Thanks for last season, Glasner, but it’s time to go (now!)

cjh97

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Oliver Glasner has shown himself to be a hypocrite who spends far too much time moaning and deflecting blame. What he achieved last season was fantastic and we will always be grateful for that. But the way he has conducted himself this season has been nothing short of embarrassing.

What exactly did he expect when he took the job? That Palace were suddenly going to start throwing £100m+ around every summer? We are not that club and never have been. We are a mid-table Premier League side, competing with clubs who dwarf us financially. We are a selling club by necessity, not choice, and player trading is essential to our long-term sustainability.

Despite that, the board have backed Glasner far more than he ever acknowledges. Since his appointment, Palace have sold roughly £78m worth of players and spent around £83m – a net spend that shows clear intent to support him. Yet all we hear is complaining.

Eze wanted to leave. Anyone with a brain could see that after the season he had. There was never a realistic scenario where he stayed long-term, so Glasner’s constant moaning about the timing of that sale is baffling. The same applies to Marc Guehi. We turned down £35m in the summer at Glasner’s request, which already shows the club bent over backwards for him. But when January comes and City offer £20m rather than risking losing him for nothing, how is a club like Palace supposed to say no? That is basic football economics.

What makes it worse is that Glasner doesn’t help himself. He refuses to rotate the squad, barely trusts youth players, and has shown no real interest in developing talent. Players like Jesse Derry, Esse and Rak-Sakyi have been frozen out, despite Palace historically relying on youth pathways. That’s not just bad short-term thinking, it’s anti-Palace.

As for transfers, Glasner had a major say. These weren’t signings forced upon him. And frankly, the hit rate has been poor. Muñoz is a genuine success. Beyond that, it’s grim reading. Sosa looks Championship level at best. Uche is nowhere near Premier League standard. Nketiah was a complete waste of money. Riad has barely been fit, raising serious questions about physical readiness and recruitment judgement. When so many of “his” players fail to deliver, responsibility has to sit with the manager.

We’ve even broken our transfer record with Johnson at £35m, yet Glasner still acts like he’s working with scraps.

The hypocrisy is staggering. He publicly criticised the club for selling Guehi the day before a match, yet then announces he’s leaving at the end of the season… the day before a game. How is that acceptable leadership?

On the pitch, the coaching issues are obvious. We’ve been shocking at defending set pieces all season, that’s a coaching failure, not a budget issue. The set-up against Macclesfield was wrong from the start. These are tactical problems, not resource problems.

And none of this is new. Glasner behaved the same way at Frankfurt and Wolfsburg. At both clubs he clashed with the board, publicly criticised recruitment, showed little interest in youth development, and ultimately burned bridges rather than adapting to the realities of the club. This isn’t bad luck, it’s a pattern. He’s a petulant manager who wants a bigger job without accepting the constraints that come with anything below the elite.

I genuinely believe Palace should sack him now. It wouldn’t cost much, and at least it would allow us to reset and prevents the board being humiliated by Glasner and his negative comments. Give Paddy McCarthy the job until the end of the season if needed, at least he understands the club, the culture and the importance of building for the future. Right now, Glasner looks like a man counting down the days, not someone invested in Crystal Palace Football Club.

Ideally, Spurs sack Frank, hire Glasner, and we take Frank. Spurs is a cursed job and this season isn’t a fair reflection of his ability. What he did at Brentford shows exactly the sort of manager Palace should want: pragmatic, developmental, and realistic. Glasner is none of those things.
 
Oliver Glasner has shown himself to be a hypocrite who spends far too much time moaning and deflecting blame. What he achieved last season was fantastic and we will always be grateful for that. But the way he has conducted himself this season has been nothing short of embarrassing.

What exactly did he expect when he took the job? That Palace were suddenly going to start throwing £100m+ around every summer? We are not that club and never have been. We are a mid-table Premier League side, competing with clubs who dwarf us financially. We are a selling club by necessity, not choice, and player trading is essential to our long-term sustainability.

Despite that, the board have backed Glasner far more than he ever acknowledges. Since his appointment, Palace have sold roughly £78m worth of players and spent around £83m – a net spend that shows clear intent to support him. Yet all we hear is complaining.

Eze wanted to leave. Anyone with a brain could see that after the season he had. There was never a realistic scenario where he stayed long-term, so Glasner’s constant moaning about the timing of that sale is baffling. The same applies to Marc Guehi. We turned down £35m in the summer at Glasner’s request, which already shows the club bent over backwards for him. But when January comes and City offer £20m rather than risking losing him for nothing, how is a club like Palace supposed to say no? That is basic football economics.

What makes it worse is that Glasner doesn’t help himself. He refuses to rotate the squad, barely trusts youth players, and has shown no real interest in developing talent. Players like Jesse Derry, Esse and Rak-Sakyi have been frozen out, despite Palace historically relying on youth pathways. That’s not just bad short-term thinking, it’s anti-Palace.

As for transfers, Glasner had a major say. These weren’t signings forced upon him. And frankly, the hit rate has been poor. Muñoz is a genuine success. Beyond that, it’s grim reading. Sosa looks Championship level at best. Uche is nowhere near Premier League standard. Nketiah was a complete waste of money. Riad has barely been fit, raising serious questions about physical readiness and recruitment judgement. When so many of “his” players fail to deliver, responsibility has to sit with the manager.

We’ve even broken our transfer record with Johnson at £35m, yet Glasner still acts like he’s working with scraps.

The hypocrisy is staggering. He publicly criticised the club for selling Guehi the day before a match, yet then announces he’s leaving at the end of the season… the day before a game. How is that acceptable leadership?

On the pitch, the coaching issues are obvious. We’ve been shocking at defending set pieces all season, that’s a coaching failure, not a budget issue. The set-up against Macclesfield was wrong from the start. These are tactical problems, not resource problems.

And none of this is new. Glasner behaved the same way at Frankfurt and Wolfsburg. At both clubs he clashed with the board, publicly criticised recruitment, showed little interest in youth development, and ultimately burned bridges rather than adapting to the realities of the club. This isn’t bad luck, it’s a pattern. He’s a petulant manager who wants a bigger job without accepting the constraints that come with anything below the elite.

I genuinely believe Palace should sack him now. It wouldn’t cost much, and at least it would allow us to reset and prevents the board being humiliated by Glasner and his negative comments. Give Paddy McCarthy the job until the end of the season if needed, at least he understands the club, the culture and the importance of building for the future. Right now, Glasner looks like a man counting down the days, not someone invested in Crystal Palace Football Club.

Ideally, Spurs sack Frank, hire Glasner, and we take Frank. Spurs is a cursed job and this season isn’t a fair reflection of his ability. What he did at Brentford shows exactly the sort of manager Palace should want: pragmatic, developmental, and realistic. Glasner is none of those things.
Like most people, I have been disappointed with Glasners conduct over the last couple of weeks.

I don't think he's daft enough not to know where Palace sit financially. And I'm sure that there would have been transparency from Parish when he was recruiting Glasner.

When we get to the figures you quote it tells a different story. A net of -£5m spend is more about breaking financially even than backing the manager in the market.

I think you are missing Glasners point when it comes to the sales of Eze and Guehi. His issue is with the timing of those sales not the sales themselves. He said it himself the other day - Guehi will leave when the club receive an acceptable offer. What annoyed him was the fact he was preparing Guehi for the Sunderland game without being told that the transfer had been agreed and that Marc was no longer available.

The young players you mention - Rak-Sakyi and Esse haven't done enough, from what I've seen of them, to merit much more than the opportunities they've had. Jessie Derry hasn't featured for Chelsea despite, according to him, providing a clearer pathway to first team football. Roy used to get criticised for not giving young players a chance.

You say that Glasner had a '' major say '' in signings. Define that - because I read the reports back in August that Parish wanted Pino and Glasner didn't. The fact is that we don't know to what extent Glasner is involved.

Which brings us to Johnson. How much input would there have been from a manager that verbally handed his notice in 3 months ago ? If you were Parish how much value do you place in his opinion ?

In terms of tactics, I dispute that the set piece defending has been bad all season. That it has been of late is undeniable. As for Macclesfield, tactics shouldn't really come into it. We should have been able to put any permutation of our squad out there and won the game.

Ultimately though, I have come to the view that Glasner should go now. But on Palace's terms not his.
 
Like most people, I have been disappointed with Glasners conduct over the last couple of weeks.

I don't think he's daft enough not to know where Palace sit financially. And I'm sure that there would have been transparency from Parish when he was recruiting Glasner.

When we get to the figures you quote it tells a different story. A net of -£5m spend is more about breaking financially even than backing the manager in the market.

I think you are missing Glasners point when it comes to the sales of Eze and Guehi. His issue is with the timing of those sales not the sales themselves. He said it himself the other day - Guehi will leave when the club receive an acceptable offer. What annoyed him was the fact he was preparing Guehi for the Sunderland game without being told that the transfer had been agreed and that Marc was no longer available.

The young players you mention - Rak-Sakyi and Esse haven't done enough, from what I've seen of them, to merit much more than the opportunities they've had. Jessie Derry hasn't featured for Chelsea despite, according to him, providing a clearer pathway to first team football. Roy used to get criticised for not giving young players a chance.

You say that Glasner had a '' major say '' in signings. Define that - because I read the reports back in August that Parish wanted Pino and Glasner didn't. The fact is that we don't know to what extent Glasner is involved.

Which brings us to Johnson. How much input would there have been from a manager that verbally handed his notice in 3 months ago ? If you were Parish how much value do you place in his opinion ?

In terms of tactics, I dispute that the set piece defending has been bad all season. That it has been of late is undeniable. As for Macclesfield, tactics shouldn't really come into it. We should have been able to put any permutation of our squad out there and won the game.

Ultimately though, I have come to the view that Glasner should go now. But on Palace's terms not his.
Sorry but I missed that opinion poll - link?

Whilst the results haven't gone our way esp. Macclesfield FC and a couple of the Conference League sides, it is obvious that last summer's transfer window was underwhelming (courtesy of seemingly prioritising attention towards Europa League court battle) and we have a squad that does lack depth to compete across ALL formats. When we are having to field 16 year olds (irrespective of their emerging talent) into key games due to increasing number of injuries as well as player exhaustion, then there is something wrong in the preparation for this arguably defining season given the fresh opportunities for development presented to Glasner and club courtesy of FA cup win.
 
Sorry but I missed that opinion poll - link?

Whilst the results haven't gone our way esp. Macclesfield FC and a couple of the Conference League sides, it is obvious that last summer's transfer window was underwhelming (courtesy of seemingly prioritising attention towards Europa League court battle) and we have a squad that does lack depth to compete across ALL formats. When we are having to field 16 year olds (irrespective of their emerging talent) into key games due to increasing number of injuries as well as player exhaustion, then there is something wrong in the preparation for this arguably defining season given the fresh opportunities for development presented to Glasner and club courtesy of FA cup win.
Just take my word for it
 
Like most people, I have been disappointed with Glasners conduct over the last couple of weeks.

I don't think he's daft enough not to know where Palace sit financially. And I'm sure that there would have been transparency from Parish when he was recruiting Glasner.

When we get to the figures you quote it tells a different story. A net of -£5m spend is more about breaking financially even than backing the manager in the market.

I think you are missing Glasners point when it comes to the sales of Eze and Guehi. His issue is with the timing of those sales not the sales themselves. He said it himself the other day - Guehi will leave when the club receive an acceptable offer. What annoyed him was the fact he was preparing Guehi for the Sunderland game without being told that the transfer had been agreed and that Marc was no longer available.

The young players you mention - Rak-Sakyi and Esse haven't done enough, from what I've seen of them, to merit much more than the opportunities they've had. Jessie Derry hasn't featured for Chelsea despite, according to him, providing a clearer pathway to first team football. Roy used to get criticised for not giving young players a chance.

You say that Glasner had a '' major say '' in signings. Define that - because I read the reports back in August that Parish wanted Pino and Glasner didn't. The fact is that we don't know to what extent Glasner is involved.

Which brings us to Johnson. How much input would there have been from a manager that verbally handed his notice in 3 months ago ? If you were Parish how much value do you place in his opinion ?

In terms of tactics, I dispute that the set piece defending has been bad all season. That it has been of late is undeniable. As for Macclesfield, tactics shouldn't really come into it. We should have been able to put any permutation of our squad out there and won the game.

Ultimately though, I have come to the view that Glasner should go now. But on Palace's terms not his.
It would appear that this view is prevalent amongst our supporters.
How the mighty have fallen !
The media highlight the achievements in lifting the FA Cup, winning the Community Shield, our participation in the Conference League and our long unbeaten run. Of course these are worthy of plaudits and brought us all great joy.
On the 'Flip side', this season we have only won 4 out of 16 games at home (All competitions), we have only won 2 out of 11 home games in the League and we have been eliminated by Macclesfield.
The ecstasy and the agony.
 
Like most people, I have been disappointed with Glasners conduct over the last couple of weeks.

I don't think he's daft enough not to know where Palace sit financially. And I'm sure that there would have been transparency from Parish when he was recruiting Glasner.

When we get to the figures you quote it tells a different story. A net of -£5m spend is more about breaking financially even than backing the manager in the market.

I think you are missing Glasners point when it comes to the sales of Eze and Guehi. His issue is with the timing of those sales not the sales themselves. He said it himself the other day - Guehi will leave when the club receive an acceptable offer. What annoyed him was the fact he was preparing Guehi for the Sunderland game without being told that the transfer had been agreed and that Marc was no longer available.

The young players you mention - Rak-Sakyi and Esse haven't done enough, from what I've seen of them, to merit much more than the opportunities they've had. Jessie Derry hasn't featured for Chelsea despite, according to him, providing a clearer pathway to first team football. Roy used to get criticised for not giving young players a chance.

You say that Glasner had a '' major say '' in signings. Define that - because I read the reports back in August that Parish wanted Pino and Glasner didn't. The fact is that we don't know to what extent Glasner is involved.

Which brings us to Johnson. How much input would there have been from a manager that verbally handed his notice in 3 months ago ? If you were Parish how much value do you place in his opinion ?

In terms of tactics, I dispute that the set piece defending has been bad all season. That it has been of late is undeniable. As for Macclesfield, tactics shouldn't really come into it. We should have been able to put any permutation of our squad out there and won the game.

Ultimately though, I have come to the view that Glasner should go now. But on Palace's terms not his.
I agree with you on the final conclusion, he should go now, but on Palace’s terms, not his.

Where I differ is on the idea that the figures “tell a different story”. A net spend of roughly £5m at a club like Palace is backing the manager in relative terms. We’re not a club that usually reinvests pound for pound. Historically we sell first, then replace cheaply. This time the board largely maintained the squad value and even broke our transfer record. That’s not standing still, it’s the club stretching within its means.

On Eze and Guehi, I do understand Glasner’s point about timing, but this is where his lack of realism frustrates me. At a selling club, timing isn’t always clean or ideal. Deals move fast, especially in January. If he genuinely wasn’t aware, that’s a breakdown in communication, but again, that’s not unique to Palace, and it doesn’t justify the public outbursts.

On youth, I’m not arguing that all of them should be starters. My issue is the complete lack of trust or rotation. Rak-Sakyi and Esse might not be the finished article, but Palace has always given youth exposure, minutes, and a pathway. That’s part of our identity. Roy got criticised for it, yes, but Roy never publicly distanced himself from the club or acted like development was beneath him. Glasner feels very short-term in comparison.

Regarding signings, you’re right that we don’t know the full picture. But Glasner himself has repeatedly said he was involved in recruitment discussions. He can’t on one hand say he wasn’t backed, and on the other absolve himself of responsibility when signings don’t work. Even if Parish pushed certain names, Glasner still accepted the job knowing how recruitment works here.

Johnson is actually a good example of my wider point. If Glasner had mentally checked out months ago, then his continued public criticism becomes even worse. Either he was still involved and therefore partly responsible, or he wasn’t, in which case he should have behaved professionally and kept disputes internal.

On tactics, I’ll slightly concede the set-piece point hasn’t been bad all season, but it’s been poor enough, often enough, to be a clear coaching issue. And with Macclesfield, I agree we should win regardless, but poor organisation and preparation still matters. That performance reflected a team lacking focus and clarity.
 
I agree with you on the final conclusion, he should go now, but on Palace’s terms, not his.

Where I differ is on the idea that the figures “tell a different story”. A net spend of roughly £5m at a club like Palace is backing the manager in relative terms. We’re not a club that usually reinvests pound for pound. Historically we sell first, then replace cheaply. This time the board largely maintained the squad value and even broke our transfer record. That’s not standing still, it’s the club stretching within its means.

On Eze and Guehi, I do understand Glasner’s point about timing, but this is where his lack of realism frustrates me. At a selling club, timing isn’t always clean or ideal. Deals move fast, especially in January. If he genuinely wasn’t aware, that’s a breakdown in communication, but again, that’s not unique to Palace, and it doesn’t justify the public outbursts.

On youth, I’m not arguing that all of them should be starters. My issue is the complete lack of trust or rotation. Rak-Sakyi and Esse might not be the finished article, but Palace has always given youth exposure, minutes, and a pathway. That’s part of our identity. Roy got criticised for it, yes, but Roy never publicly distanced himself from the club or acted like development was beneath him. Glasner feels very short-term in comparison.

Regarding signings, you’re right that we don’t know the full picture. But Glasner himself has repeatedly said he was involved in recruitment discussions. He can’t on one hand say he wasn’t backed, and on the other absolve himself of responsibility when signings don’t work. Even if Parish pushed certain names, Glasner still accepted the job knowing how recruitment works here.

Johnson is actually a good example of my wider point. If Glasner had mentally checked out months ago, then his continued public criticism becomes even worse. Either he was still involved and therefore partly responsible, or he wasn’t, in which case he should have behaved professionally and kept disputes internal.

On tactics, I’ll slightly concede the set-piece point hasn’t been bad all season, but it’s been poor enough, often enough, to be a clear coaching issue. And with Macclesfield, I agree we should win regardless, but poor organisation and preparation still matters. That performance reflected a team lacking focus and clarity.
I suppose the only positive with selling Guehi on the 19th January is at least we have 12 days to sign a replacement. This is where we will see if we have replaced Dougie adequately I think.

I don't know if Glasner was consulted about the sale of Guehi or not, but it sounds like he wasn't convinced about the direction of travel at the club quite a while ago.
 
Oliver Glasner has shown himself to be a hypocrite who spends far too much time moaning and deflecting blame. What he achieved last season was fantastic and we will always be grateful for that. But the way he has conducted himself this season has been nothing short of embarrassing.

What exactly did he expect when he took the job? That Palace were suddenly going to start throwing £100m+ around every summer? We are not that club and never have been. We are a mid-table Premier League side, competing with clubs who dwarf us financially. We are a selling club by necessity, not choice, and player trading is essential to our long-term sustainability.

Despite that, the board have backed Glasner far more than he ever acknowledges. Since his appointment, Palace have sold roughly £78m worth of players and spent around £83m – a net spend that shows clear intent to support him. Yet all we hear is complaining.

Eze wanted to leave. Anyone with a brain could see that after the season he had. There was never a realistic scenario where he stayed long-term, so Glasner’s constant moaning about the timing of that sale is baffling. The same applies to Marc Guehi. We turned down £35m in the summer at Glasner’s request, which already shows the club bent over backwards for him. But when January comes and City offer £20m rather than risking losing him for nothing, how is a club like Palace supposed to say no? That is basic football economics.

What makes it worse is that Glasner doesn’t help himself. He refuses to rotate the squad, barely trusts youth players, and has shown no real interest in developing talent. Players like Jesse Derry, Esse and Rak-Sakyi have been frozen out, despite Palace historically relying on youth pathways. That’s not just bad short-term thinking, it’s anti-Palace.

As for transfers, Glasner had a major say. These weren’t signings forced upon him. And frankly, the hit rate has been poor. Muñoz is a genuine success. Beyond that, it’s grim reading. Sosa looks Championship level at best. Uche is nowhere near Premier League standard. Nketiah was a complete waste of money. Riad has barely been fit, raising serious questions about physical readiness and recruitment judgement. When so many of “his” players fail to deliver, responsibility has to sit with the manager.

We’ve even broken our transfer record with Johnson at £35m, yet Glasner still acts like he’s working with scraps.

The hypocrisy is staggering. He publicly criticised the club for selling Guehi the day before a match, yet then announces he’s leaving at the end of the season… the day before a game. How is that acceptable leadership?

On the pitch, the coaching issues are obvious. We’ve been shocking at defending set pieces all season, that’s a coaching failure, not a budget issue. The set-up against Macclesfield was wrong from the start. These are tactical problems, not resource problems.

And none of this is new. Glasner behaved the same way at Frankfurt and Wolfsburg. At both clubs he clashed with the board, publicly criticised recruitment, showed little interest in youth development, and ultimately burned bridges rather than adapting to the realities of the club. This isn’t bad luck, it’s a pattern. He’s a petulant manager who wants a bigger job without accepting the constraints that come with anything below the elite.

I genuinely believe Palace should sack him now. It wouldn’t cost much, and at least it would allow us to reset and prevents the board being humiliated by Glasner and his negative comments. Give Paddy McCarthy the job until the end of the season if needed, at least he understands the club, the culture and the importance of building for the future. Right now, Glasner looks like a man counting down the days, not someone invested in Crystal Palace Football Club.

Ideally, Spurs sack Frank, hire Glasner, and we take Frank. Spurs is a cursed job and this season isn’t a fair reflection of his ability. What he did at Brentford shows exactly the sort of manager Palace should want: pragmatic, developmental, and realistic. Glasner is none of those things.
Top post, to be honest. Agree entirely. We deserve better than this.

Thanks Oliver, but the door is that way.
 
Like most people, I have been disappointed with Glasners conduct over the last couple of weeks.

I don't think he's daft enough not to know where Palace sit financially. And I'm sure that there would have been transparency from Parish when he was recruiting Glasner.

When we get to the figures you quote it tells a different story. A net of -£5m spend is more about breaking financially even than backing the manager in the market.

I think you are missing Glasners point when it comes to the sales of Eze and Guehi. His issue is with the timing of those sales not the sales themselves. He said it himself the other day - Guehi will leave when the club receive an acceptable offer. What annoyed him was the fact he was preparing Guehi for the Sunderland game without being told that the transfer had been agreed and that Marc was no longer available.

The young players you mention - Rak-Sakyi and Esse haven't done enough, from what I've seen of them, to merit much more than the opportunities they've had. Jessie Derry hasn't featured for Chelsea despite, according to him, providing a clearer pathway to first team football. Roy used to get criticised for not giving young players a chance.

You say that Glasner had a '' major say '' in signings. Define that - because I read the reports back in August that Parish wanted Pino and Glasner didn't. The fact is that we don't know to what extent Glasner is involved.

Which brings us to Johnson. How much input would there have been from a manager that verbally handed his notice in 3 months ago ? If you were Parish how much value do you place in his opinion ?

In terms of tactics, I dispute that the set piece defending has been bad all season. That it has been of late is undeniable. As for Macclesfield, tactics shouldn't really come into it. We should have been able to put any permutation of our squad out there and won the game.

Ultimately though, I have come to the view that Glasner should go now. But on Palace's terms not his.
I’ve posted that Marc Guehi was in the previous 9 games we didn’t win. Why suddenly would he have been the difference against the Mackams. Glasner had an option in the game to prove a point by putting the bench players on and getting bashed 4 or 5 after they scored their 2 nd. He didn’t so had no intention of chasing the game. Wear out the first 11 so Chelsea start bashing us at 60 mins. It’s a set up and tbh I don’t care if he stays or goes but ffs do something different if plan A isn’t working.
 

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