hector wrote:
He couldn't buy a win by the time he left. What are you failing to understand about the dismal run that preceded his departure?
One win a month is not gong to get you very far. That was Ling's record over the final three months of his reign. That does not point to Him being a successful manager. It just is not going to work, sadly and a new start is best for all.
Let me make this easy...
HOW BAD CAN THIS "BAD" RUN HAVE BEEN IF WE WERE THREE F***ING POINTS OUTSIDE THE PLAYOFFS?
You say he didn't win a match for 500 years, we didn't have a single shot in all that time and we got beaten 400-0 every week, yet we were one win outside the playoff places after half a season. Either we won our first 20 games so handsomely that we could afford to lose every match for half a millennium, or our "bad" run was just a poor to average run which is now being viewed by those wishing to chastise Martin Ling.
He has been here for 18 months, you're picking on three months and saying he is no good. I point to the whole 18 months and we were never lower in the table, with Dinger at the helm, than about 10th place. Since he left, we have only been below that line. Yes, he may well have been on a bad run of form, but that bad run of form wasn't really all that bad, it can't have been, because at the end of it (the day he left) we were still very much in the playoff hunt. Regardless of any particular time frame at which you care to point, the salient facts are that, in his time in charge, Dinger took us to the playoffs (having been perilously close to going up automatically) and left us in fine enough fettle, just a win outside the playoff places.
If he were a landlord, he'd have handed over a lovely little cottage in the Cotswolds with a red wine stain on the living room carpet and a chip in one window. Where we are now represents a burnt out shell after the place was set on fire.
If he were a driver, the club he left was an Alfa Romeo with a dicky electric window switch. What he's getting back is the windscreen wiper from a 1989 Nissan Micra (in beige).
If he were a football manager, what he left behind was a team on a moderately bad run, just outside the playoffs. What he's getting back is a team who are fortunate not to have dropped out of the football league.
Where we are now is not Dinger's fault, nor is it a fair reflection of his abilities as a manager. Blaming an absent Martin Ling for everything which has happened since he left is a bit like blaming Tony Blair for all the trouble we are in today (ok, bad analogy, it is the cash we have spunked on his unwinnable wars in the Middle East which we would now be using to pay for shit instead of borrowing it from the IMF, European Bank etc. Well done leftists, another fine mess...).
Matt.