TheBigToePunt
Member
- Country
England
No doubt about it, they certainly have not. That's been a huge part of the problem. Imagine if Pino or Johnson had caught fire. How different would everything seem?Of course Glasner will have known the business model and the ethos of our club.
Perhaps he is not enamoured by some of the acquisitions during his time at the helm.
It is clear that he believes, further investment in players should have been made in the summer, hence his comments that after an FA Cup win, a club needed to invest and not save.
I reiterate, that none of the outfield summer acquisitions have made a significant contribution.
I think the thing is, when signings struggle there is a temptation to say that the club has failed to deliver, when it is perhaps more accurate (and fair) to say that the club seems to have spent all it can on players, that every transfer comes with risk, and that not all of them will work out as hoped no matter how much homework you do. I don't see that all the analytics and software has changed that, it has just widened the net.
In some ways we were always heading for a bit of a punch on the nose with this. In the last few years so many (though certainly not all) signings came up double six that we, as supporters, perhaps fell into the trap of thinking it was the result of a reliable process that could be repeated. In fact, each transfer is a bit of a gamble, and unique to itself.
To be a bit Holloway about it, if you met a beautiful girl in a particular bar one night and all went really very well indeed before the relationship ran its course and she moved on, it might be tempting to go back to that same bar to try again. Obviously, in the cold light of day a bar is one place you might meet someone, but so too are lots of other places. Even if there is another beautiful girl in that same bar when you arrive, there is nothing to say she will be interested in you. The exact same chat up lines that worked so well last time may fail. In other words repeating the same approach in anticipation of the same outcome is a classic case of false cause and effect, and of projecting a false sense of control onto the random.
I do of course mean that when, for instance, a few young signings from the Championship go well, its natural to think that we should only buy young championship players. In fact, the championship is one place to look along with abroad, big teams benches, the academy, and wherever else. We have made good and bad signings from all these places, and will do so again. The idea that one place is more reliable is just projecting control and reliability on to what is really quite an unpredictable and random endeavour.
So, for those on the lookout, my advice is that you are just as likely to meet a nice girl at work, or in the library, as in a bar. The trick is to keep all avenues open, not to mistaken one of them as reliable, and of course, don't spend what you haven't got hoping to attract someone you can't keep up with, it'll only end in tears (and debt). Better to focus on making the very best of yourself as you are. Perhaps by building a new stand. Something like that.