It’s
not yet clear whether Lyle Taylor has turned down the new contract offered as
part of an as yet unfinished negotiating process or whether he has made up his
mind to leave in January. As in most cases there is a strongly positive outcome
for us, a clearly negative one, and plenty of grey in between.
The
strongly positive result is that Taylor signs a new contract in the very near
future, ie before the end of December. That would end the matter and leave Steve
Gallen and our new owners all of the January transfer window to make changes
they want to. His re-signing before the end of January for me still falls very
much into the positive category. We are in a relegation struggle and a fit and
motivated Taylor would be a massive factor in staying up. You’re lucky if any
replacement gels quickly and there no doubting that the team plays at its best
when he is part of it.
The
strongly negative outcome is of course the uncertainty dragging on through
January and Taylor being sold at the last minute. Past history indicates we are
not very good at dealing with those situations. I’d also list as negative
Taylor not signing a new contract with us but not being sold, perhaps with a
pre-contract signed for the summer. We would then be in the twilight zone,
unsure if Taylor will be up for the struggle (and then doubts about how fans
would react if it looks like he is not).
What
is clearly needed is resolution. If Taylor makes it clear that he wishes to
leave there will be no griping from me. He’s 29 years old and this would
probably be the final move higher of his career (if it is possible to go higher
than Charlton). Nobody should blame him even if it proves to be just about the
money. He’s been an outstanding player for us, played a central role in our
promotion, and has been a leader on the pitch. That some fans might feel in
some way betrayed by someone they have made a talismanic figure deciding to
walk away really is their problem, not his.
Just
please Lyle, make it clear very soon, for your own benefit if nothing else.
There is no reason to part on bad terms, if him and us must part. If he is
indifferent to such concerns he is not the man we thought he was. Who knows where
paths will lead and when they will cross again.
Whatever
the outcome, if Taylor leaves now and were to return to The Valley at some
point in the future, I’d applaud him. There’s an element I guess of ‘salute the
rank, not the person’. He has played a major role in our recent history; it’s
not an exaggeration to say that without him we would be scrapping it out in
League One and probably with the lunatic still looking for a buyer. That contribution
should not be forgotten.
I
though the booing of Karlan Grant during the Huddersfield match was a little
silly but not outrageous (as opposed to the abuse he received on social media,
which was shameful, disgusting and utterly unacceptable). I can’t blame anyone
for taking the opportunity to advance their career and to escape from
Duchatelet’s oversight. But when the history of Charlton is updated he isn’t
going to get more than a line: ‘Brought into the first team too soon, had a
number of chances to shine, finally got it right and after a very good
half-season took the chance to get away’.
What
I do find absurd, if it is repeated, is the booing of Scott Parker, if it gets
repeated when he brings his Fulham team to The Valley in January. Parker is a
Charlton legend and we don’t need to go over the reasons why. To say that he
deserves our respect and thanks really ought to go without saying. Yes, he left
us in acrimonious circumstances. That is unfortunate. But it should in no way
overshadow what he did in a Charlton shirt.
There’s
no question surely that if Taylor goes he will need to be replaced. I’ve no
idea if and when Hemed might be available, which leaves Bonne and Aneka plus
Leko trying to operate as another forward when he is surely a big asset playing
in a wider and freer role. Our midfield problems can be fixed with players
returning from injury, but options up front are too few to be confident. We
need to know soon what they are.
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