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Bristol City Pre-Season Report Blog.

Discussion in 'Bristol City' started by wizered, Jul 31, 2018.

  1. wizered

    wizered Ol' Mucker
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    It Could Be a Great Season or a Season of Consolidation - Bristol City Pre-Season Report
    Tuesday, 31st Jul 2018 11:30 by HarryFromBath

    In the 17th of a series of pre-season reports, HarryFromBath assesses the mood around the Championship clubs by delving into their forums, looking here at how things have progressed for the Robins this summer. A report on Reading will follow later today and all of the teams in the division will be covered between now and the start of the season.

    “A long, hard season is coming up”, “I’m quietly optimistic but also quite prepared for a season of mediocrity in mid-table”, “Like others, I feel we will have a shaky start as new players bed in but will improve as the season progresses”, “I hope we don’t struggle and will be happy with mid-table.”

    Robins are approaching the coming season curious to see how the next chapter in their evolution will play out. Many anticipate a transitional season given their high-profile departures this summer. Others are simply hoping to see an end to their recent pattern of long winning and losing streaks.

    “I’m hoping for upper mid-table but with more consistency through the season”, “I'm really hoping that there won't be terrible runs of games like the last two seasons”, “I’ll accept a few places lower than last season if we manage to keep a more consistent pattern of results throughout the season.”

    “I’m not optimistic for this season. Bobby Reid and Aden Flint are massive losses. The replacements look inexperienced. It’s all part of the rebuilding process though, hopefully we will see the younger players in our squad rather than loaned out to other teams. The long-term plan will come together.”

    “We will make a slow start but improve as players gel. We have several players who have not been able to complete a full pre-season and I think we will be a bit of a slow-burner. As players return and become fully fit we won’t be at our best but as September ends I expect us to be at full strength.”

    Lee Johnson
    “The only thing that is easy to call this season is that this will be the season that Lee Johnson can be judged more accurately than in previous seasons.” The 37-year-old is entering his third full season in charge at Ashton Gate. For many Robins, this is now his team playing his preferred style of football.

    “He appears to have learnt from his transfers, insisting on having more say on them. This may be talk but the trend from bargain foreign Football Manager-database-unearthed gems to hardworking, fast English-based players has been obvious. It will shorten the time taken to fit into the Championship”

    “Lee has proved himself capable of competing with the very best and also churning out defeat after defeat so who knows. If he has a Plan B and C worked out on the training ground, I can see a top half finish or a play-off push. If, however, he has learnt nothing we will be scrapping around relegation.”

    Players Progressing In and Out of the Club
    “It has been an interesting transfer window and I’m really looking forward to what will happen in the coming months. We knew Reid and Flint were going, but the way we’ve replaced them is different to the way in which City have normally operated in the transfer market. Let’s see how it plays out.”

    Johnson has added six new players this summer. The defence has been strengthened by the addition of 29-year-old right-back Jack Hunt from Sheffield Wednesday along with footballing centre-back Adam Webster, the 23-year-old switching from Portman Road on a four-year contract.

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    Adam Webster

    Midfielder Hakeeb Adeklun, 22, has been bought from Scunthorpe along 27-year-old former Bath City and Norwich City winger or striker Marley Watkins. Two other strikers added to the squad this summer have been 24-year-old Mo Eisa from Cheltenham and Andreas Weimann, 26, from Derby.

    “Webster also looks very composed at the back”, “He’s a complete contrast to Flint. He’s very much a good reader of the game, calm in possession and good with both feet”, “He seems a mile ahead of everyone else, a solid player who is comfortable on the ball and not afraid to bring it into midfield.”

    “Jack Hunt looks good going forward but he’s not at the races defensively yet”, “He seems to lack pace”, “I’m not sure about Hunt defensively and think our full backs could remain our Achilles heel. We could also do with a goalkeeping upgrade, but it has been a very good window on paper.”

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    Jack Hunt

    “I like the look of Eisa already. He is very direct, gets the ball and goes straight to goal”, “He looks to have real promise”, “He has good touch and pace. He got the ball caught under his feet he found his footing to get a good shot off. He’s still raw and needs coaching as his vision is still a bit lacking.”

    “Johnson has cleverly picked Weimann to fulfil the role of high pressing striker, just as he did with Reid last season”, “Weimann looked classy and he adds a bit of guile. He will be all endeavour and few goals, not a bad thing if others as are scoring around him. He won't give backlines any peace.”

    Centre-half Aden Flint (to Middlesbrough) and striker Bobby Reid (to Cardiff) are the highest profile departures, but defender Hordur Magnusson (to CSKA Moscow) keeper Luke Steele (recently on trial at Sheffield United) and midfielder Gary O’Neil (recently on trial at Bolton) have also left the club.

    Other players leaving include defender Scott Golbourne (on loan last season at Milton Keynes) and striker Gustav Engvall, now at KV Mechelen in Belgium having been on loan at Goteborg since March while 21-year-old right-back Zak Vyner has joined Rotherham on a season long loan.

    Pre-Season Results
    After a 4-0 win at Bitton, City beat Cheltenham 4-2 before drawing at Newport 2-2 and at home to Shrewsbury 1-1. They drew with Real Balopecida Linense 2-2 and lost 1-0 to Rayo Vallecano before their final run-out, a home game with Bournemouth last Friday night which ended in a 1-1 draw.

    O'LearyHuntBakerWebsterBryanEliassonPackBrownhillPatersonTaylorWeimann
    Friday’s starting line-up against the Cherries (above) is expected to closely resemble the team for the opening day fixture at home to Nottingham Forest. Apart from some new personnel, Robins have noted that the shape and style of play in pre-season have been broadly very similar to last season.

    “I was hoping we would switch to some version of 4-3-3 this season but it is still a basic 4-4-2, leaving loads of room in midfield for the opposition”, “The style of play is still clear. It seems like we will be a bit more reserved in our pressing but this will be interspersed with quick bursts of intense pressure.”

    “Time will tell but it doesn’t look a strong squad to me. On the plus side it is hard-working, but on the downside it’s lacking that little bit of quality”, “It still lacks some steel and presence in midfield”, “We’re missing our version of N’Golo Kante, someone to grab the game by the scruff of its neck.”

    One player has really caught the eye. “I don't know what Niclas Eliasson has been taking but he looks 10 times the player he did last season”, “He looks a different player doesn’t he? I like the mix of him and Paterson. Eliasson is your classic wide winger while Paterson can find much more space inside.”

    Making Progress
    “We won’t go down but I can’t see us making the play-offs”, “Despite the increased strength of the Championship this year I expect us to play the same high tempo football we played before Christmas last season. I expect us to be in and around the play-offs come the end of the season if not higher.”

    “Given the turnaround of players and particularly the loss of key players, could this realistically go down as a transition season?” Few Robins are worried about relegation, but some are keen not to lose the sense of progress that has been the hallmark of the club since their relegation in 2013.

    “We have gone from bottom of League One, to runaway winners of League One, to looking out of our depth in the Championship, to then staying up and then to finishing in the top half, along with reaching the semi-finals of a major cup competition. In what world is that not showing progress?”

    “We have improved our league position year on year in the last four seasons. That's not even slightly debatable, that's indisputably progress”, “The problem is that being Bristol City we could just as easily be a surprise package as we could be in a relegation battle. We never do things the easy way.”
    https://www.twtd.co.uk/ipswich-town-news/34073
     
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  2. invermeremike

    invermeremike Well-Known Member

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    I constantly equate the comings and goings at Ashton Gate to someone waiting to use their return half of the Titanic ticket they bought years ago. It always seems that we tell the world we want to get better and yet most times when we are within touching reach we want to tear it down and rebuild with products of a lesser quality, hoping they will come good. When you consider all the good players that have left us for newer employment it makes me ask if our club culture is not up to the task of being the competitors we tell the world we want to become. It's always next year and in that vein I don't think this will be a season of spectacular results and sustainability.
     
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  3. AshtonRed

    AshtonRed Well-Known Member

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    I can see where you are coming from Mike , you’re suggesting rather than selling the silverware this summer we should of added to it and really gone for it next season , you have a point , I’m not sure how much was down to us deciding to sell though , rather they wanted to leave whilst their stock was high.
     
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  4. invermeremike

    invermeremike Well-Known Member

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    The grass is always greener they say. Mmm.
     
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  5. bcfcredandwhite

    bcfcredandwhite Well-Known Member

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    I agree with Mike but as Ashtonred said there is probably nothing we could have done about it - I can’t blame Reid for wanting to play in the Prem and he would be better off taking his opportunity now than waiting to see if it would come along with us. Besides, £10m for a striker with one good season on his CV and only 1 year left on his contract was good business in my book.
    Flint had already been linked to going last season so there have been rumblings for a while. I liked Flint and I think we will miss him at times, but he also had mistakes in him so I’ll wait and see how our defence knits together before bemoaning his departure.
    Magnusson leaving was my biggest disappointment - which may sound surprising coming from probably his biggest critic on here. He was often the weak link and gave the ball away a lot. My heart was in my mouth every time he had the ball in defence with an opposing player putting him under pressure! However those mistakes can be trained out - they were not due to a lack of ability and I was convinced he would mature into a very good player for us given time. Again I can hardly blame him for swapping another unpredictable Championship campaign with us for the chance of champions league football immediately.
    It’s a fact of life in football that players will leave and it’s a challenge not just for LJ but for every football manager. You can’t guarantee that your squad will remain the same from one season to the next and sometimes departures can force a change of plan - like Kodjia’s did last season.
     
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    Last edited: Aug 1, 2018
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  6. johngalleyfan2

    johngalleyfan2 Well-Known Member

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    very interesting article

    If you are an average team, and pretty much lose against teams in the top 8, win / draw at home to middle 8 whilst mostly drawing away, and winning 10 of the 16 games against bottom 8 ... then the fixtures will dictate your winning and losing streaks ........ this season the "pre season spread of expected teams [ bookies odds ] " is more favourable with regard to this, however it will indicate how poor we are should we be in bottom 8 and losses exceed wins and draws combined!
    When I looked at our squad, the Bournemouth game and tried to predict a starting line up v florest the only certainty was a back 4! The hardest bit to predict was
    front line .... 1 ; 2 or 3............ for 6 games we will have Taylor Weimann [ eisa djuric ]
    middle.............. Pack, Niclas, Brownhill Smith , [3 subs] ...........leaves 2 sub defenders and goalie as back 4 I would say has 6 players vying for start.
     
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