by Alpine Joe » 28 Oct 2014, 09:19
chestertorkyman
Should he not be the one to be helping the manager to make the right tactical decisions during the match, and substitutions at the right time. Surely he should be the one saying "we need a change at HT because Richards is not a defender"
If there's space in the dressing room for everyone as well as the tea urn, then I'm with chestertorkyman on this one in that I'd want all subs listening to the half time analysis and the plan for the second half. Subs can do some running up and down the line if they want to keep warm or loosen the muscles. The half time 'warm up' of standing on the spot with your hands in your pockets and occasionally flicking out a leg if the ball comes near you to keep it up in the air is clearly a fans favourite and I'm sure it'll be back on show this Saturday, even if as an exercise it's of negligible use.
Without going along and seeing how the club operates for a couple of days I don't know what the Assistant Manager's job is either, but I'd assumed that in a situation such as the lead up to the Alfreton game when we knew that our two first choice central defenders were unavailable, that Lee Hodges would be the key man in selecting replacements. Would Hodges perhaps work with different pairings and ideas, maybe with Cruise in the middle, then trying Pearce and Hutchings together, a combination of Pearce and Courtney Richards etc, and then by maybe Wednesday afternoon or Thursday lunchtime at latest, go to the Boss and tell him what he sees as the best option for defence in that forthcoming match. If Chris is going to take the advice of his coaching staff on anything then he would surely accept Hodges recommendation on the defensive set up. After all Hodges is the expert on that specialisation rather than Chris. Hargreaves then has to factor in the impact on midfield and the overall shape of the team.
Therefore I can't imagine Hodges then telling Chris that 'Richards is not a defender', as I'd been assuming it was Hodges who had told Chris that Richards
would be the best option to use as a defender in the absence of Downes and MacDonald. Had you suggested it was the other way around, with Hargreaves telling Hodges what he thought as his pre match 'advice' then I could envisage that also. If Richards was no good as a defender then Hodges should have spotted that in all the defensive drills that he would have overseen in the week leading up to Alfreton, and made that view perfectly clear to the Manager when discussing the forthcoming line up. Perhaps half time at Alfreton was the one time that Hodges didn't need to say it again, as the painful evidence would have been staring Chris in the eyes for 45 minutes, although an ' I told you so' can be quite satisfying in some circumstances.
I'd expect Hargreaves to listen very carefully to Hodges advice re defensive set up, just as I'm sure he respects Kenny Veysey's specialist knowledge when it comes to who should be in goal. How much 'advice' you want from other members of staff during a match is probably a matter of personal choice. I doubt Steve Bould tells Arsene Wenger where he's going wrong too many times during a game, but hopefully Chris & Lee work in reasonable harmony, and with the right amount of mutual input to help the team.
chestertorkyman [quote]Should he not be the one to be helping the manager to make the right tactical decisions during the match, and substitutions at the right time. Surely he should be the one saying "we need a change at HT because Richards is not a defender"[/quote]
If there's space in the dressing room for everyone as well as the tea urn, then I'm with chestertorkyman on this one in that I'd want all subs listening to the half time analysis and the plan for the second half. Subs can do some running up and down the line if they want to keep warm or loosen the muscles. The half time 'warm up' of standing on the spot with your hands in your pockets and occasionally flicking out a leg if the ball comes near you to keep it up in the air is clearly a fans favourite and I'm sure it'll be back on show this Saturday, even if as an exercise it's of negligible use.
Without going along and seeing how the club operates for a couple of days I don't know what the Assistant Manager's job is either, but I'd assumed that in a situation such as the lead up to the Alfreton game when we knew that our two first choice central defenders were unavailable, that Lee Hodges would be the key man in selecting replacements. Would Hodges perhaps work with different pairings and ideas, maybe with Cruise in the middle, then trying Pearce and Hutchings together, a combination of Pearce and Courtney Richards etc, and then by maybe Wednesday afternoon or Thursday lunchtime at latest, go to the Boss and tell him what he sees as the best option for defence in that forthcoming match. If Chris is going to take the advice of his coaching staff on anything then he would surely accept Hodges recommendation on the defensive set up. After all Hodges is the expert on that specialisation rather than Chris. Hargreaves then has to factor in the impact on midfield and the overall shape of the team.
Therefore I can't imagine Hodges then telling Chris that 'Richards is not a defender', as I'd been assuming it was Hodges who had told Chris that Richards [b]would[/b] be the best option to use as a defender in the absence of Downes and MacDonald. Had you suggested it was the other way around, with Hargreaves telling Hodges what he thought as his pre match 'advice' then I could envisage that also. If Richards was no good as a defender then Hodges should have spotted that in all the defensive drills that he would have overseen in the week leading up to Alfreton, and made that view perfectly clear to the Manager when discussing the forthcoming line up. Perhaps half time at Alfreton was the one time that Hodges didn't need to say it again, as the painful evidence would have been staring Chris in the eyes for 45 minutes, although an ' I told you so' can be quite satisfying in some circumstances.
I'd expect Hargreaves to listen very carefully to Hodges advice re defensive set up, just as I'm sure he respects Kenny Veysey's specialist knowledge when it comes to who should be in goal. How much 'advice' you want from other members of staff during a match is probably a matter of personal choice. I doubt Steve Bould tells Arsene Wenger where he's going wrong too many times during a game, but hopefully Chris & Lee work in reasonable harmony, and with the right amount of mutual input to help the team.