Sage advice from Sir James Chester... “I think in the Championship, it’s important not to get too high with the highs and too low with the lows as there are so many games in league football, so if you get stuck in a rut, you’ll find yourself out the race for promotion to the Premier League," “On the other side, if you’re not in the race, you can put yourself on a good run and suddenly find yourself in contention for promotion. But, for Hull City, my advice would be to keep going with how they’re going, don’t get overly excited or down with results because what they’re doing currently is going well.”
Nah **** that Chezzy. When we lose its because everything is a disgrace and if we just played the right tactics we never would.
We are struggling to find the balance though when we don’t have any wide players in the starting 11. It’s like night and day, West Brom vs the previous 3 games.
Obviously not having wingers isn't great, and specifically not having our best attacking player isn't great at all. But I think the WBA game is yet another example of outcome bias affecting people's appraisal of the performance. We dominated the ball as usual and we did get it up the pitch into good positions, but we didn't do enough with it once it got to the penalty area, as is often the case even in games we've won, and we made some mistakes out of possession (and in possession for the first goal of course). Football matches are decided by these fine margins at both ends as much as anything. If we can sort that out at both ends then we'll do well this season.
When have you written in the vernacular? Or do you mean you will use wrong words like of instead of have or compliment instead of complement? Are those evolving lexicons? Or just wrong?
Eh? When did I confuse compliment or complement? And.... Says the man whose entire persona is based on the tragic belief that demonstrating some sort of upper primary school standard of grammar is actually valid, argument winning or interesting in any kind of way.
Writes the person who comes out with phrases like evolving lexicon in the mistaken assumption it makes them appear erudite.
Common word down the pub. Often used whist discussing transitioning through the thirds and evolving lexicons.