The Premier League Thread

  • Please bear with us on the new site integration and fixing any known bugs over the coming days. If you can not log in please try resetting your password and check your spam box. If you have tried these steps and are still struggling email [email protected] with your username/registered email address
  • Log in now to remove adverts - no adverts at all to registered members!
Just seen a bit of an interview with Allardyce talking about his darkest hour when he lost the England job. The bit that touched me was that he said his grandchildren had to deal with it at school....I feel for them...kids can be so cruel.
 
That makes me feel for the grandkids, not for Sam.
Yep. Sorry Palace but you've just achieved "my most disliked club" status, knocking Spam off that distinguished perch for the last 5 years. This is such a sad appointment. To much, to much ****ing money in football. And he stills has his £4-5M England payoff to spend:emoticon-0121-angry
 
Last edited:
You must log in or register to see media

Just seen this on BBC Sport - shows how good our 2nd half of the season was last year!

Although of course they're only mentionoing CPalace's dismal drop instead
 
I'm sure the money softens any blow, but I would still draw attention to the saying " never judge a man til you've walked a mile in his shoes".

Having held a high pressure management job in a completely different industry, but one with similarly unrealistic expectations, where you are expected to achieve miracles with inadequate resources, getting the blame from everyone for everything that goes wrong, and being entirely dependent for results on a team over which you only ever have limited influence, I can say you need to be nuts to want to be a manager, in any walk of life.
Well maybe it was being self-employed for twenty-five years, with no holiday pay, no sick pay, constantly chasing clients for money in time to pay my bills, remortgaging my house and having my pension fund denuded by Gordon Brown, which has made me look with overly rose-tinted spectacles at the pressure of Premier League management. Pressure, in my book, is not knowing if you can pay a bill or keep your house. I'd take the abuse of a few thousand football fans in exchange for never having to worry about the really important things in life.
I'm sure the money softens any blow, but I would still draw attention to the saying " never judge a man til you've walked a mile in his shoes".

Having held a high pressure management job in a completely different industry, but one with similarly unrealistic expectations, where you are expected to achieve miracles with inadequate resources, getting the blame from everyone for everything that goes wrong, and being entirely dependent for results on a team over which you only ever have limited influence, I can say you need to be nuts to want to be a manager, in any walk of life.

Well maybe it was being self-employed for twenty-five years, with no holiday pay, no sick pay, constantly chasing clients for money in time to pay my bills, remortgaging my house and having my pension fund denuded by Gordon Brown, which has made me look with overly rose-tinted spectacles at the pressure of Premier League management. Pressure, in my book, is not knowing if you can pay a bill or keep your house. I'd take the abuse of a few thousand football fans in exchange for never having to worry about the really important things in life ever again.

I notice how many times these poor, pressured managers return to lucrative posts despite the intolerable conditions they work under- maybe it's the multi-million pound handshakes they receive when they leave....as they know they will, inevitably.
One of England's greatest ever managers (well, the greatest) put it into perspective, when he took his "pressured" team to the local coalmine in order to show them men under real pressure.