Sport Republic's end of season interview

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I will disagree that we were a well-run club before them, honestly. We lurched from crisis to crisis for five years, churning through executive staff at an impressive rate, with dysfunction up and down the organization. It came to a head this year, but the seeds had long since been planted.
Things have been going downhill since Cortese left, really. Sure, we lucked out with the recruitment of Koeman, and the likes of Pellé, Mané, Virgil, and Tadic, but that was it. A steady downhill slide ever since, with one set of bad owners and management replaced by another. Ralph was a brief respite, but he had zero backing, except for the signing of the brilliant but injury-prone Danny Ings.
 
Things have been going downhill since Cortese left, really. Sure, we lucked out with the recruitment of Koeman, and the likes of Pellé, Mané, Virgil, and Tadic, but that was it. A steady downhill slide ever since, with one set of bad owners and management replaced by another. Ralph was a brief respite, but he had zero backing, except for the signing of the brilliant but injury-prone Danny Ings.

Agreed. And while things failed pretty spectacularly this season, I'm fairly blasé about relegation because it had felt like a matter of time anyway, because the rot was pretty deep. We have an involved ownership group with a workable plan, they just need to execute on that plan. And getting chastened might help long-term.
 
I will disagree that we were a well-run club before them, honestly. We lurched from crisis to crisis for five years, churning through executive staff at an impressive rate, with dysfunction up and down the organization. It came to a head this year, but the seeds had long since been planted.

Good points but I guess I would counter that we were well run within our limitations. If that was crisis to crisis then they did well at that. The new ownership group was supposed to stabilise things. For an ownership group to get us relegated in the first season and lay the blame at the feet of the team they initially said were doing a good job seems like deflection to me. Ultimately Ralph wasn't on good terms with the dressing room so they tried to fix it and got the recruitment balance all wrong. Too much change too soon in the playing staff. Now they have taken some very wide swings with the axe and felled a lot more. That amount of change is very hard to implement all at once but that is what they are attempting to do. Hopefully they compartmentalise well and the playing and coaching staff are fully supported in what they need while the office and boardroom sort their **** out.
 
Agreed. And while things failed pretty spectacularly this season, I'm fairly blasé about relegation because it had felt like a matter of time anyway, because the rot was pretty deep. We have an involved ownership group with a workable plan, they just need to execute on that plan. And getting chastened might help long-term.

I'm surprised you feel that we were badly run. you've said yourself several times that we have remained a secure club on a good financial footing. We had achieved the main goal of staying up on the least money in the league, even hit the top of the league for a brief moment. I think the problem was primarily lack of investment/turnover in the playing squad, poor leadership didn't seem like a biggie, nothing that was newsworthy anyway.

Like you I'm blase about relegation though I think if we had survived next season would have been a step forward.
 
I'm surprised you feel that we were badly run. you've said yourself several times that we have remained a secure club on a good financial footing. We had achieved the main goal of staying up on the least money in the league, even hit the top of the league for a brief moment. I think the problem was primarily lack of investment/turnover in the playing squad, poor leadership didn't seem like a biggie, nothing that was newsworthy anyway.

Like you I'm blase about relegation though I think if we had survived next season would have been a step forward.

Prior to Gao, yes, though that was mostly a cynical attempt by Liebherr to maximize her own profit. Our financial situation in recent years had actually gotten pretty alarming, and I said as much. We had major cashflow issues, the outside loan we had taken out had onerous terms, and our owner couldn't cover the debts if needed. If we went down under Gao, I fully expect that we'd have faced administration, and that was my take at the time:

https://not606.com/threads/confirmed-saints-sign-roméo-lavia.401262/page-6#post-15941329

If we got relegated with Gao at the helm, our options would have either been to liquidate the all of the useful parts of the squad immediately or go into administration; our finances were that bad.

https://not606.com/threads/the-martin-semmens-appreciation-thread.394533/#post-15072719

The reason we have less debt than some teams is that we're not that far removed from having cash sloshing all over the place, owing to our exuberant player sales prior to the takeover. We had a net cash position of £20m on the 2018 books; we're probably at £40-50m or more net debt as of the end of this past season. COVID accounts for a portion of that, but our financial position was eroding quite badly before it hit, too.
 
I will disagree that we were a well-run club before them, honestly. We lurched from crisis to crisis for five years, churning through executive staff at an impressive rate, with dysfunction up and down the organization. It came to a head this year, but the seeds had long since been planted.

Maybe the word well run was wrong. But, we kept ticking over and, most importantly, we survived and kept our heads above water. Everyone knew where we stood and who did what.

That's all changed now.

At the end of the day, Sport Republic have come in, and to their credit, have spent a lot of money. However, that money has been spent poorly on the wrong type of players. Wrong decisions have been made left right and centre, whilst the club structure is seemingly dismantled piece by piece. Now, some might argue this is necessary, I'm not so sure. As I said, we always kept our heads above water under the previous regime. We were never in any serious danger.

Again, sure, we might have been circling the drain for a while, but I'm not convinced that the old regime would have made the mistakes that cost us of last season. That's on SR, and SR alone.

Sport Republic decisions have cost us relegation, in my opinion.
 
Maybe the word well run was wrong. But, we kept ticking over and, most importantly, we survived and kept our heads above water. Everyone knew where we stood and who did what.

That's not exactly how I remember it. We survived, yes, but repeatedly by the skin of our teeth. We regularly had months-long stretches of being absolutely atrocious. Our previous four seasons: 17th, 16th, 11th, 15th. Would you rate Everton as a team that keeps ticking over given that they've managed to have consecutive sub-40 point seasons while staying up, or are they a bad team that has been fortunate that others have been worse? Because for my money it's the latter, as it often was with us.
 
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That was ok. I can see some of the rational, and if this kick up the arse galvanises something resembling a well run club, then there could be some fun to be had.

Bring in the Vegan.
(No issues with vegan’s, just in case!)
 
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Maybe the word well run was wrong. But, we kept ticking over and, most importantly, we survived and kept our heads above water. Everyone knew where we stood and who did what.

That's all changed now.

At the end of the day, Sport Republic have come in, and to their credit, have spent a lot of money. However, that money has been spent poorly on the wrong type of players. Wrong decisions have been made left right and centre, whilst the club structure is seemingly dismantled piece by piece. Now, some might argue this is necessary, I'm not so sure. As I said, we always kept our heads above water under the previous regime. We were never in any serious danger.

Again, sure, we might have been circling the drain for a while, but I'm not convinced that the old regime would have made the mistakes that cost us of last season. That's on SR, and SR alone.

Sport Republic decisions have cost us relegation, in my opinion.
SR have cost us this season through their mistakes for sure. The question going forward is Have they learnt from their mistakes ? Hopefully they have only time will tell.
 
That's not exactly how I remember it. We survived, yes, but repeatedly by the skin of our teeth. We regularly had months-long stretches of being absolutely atrocious. Our previous four seasons: 17th, 16th, 11th, 15th. Would you rate Everton as a team that keeps ticking over given that they've managed to have consecutive sub-40 point seasons while staying up, or are they a bad team that has been fortunate that others have been worse? Because for my money it's the latter, as it often was with us.

Hm, I certainly don't remember surviving by the skin of our teeth for a while. Yes, we had streaky runs but the good runs often kept us up without ever worrying about going down.

2018/19 - The Mark Hughes/Ralph season was the only season where we were in the bottom 3 consistently, and took until April to survive. This was our closest brush with relegation before this season.
2019/20 - Naturally disrupted by covid, lost 9-0 & had a patchy start to the season but at no point did we ever look like going down. Not much investment.
2020/21 - No crowds, but we got to the top of the league. Yes, we fell apart in the last half (sound familiar?), and we dropped like a stone but again, never looked like going down. Not much investment.
2021/22 - Again, a superb first half of the season but again fell apart in the last half. Again, we dropped like a stone but never looked like going down. Not much investment.
2022/23 - Well, what a clusterfuck. Lots of investment and we've gone backwards.

Everton got lucky there were 3 worse teams than themselves, no doubt about it.
 
The owner, who admits he is not a 'football man', helped picked Nathan Jones.

Super.

I feel underneath all of this there is a fair amount of hubris, 'It's our fault, we made mistakes, but not really, it's their fault'.

Also they said it, this coming season in the Championship I'm judging it all now but results only. If we are struggling come Christmas it is their fault.
 
Hm, I certainly don't remember surviving by the skin of our teeth for a while. Yes, we had streaky runs but the good runs often kept us up without ever worrying about going down.

2018/19 - The Mark Hughes/Ralph season was the only season where we were in the bottom 3 consistently, and took until April to survive. This was our closest brush with relegation before this season.
2019/20 - Naturally disrupted by covid, lost 9-0 & had a patchy start to the season but at no point did we ever look like going down. Not much investment.
2020/21 - No crowds, but we got to the top of the league. Yes, we fell apart in the last half (sound familiar?), and we dropped like a stone but again, never looked like going down. Not much investment.
2021/22 - Again, a superb first half of the season but again fell apart in the last half. Again, we dropped like a stone but never looked like going down. Not much investment.
2022/23 - Well, what a clusterfuck. Lots of investment and we've gone backwards.

Everton got lucky there were 3 worse teams than themselves, no doubt about it.

2017-18, we finished on 36 points. We were in the drop zone as late as the 35th match week.
2018-19, finished on 39 points. We were in the drop zone in late February before rallying to 16th.
2019-20, pretty sure everyone was disrupted by COVID, not just us. Struggled first half but finished a fairly strong 11th on 52 points.
2020-21, finished 15th on 43 points. Not terrible, also demonstrably not good.
2021-22, hung around the lower part of the table before a bunch of good results, before collapsing back to 15th.

Over the course of five years, our average finish was 15th on 42 points. We were in the drop zone for lengthy or late stretches in three of those seasons (for 10 matchdays in 2019-20 before our big rally), and in the other two we had months-long meltdowns. And that doesn't even get into the off-the-field silliness with our chairmen, absent owner, nonexistent sponsor, generally terrible recruitment, and increasingly dire finances. There's a reason I compared us to Sunderland rather frequently...they stayed up for a fair while too, always barely scraping by, before the sheer weight of mistakes caught up to them. We were very much on a path to do the same.

The only reason that we stayed up as long as we did is that Danny Ings' joints miraculously went a couple years without turning into slurry, something he had not achieved prior and has not achieved since.
 
2017-18, we finished on 36 points. We were in the drop zone as late as the 35th match week.
2018-19, finished on 39 points. We were in the drop zone in late February before rallying to 16th.
2019-20, pretty sure everyone was disrupted by COVID, not just us. Struggled first half but finished a fairly strong 11th on 52 points.
2020-21, finished 15th on 43 points. Not terrible, also demonstrably not good.
2021-22, hung around the lower part of the table before a bunch of good results, before collapsing back to 15th.

Over the course of five years, our average finish was 15th on 42 points. We were in the drop zone for lengthy or late stretches in three of those seasons (for 10 matchdays in 2019-20 before our big rally), and in the other two we had months-long meltdowns. And that doesn't even get into the off-the-field silliness with our chairmen, absent owner, nonexistent sponsor, generally terrible recruitment, and increasingly dire finances. There's a reason I compared us to Sunderland rather frequently...they stayed up for a fair while too, always barely scraping by, before the sheer weight of mistakes caught up to them. We were very much on a path to do the same.

The only reason that we stayed up as long as we did is that Danny Ings' joints miraculously went a couple years without turning into slurry, something he had not achieved prior and has not achieved since.

I'm not disputing any of that. But apart of 17/18 (Pellegrino) & 18/19 (Hughes) ... were we in any (realistic) danger of going down? Not really, in my opinion. There was no miraculous escapes or near misses. We were streaky, and it was a downward spiral, but we kept our heads above water & we did bloody well considering the lack of investment. Maybe I was just optimistic we'd survive every year, but even looking back, we didn't look in any danger in those years.

Sunderland were the absolute definition of scraping by. There are similarities, of that I'm not disputing. Year in year out they'd look doomed by March, and every year they'd somehow survive. We weren't quite that bad!
 
I'm not disputing any of that. But apart of 17/18 (Pellegrino) & 18/19 (Hughes) ... were we in any (realistic) danger of going down? Not really, in my opinion. There was no miraculous escapes or near misses. We were streaky, and it was a downward spiral, but we kept our heads above water & we did bloody well considering the lack of investment. Maybe I was just optimistic we'd survive every year, but even looking back, we didn't look in any danger in those years.

Sunderland were the absolute definition of scraping by. There are similarities, of that I'm not disputing. Year in year out they'd look doomed by March, and every year they'd somehow survive. We weren't quite that bad!

In the five seasons before they went down, Sunderland's average finish was 15th on 40 points and a -14 GD, compared to our 15th on 42 points and a -19 GD. So the same position, with a slightly better points total and a significantly worse GD. Pretty similar honestly.
 
In the five seasons before they went down, Sunderland's average finish was 15th on 40 points and a -14 GD, compared to our 15th on 42 points and a -19 GD. So the same position, with a slightly better points total and a significantly worse GD. Pretty similar honestly.

Now the question is will our stay in the Championship be similar?

I have said previously we feel like Sunderland and not any of the teams that came straight back up at this moment in time.

They seemed in disarray, had some errr so-so managers, and went straight down the bottom of the Championship the next season. Even their record in the Premier League that season looks very much like ours - 6 wins 6 draws!
 
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Maybe the word well run was wrong. But, we kept ticking over and, most importantly, we survived and kept our heads above water. Everyone knew where we stood and who did what.

That's all changed now.

At the end of the day, Sport Republic have come in, and to their credit, have spent a lot of money. However, that money has been spent poorly on the wrong type of players. Wrong decisions have been made left right and centre, whilst the club structure is seemingly dismantled piece by piece. Now, some might argue this is necessary, I'm not so sure. As I said, we always kept our heads above water under the previous regime. We were never in any serious danger.

Again, sure, we might have been circling the drain for a while, but I'm not convinced that the old regime would have made the mistakes that cost us of last season. That's on SR, and SR alone.

Sport Republic decisions have cost us relegation, in my opinion.

Keeping our heads above water is one thing but to keep on doing it season after season is different; the writing's been on the wall for a long time and relegation was going to happen sooner or later. The last couple of seasons, especially, have been depressing to watch.
I'm hoping that relegation is a wake up call for everyone, the rot leaves the club and we start again with players that want to be here. Besides, already looking at the league next year is more interesting for me. The Championship was fun last time round after all!

Last season, the problem for me was the team selection; most weeks there were players in our starting line up that shouldn't have been in there. Everyone knew it other than the manager(s) themselves! Whether it was contract clauses or whatever I don't know but it was so frustrating. Hopefully that all ends now and the best players get chosen.
 
Now the question is will our stay in the Championship be similar?

I have said previously we feel like Sunderland and not any of the teams that came straight back up at this moment in time.

They seemed in disarray, had some errr so-so managers, and went straight down the bottom of the Championship the next season. Even their record in the Premier League that season looks very much like ours - 6 wins 6 draws!

They were skint, and got stuck with a lot of really old players on massive wages...had to be the oldest team in the division, comfortably, and very few of them wanted to be there. I'm more optimistic about our chances because we should actually have the resources to get some quality Championship players to round out the squad after the fire sale, and we have a young group that's more likely to be motivated by the available playing time rather than resentful of the drop in level.

But Sunderland 'Til I Die is definitely the reason I wouldn't hold on to anyone who doesn't want to be here, heh.
 
I can imagine they do feel like **** for NJ. He would be a PremierLeague manager next season if he had stayed put. Only for a couple of months probably because hes **** but he would have earned it.

There was an air of panic in their actions if you ask me. Bringing Jones in as a manager because he could possibly sort out our setpiece issues? Well that's a setpiece coach then. One manager with Prem experience is the same as another, really?? That's the wildest statement of the lot. And then after getting rid of Ralph because we couldn't play the way he wanted they decided to try Selles playing the way Ralph wanted. We lost 20+ games playing 4222, sacked Jones after 7 and then went back to 4222 and lost another dozen or so. That just sounds like stupidity in hindsight.

They were 'attracted to a well run club' and have dismantled it from the top down. Now it’s a shambles of their own making and they have nowhere to hide & no-one left to fire now. We will live or die by their actions I guess. I'm concerned at the degree of change and the inexperience of the owners most of all.

Agree but just imagine for a few seconds how they might have handled Chelsea. That is a club in deep doo do.