Football
in general may not yet be into the silly season - there remain small matters such
as Man Utd lifting the cup, Walsall or Barnsley confirming a place in the
Championship, and some international tournament soon to get underway in France
- but as far as our club is concerned it began once the protests at the Burnley
game came to a conclusion. It's always a dangerous time of thin news when groundless
rumours can abound; sometimes it's necessary to knock these on the head
before they gain traction.
I
can for example confirm that contrary to speculation the regime is active and fully focused on filling key
positions at our club. I know this to be true as I happened to see an ad for a
work experience day for people to get a taste of being a steward at The Valley.
We'll gloss over the cheap jokes, such as don't bother coming along if you're
parents were married, but should be able to save some hopefuls' time: if you
are happy to be instrumental in helping an appallingly-run company headed by
near-universally despised (for good reason) senior management, one which needs
as much protection as possible from law-abiding, peaceful and innovative protesting
customers and which will probably not be around for much longer, get down there
asap, it could be the career for you. Charlton Athletic may not have a manager,
may have a plethora of unfilled positions off the pitch (and the prospect of
plenty on it before long), but as long as we have enough stewards the Football
League can continue to absurdly praise the regime, Pinocchio can sleep soundly, and our
usually-absent owner can relax, knowing that his money is being well spent.
I
do have to confess to moments of concern for Ms Meire in the wake of her
comments from the audience at the recent London conference. People do crack up
and nobody wants to see a young person with talents - albeit talents not suited
to running a football club - succumb to the pressure of being in an invidious
situation. But despite the embarrassment she herself must be feeling at what
she said and the damage to the club's reputation that she caused, she has not
resigned (or been sacked, as she should have been). There's been no public
apology or retraction, so we can only assume that she actually believes what
she said. Pinocchio In Cloud Cuckoo Land sounds like a particularly dire Disney
concoction; but as this regime has turned our club into a laughing stock
perhaps it is apt.
So
no more sympathy, just a note of congratulations to CARD for the quick reaction
to news of the planned 'networking' breakfast at The Valley featuring Ms Meire.
The need to do all we can to facilitate and encourage a change of ownership of
our club remains as pressing as ever and, although naturally protests will be
more sporadic and probably less visible ahead of at least pre-season
friendlies, this doesn't mean any change in attitude. That applies whoever the
next manager/head coach proves to be, and whatever players leave and arrive.
The regime pushed us into these obvious and necessary conclusions some time ago.
And
so to the Lyon Duchere update as the fight for promotion from France's CFA
Groupe B to National (the third division) saw round 28 (of 30) take place over
the weekend. First up were Duchere, on Saturday evening. They did their bit,
with what looks like a fairly routine 2-0 win at home against mid-table
Mulhouse. It was a bank holiday weekend for France (please don't upset my partner
Suzanne by suggesting that the French have holidays for everything as she may
point out that, unlike in the UK, when holidays fall over a weekend, such as 1
May this year, there is no day in lieu) and the match for promotion rivals
Grenoble didn't take place until Monday. Unfortunately they ground out a 1-0
win at home against (also mid-table) Monts d'Or Azergues.
So
it's no change at the top. Duchere have a one-point lead with now only two
games to go, just two more victories needed. The problem is that on paper at least they
have by a distance the tougher of the fixtures: they will be away to Auxerre B,
currently third in the league, in round 29 and then at home to Olympique
Lyonnais B, currently fourth, on the final day; Grenoble will be at home to Montceau-les-Mines,
who are placed 13th out of 16, and then away at Le Puy, who are 14th. Of course
this is football, (unfortunately for our owner) it can't be reduced to an
engineering equation or legal precedent. Grenoble's two opponents are both in a
desperate struggle to avoid relegation (the bottom three of 16 go down),
whereas Duchere's games are against the reserve teams of clubs which have already
concluded their seasons, with most first-team players presumably either on the
beach or preparing for the European Championship. Just how their reserve teams
feel about still being required to be fit and ready for an extra few weeks (the
final round of games is not until 4 June) is anyone's guess.
It
could all be over on 28 May, if Duchere win and Grenoble lose in round 29,
possibly even if Duchere win and Grenoble only draw (I'm still not 100% sure on
the way teams on the same number of points are ranked - I sent Suzanne back to
France on Monday with a mission to find out). This is after all a league in
which the goals don't exactly flow; Duchere and Grenoble are the joint highest
scorers but have only managed 38 goals in 28 games (while conceding 17 and 19
respectively). But the odds surely favour Duchere needing to win those final
two games to go up. If they do, they will have earned it for sure - and while
such an achievement may not match that of Leicester for pure delight (and
publicity), in terms of resources and progress (it would be their second
promotion in around five years) it will be something to celebrate, in this particular
part of south-east London at least.
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteI take it a2c doesn't like French football much, darn thore gaff then, they's definitely a RACIST, fascist, anti accordion hating hooligoon thug!
ReplyDeleteYou're probably right Anon, I just stopped actually reading them some time ago.
ReplyDelete