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tuesday night

Discussion in 'Bristol City' started by johngalleyfan2, Feb 12, 2017.

  1. johngalleyfan2

    johngalleyfan2 Well-Known Member

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    its a shame Leeds lost a win or draw would have been better for us ??? Tuesday.....
    Wolves v Wigan is really the only bottom team head to head... please a draw that will give us breathing space!
    Villa home to Barnsley
    Rotherham home to Huddersfield .. could be a shock this one!

    City away to Leeds
    Florest away to Fulham
    Blackburn away to Sheffield
    and
    Burton Albion and QPR do not play
    AWAY to Newcastle and Villa after this game.... with Fulham, in form at home.....
    would settle for a 2-2 draw!
     
    #1
  2. invermeremike

    invermeremike Well-Known Member

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    I believe that if you have to start hoping other teams will do this or that then you are in deep doggy-do. How will the lost 2 points on Saturday come back to haunt us and our never flapping manager? Beware the Ides of March.
     
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  3. johngalleyfan2

    johngalleyfan2 Well-Known Member

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    really
    one comment on here is we don't need to worry about other teams as long as we keep winning!

    well WE DONT so we have to hope they don't either...
    also if we are below teams we do need them to lose!
    Why Steve Lansdown has not yet decided to sack Lee Johnson with Bristol City in the relegation zone
    By a_stockhausen | Posted: March 07, 2017

    When his team failed to beat Burton Albion in what Lee Johnson described as a "must-win" game, Bristol City fans anticipated the imminent removal of the head coach from his post.

    But as the hours following Saturday's goalless stalemate passed without incident and the weekend gave way to Monday without any announcement emanating from Ashton Gate, it became apparent that City's young head coach had dodged another bullet.

    For those City fans who stayed behind after the final whistle to register their discontent at what they perceive to be a headlong slide towards relegation, it is inconceivable that Johnson should be permitted to lead the Robins into tonight's contest against Norwich at Ashton Gate.

    Vocal advocates of a change at the top cannot understand why majority shareholder Steve Lansdown has not chosen to act decisively in a quest to turn the tide before it is too late. With just eleven games left to negotiate, they argue time is fast running out for the Robins to arrest a slide that has seen them plummet from fourth to 22nd place in the Championship table in the space of five painful months.

    Of course, Lansdown has earned a reputation as a patient man in his capacity as hirer and firer in chief at Ashton Gate, and he is not given to knee-jerk reactions in the face of adversity. That said, it is difficult to imagine too many managers or coaches in English football surviving a record of two wins in 22 league outings.Clearly, Lansdown does not subscribe to the perceived wisdom that salvation can only be achieved by a change at the top.

    Quite why his assessment of the situation should differ so markedly from a majority of those who pay at the turnstiles is cause for conjecture. Since coming out and speaking publicly in support of his head coach on January 23, the man at the top has maintained a dignified silence.

    Despite rumours to the contrary, there is no discernible evidence that Johnson has "lost" the dressing room. The players are clearly still working hard for him and doing their utmost to remedy an increasingly parlous situation.

    That unity of purpose and commitment explains, at least in part, Lansdown's continued backing for the status quo. He is also reluctant to call time on a project he invested so much in when he and chief operating officer Mark Ashton identified Johnson as the ideal candidate to manage a more sustainable model, one that had youth development and financial prudence at its very core. To remove the head coach from his position 13 months into the project, will be akin to admitting defeat.

    Certainly, Lansdown and his board of directors have afforded Johnson staunch backing, but there comes a point when enough is enough. It may be that defeat to Norwich beneath the Ashton Gate floodlights this evening will prove the final straw and persuade those responsible for running the club to resort to the ultimate sanction.

    A victory will render him safe for now, while a draw would more than likely be enough to secure Johnson another game – at fellow strugglers Wigan on Saturday.

    Another potentially crucial watershed moment could arrive when City host Huddersfield on March 17 and then immediately embark upon a two-week break for international matches.

    In the event results continue to fall short of what is required, City remain in the bottom three and Lansdown elects to make a change, a new manager or coach will at least have time to work with the players on the training ground ahead of a return to arms at Brentford on April 1.

    I suspect we are fast approaching the point at which a change in head coach might prove counter-productive, given how little of the season remains.
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    Even if Lansdown chose to act after Tuesday's game, it is unlikely he would have a permanent replacement in before Saturday's proverbial "six-pointer" at Wigan. Thereafter, the new man would have just nine games in which to effect the necessary about-turn in fortunes.

    Without recourse to the transfer market and with no guarantee that he would be able to extract more from the current crop of players, would he necessarily stand a better chance of achieving survival?

    Some City fans think they know the answer to that question, but until Lansdown is convinced of the need for change, it will continue to be business as usual for Johnson and his players.

    Mr Lansdown please take note ~
    'We have won 2 out of the last 20 games, losing 11 out of the last 15 and earning just 10 points out of the last 60. I honestly cannot think of any other manager who would stay in his job with statistics that are so bad.'

    This record from Lee Johnson is pathetic, embarrassing, below par, useless, rubbish, failure, broken promises, unbelievable, bad,not acceptable, weak, relegation fodder, shameful.

    ....and you still praise and employ this person with a record of defeats for our club...

    WHY.....?
     
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    Last edited: Mar 7, 2017
  4. invermeremike

    invermeremike Well-Known Member

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    Like it or not we are in deep messy stuff and the only way out is for our lot to do the business and stop making up tweety words to satisfy the hordes. Do what you are supposed to do and there will be no problems, just opportunities.
     
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  5. RedorDead

    RedorDead Well-Known Member

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    You do understand that it's not LJ tweeting don't you? I know people been trying to explain this but you still refer to bcfc tweets as LJ making them not the press office.
     
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  6. Red Robin

    Red Robin Well-Known Member

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    Bit like you and SoD not understanding his job details laid out by the powers that be :emoticon-0136-giggl
     
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    Last edited: Feb 13, 2017

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