accept that, others clearly do not.
Now
take it from a different angle. Voice of the Valley No 95 contained a piece by
Wyn Grant comparing the Charlton team then (April 2000) and the team of 1954.
Towards the end he quotes Sam Bartram: "We at Charlton have the finest
team spirit in the country, and it is to that grand spirit and understanding
rather than individual merit, that I owe my success". Wyn added that
"those remarks also apply today" (ie 2000). Please could someone
explain to me how it can be possible to generate again that kind of team spirit
(which by the way was also evident under Sir Chris) if players look at the head
coach and think he might choose the team for Saturday based on what the owner wants
rather than what gives us the best chance of getting a result, or that the
coach doesn't really want me here - or that guy over there? I would suggest it is impossible.
I
don't know whether the Wilder experience will push the regime back towards
another network coach or whether there has been an irreversible decision to 'go
English'. Either way, the choice is going to be fraught with potential fall-out
- assuming that Powell and Curbishley are out of the equation. If it's the
network guy, the howls of derision will (deservedly) reach new highs. If it's
an Englishman currently out of a job, the assumption will be that he was truly
desperate - especially if we have the fresh debacle of the next front-runner walking
away. Quite frankly, if the regime is not going to shift and give the next guy
the protection he needs from unwanted and what has so far proven to be utterly
useless interference they might as well just get in another lackey prepared to
try to coach a disparate group that he didn't choose; they are easier and
cheaper to recycle. Just don't for a moment think this can lead to success.
I
honestly don't care if our next manager is English/British, Belgian, or from
Timbuktu. I want him (or her) to be the best available, the one most likely to
bring success (which is not to say that I have any confidence that the regime is capable of recognising the best candidate). Obviously any normal selection process would start with the
assumption that someone with no experience of the English lower divisions, who
may need to relocate to this country, and who may not have English as a first
language (purely for communication purposes) would need to have superior skills
in other areas to compensate (this does assume that there is more than one candidate, which has not necessarily been the case in the past). If before the process begins you set conditions
that rule out a large number of the best candidates, and this happens
regularly, either you revisit and moderate the terms or accept the chances of
success with what you end up with - or ideally you conclude that your approach
is not compatible with success in football and you withdraw yourself from the
industry, never to return.
(I had written the above before I saw the Rick
Everitt article suggesting that a sale by Duchatelet is closer than many
realise, but it rounds things off nicely; if Wilder's actions do bring forward a sale he should be viewed as a Charlton hero and given an appropriate welcome if he comes to The Valley with either Sheff Utd or Northampton.)
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteVery succinctly put BA, sums it up perfectly, thank you.
ReplyDeleteAnd please maintain your position of censoring the a2c drivel, not one word would have been a direct relevant criticism of any of your comments. Just more of the same, darn his gaff (the Den) childish nonsense, cheers.
Thanks Anon. Without wishing to make a2c the subject again, I don't like deleting comments (never done it before) and as you say it isn't done because he or she supports the regime and disagrees with me, not even because of the style, but because there's never any attempt to address points made or to engage in any way, just repeats of the same stuff - including offensive accusations. As others said before, it just becomes boring.
ReplyDeleteI think wilder basically used us and got what he wanted by showing Sheffield United he was available - the club he played over 200 games for.... I do agree if another network manager comes in it will be beyond a joke
ReplyDeleteFustymccrank, I don't think we can say just that he used us to flush out Sheff Utd. If it's true that he was flown out to Belgium to meet Duchatelet before the regime approached Northampton for formal permission it would seem that he had been identified as the guy we wanted, not that he applied for a vacancy. I don't think the Northampton chairman was being misleading when he said he expected a deal to go through. But given that Sheff Utd cropped up once he seemed to be available even I wouldn't say it is clear for sure that Wilder walked away because of the contract, or because he didn't like Meire. Maybe now he's installed in Sheffield he will provide an explanation.
ReplyDeleteAnd since your post, Meire has somehow (what on earth is wrong with her?) engulfed herself in another media gaffe.
ReplyDeleteThe antics of the club are certainly the gift that keeps on giving at the moment; and CARD don't have to lift a finger.
Can't help but feel someone is having a laugh at our expense. When will it ever end?
Incredible stuff indeed Martin. When she wakes up this morning, can she really believe she is in a job that she is suited for and capable of doing?
ReplyDelete