That’s a really long paragraph
Also a message to Ralph Kruger.
I apologise for anything bad I said about you, how the **** did you get this guy?

Also a message to Ralph Kruger.
I apologise for anything bad I said about you, how the **** did you get this guy?
He's still a fairly errant provider of finishes and final balls, and probably always will be. But this is how you use a Redmond: get them into space, where everything won't need to be inch-perfect and their pace and energy plays up. He will be a very productive player under Hasenhuttl.
Seriously. I haven't been Old Ralph's biggest fan by any stretch of the imagination, but it was an inspired choice. Would have been so easy to play it safe, to go for experience or someone with a reputation for solidifying defenses.
Also says something about New Ralph's self-confidence that he didn't exactly play it safe, either. He wasn't lacking options for clubs interested in his services, but he wanted to manage in the Premier League, a Premier League club wanted him, so he cut short his sabbatical in order to take over a side that had been in utter disarray for nearly a year and a half. Most in-demand managers would -- totally logically -- stay away, because narrative matters to your career, and jumping into English football and getting relegated (even if performances improved) would be an indelible black mark. Didn't matter to Hasenhuttl, because he wasn't getting relegated.
That picture sums everything up.... Saint Ralph of St Mary’sYou must log in or register to see images
Redmond's a gambler, and gamblers, as Lemme famously said, always lose. But when they take a punt and it comes off, it's a joy. Redmond will always give the ball away or run into a dead end in games, but only because he is trying things others wouldn't.