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Pressure on bruce

Discussion in 'Sunderland' started by billofengland, Sep 18, 2011.

  1. billofengland

    billofengland Well-Known Member

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    Sunderland's manager, Steve Bruce, has signed 30 players in a little over two years in charge. Photograph: Owen Humphreys/PA
    Steve Bruce, Ellis Short and Niall Quinn played golf together last week but, despite this outward show of camaraderie, the trio have still to silence growing speculation about how much longer their triangular bond will endure. Sunderland's manager, owner and chairman have found their relationships coming under increasing scrutiny in the wake of not only Bruce's winless start to the season but the team's record of only one home victory – against Wigan last spring – since New Year's Day.

    Although the manager feels sufficiently confident to laugh at fevered rumours speculation suggesting he is about to be sacked and Quinn has already, secretly, resigned as chairman, Bruce appreciates Short's patience is finite. Certainly anything less than victory against Stoke at the Stadium of Light will raise awkward questions about his position. Bruce was meant to imbue Sunderland withstability in the wake of Roy Keane's capricious managerial reign but after signing 30 players – several of whom have now departed – during little more than two years in charge it remains among the Premier League's most turbulent clubs.

    If change has been most pronounced on the pitch, there have also been boardroom upheavals with the departure of Quinn's old allies Steve Walton and Lesley Callaghan, prefacing the recent arrival of two Short appointees, Per Magnus Andersson and Mike Farnan. They are now working with Margaret Byrne, the well regarded, newly promoted 31-year-old chief executive.

    Byrne's diplomatic skills regularly came to the fore when, as club secretary, she mediated between Keane, Quinn and Short. Yet if the rather more easy going Bruce's installation has eased the tensions that once swirled around the river Wear things are still not exactly serene. When, three years ago, Quinn marched the intensely private Short on to an Irish golf course and persuaded him to buy out Sunderland's financially challenged owners the Drumaville consortium, he pledged that, with the right team and manager, the Stadium of Light would frequently be filled to 48,000 capacity.


    Despite a deceptively flattering 10th place finish last season, a post-Christmas collapse in formensured that gates struggled to reach 40,000, reputedly disappointing Short. It has not helped that the team have lost four key strikers in the past year. While Bruce could hardly prevent Danny Welbeck's return to Manchester United following a successful loan, his failure to motivate Kenwyne Jones – one of five former Sunderland players in Stoke's squad – or to keep first Darren Bent and then Asamoah Gyan happy have been costly.

    If Bent's defection to Aston Villa last January proved painful, the £13m Gyan's disappearance on loan to Al-Ain in the United Arab Emirates last weekend is surely one of the most bizarre moves in football history. At least as Nicklas Bendtner, Connor Wickham and Ji Dong-won endeavour to fill the attacking vacuum they can be reassured that even an "old school", technophobe manager such as Bruce is finally embracing 21st century innovation.

    As he struggles to bond with his new iPad, squad training is now individually calibrated through sophisticated heart monitors, while Steve Staunton has been hired to compile detailed scouting reports on opponents.

    Following an investigation into the causes of Sunderland's frighteningly high instance of injuries and post-rehabilitation relapses last season, the respected former academy physiotherapist David Binningsley is now responsible for supervising recovering players throughout their entire return journey from surgery to the first team.

    "We've made big changes," Bruce says. "But managers are judged by results and I know I need to win a match."

    Although a bob, I , like all of you , need a win today, some of the comments following this article, are relevent to where we are today, you dont have to agree or disagree, but if yove nowt better to do, have a butchers.

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/...ign=Feed: theguardian/football/rss (Football)
     
    #1
  2. Commachio

    Commachio Rambo 2021

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    Wonder how many of these so called "old scholl" managers are around, are any sucessfull?

    Fergie must love his supa dupa blu-ray, 3d, mega fast, free-download, 108" led, contraptions..or maybe not..


    Don't think the author of the Article from the Guardian, likes Bruce very much.
     
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  3. talcnturnip

    talcnturnip Well-Known Member

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    Does Cest work for the Guardian or he could be free lancing<whistle>
     
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  4. newtonlee2

    newtonlee2 Member

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    haway lads lets get the fat geordie **** sacked today
     
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  5. Commachio

    Commachio Rambo 2021

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    Who and how?

    If its Bruce how do you want today to pan out in order for him to be sacked?
     
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  6. SAFC 55

    SAFC 55 Member

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    You are a numpty
     
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  7. In defence of newton lee. He probably thinks a defeat today may force the powers that be to get rid of the obese clueless geordie idiot. Therefore, it will benefit the club in the long run.
     
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  8. Dorset

    Dorset Well-Known Member

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    I'm very much a BOB Lee, but to wish this, is to wish that the team loses today. I can never advocate our team loosing in order to get the manager the bullet.

    It's a must win today.....
     
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