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City transfer thread

Discussion in 'Hull City' started by originallambrettaman, May 28, 2015.

  1. originallambrettaman

    originallambrettaman Mod Moderator
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    Like Diame?
     
    #1801
  2. originallambrettaman

    originallambrettaman Mod Moderator
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    <laugh> Plenty of time yet, it would just be nice to get the ball rolling.
     
    #1802
  3. Boothferry2Wembley

    Boothferry2Wembley Well-Known Member

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    As well as Tom Ince, who are the other players entering the last years of their contracts?

    Chester, Meyler, Davies, Huddlestone and so on perhaps someone could provide a list.

    It would appear the clock is ticking on many of the players left as far as transfer value is concerned (except Meyler, who has none). The club need to raise money soon so indeed much work to be done and a busy July in inevitable.

    There is also a lot of work to be done re contract extensions. I would not expect any of them to renew for a year at current terms so an exodus in this window and the January window is not out of the question.

    Any chance of a full list, OLM, anyone?
     
    #1803
  4. originallambrettaman

    originallambrettaman Mod Moderator
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    James Chester, David Meyler, Tom Huddlestone, Robbie Brady, Curtis Davies, Tom Ince, Allan McGregor, and Sone Aluko are all in their final year.
     
    #1804
  5. GLP

    GLP Well-Known Member

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    Brady is in his final year I think.
     
    #1805
  6. GLP

    GLP Well-Known Member

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    That doesn't make good reading. I'd get offers on the table to all of them and if they don't sign ship them out. Some on there you wouldn't want to lose for nothing.
     
    #1806
  7. GLP

    GLP Well-Known Member

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    Gingers just want to be together.
     
    #1807
  8. Boothferry2Wembley

    Boothferry2Wembley Well-Known Member

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    8 of the remaining 23 in the final year of their current deals, mostly on relegation clause salary.

    That does not bode well

    The Allam family fortune may stand or fall by Steve Bruce's recruitmentability.
     
    #1808
  9. roseniorhisgranisfromhull

    roseniorhisgranisfromhull Well-Known Member

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    Newcastle and Southampton fans warned us, which 2 clubs would be in a better position to judge?

    It would depend on circumstance, I certainly wouldn't assume that because we signed someone who play's for Uruguay that we should disregard those who got us where we were.

    No, he wasn't good for a season, he was good for about 3 months, until the Fulham game, after that he's varied from average to ****e. Once more, Quinn has been more effective that Huddlestone for around 18 months.

    It isn't an exaggeration at all. I would say Diame was our best midfielder but he's crocked, and Bruce has said as soon as he isn't he'll be gone. Therefore, I firmly believe Quinn was realistically our best midfielder. Worth repeating, he created more chances, scored more goals and got more assists than Huddlestone, but no, he's not as effective because Quinn's never played for Spurs.
     
    #1809
    GLP likes this.
  10. Willson

    Willson Well-Known Member

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    I think most of our best will not want to sign a new contract but be willing to try and get us up next season. Then they can either get a Premier league club very easily on a free if we don't go up, or sign a new deal at Premier league wages if we do.
     
    #1810

  11. Obadiah

    Obadiah Well-Known Member

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    If McShane signs for Reading then they only need two more to complete the set, both of whom are in the last year of their contracts.
     
    #1811
  12. GLP

    GLP Well-Known Member

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    The club won't want to lose players for nothing that we have paid decent fees for. That doesn't make good business sense, if you doubt that - just check out his CV.
     
    #1812
  13. Boothferry2Wembley

    Boothferry2Wembley Well-Known Member

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    Nobody tells him not to let 8 players walk away for nothing.
     
    #1813
  14. Willson

    Willson Well-Known Member

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    Yeah but you have to assess the risk and maybe take the gamble. If we keep those players we have a very good chance of going straight up. If we sell them will we be able to buy players of that quality? I don't think so.
     
    #1814
  15. Fez

    Fez Well-Known Member

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    I couldn't find another more suitable thread for this discussion, but if someone can, or wants to find another that is fine by me.

    Okay, we both know what RWB stands for. So, as you say, the traditional Right Full-Back defensive responsibilities falls to the Right Centre-Back, so that leaves the Right Wing-back with no other defensive role than that of any other player who needs to track back in defence, which makes his primary role that of a midfielder; is that correct or have I misunderstood you? You seem to argue my point for me, but then get caught up on outdated, inaccurate labels. This is an article I came across after I last discussed this subject with OLM and I believe it a decent read, although the thinking, IMO, needs to develop further. It's all about opinion, sharing it and, perhaps, learning from it; Steve Bruce and his coaching team have, I believe, become confused by the whole principal of Wing-backs, 3-5-2 and the players they deploy to execute it - getting our heads around it might help us understand his recruitment strategy better (the same might be claimed for him. too!):

    Part 1

    http://www.sounderatheart.com/2011/9/14/2425896/fullbacks-wingbacks-soccer-tactics-analysis-roles

    If you want to waste time and frustrate yourself, start a conversation/debate about soccer-football positions, what you call them, what that means, and what that implies about their roles.
    This is probably why there is so little intelligent discussion about these things in the English-speaking world, if for no other reason than the fact that the very people who are purported to have invented the game long ago decided that tactics talk was somehow inherently cynical and have always seemingly been a half-step behind the rest of the world (and explains the rather off-putting nationalism that takes over the English sporting press any time a major international tournament rolls around).
    Similarly, be wary of anyone who speaks of "Total Football" as a stand-alone concept. Here's the truth about "Total Football": it is a 40-year-old concept that has been fully integrated into the global culture and tactical awareness of the game. Anyone gushing about "total football" in 2011 is likely a neophyte to thinking of the game beyond simplistic levels, or are stuck in the rigid ways in which we approach "American" sports. That may seem harsh but I myself was guilty of this until just a few short years ago myself.
    What do these things have to do with anything? Well, I bring it up because of the ongoing difficulty I have with talking about defensive positions, and comparing "3-man" defenses to "4-man" defenses, and what is a Fullback and what is a Wingback.
    So let's begin with a glossary:
    Fullback: to understand what a Fullback is you have to understand the 2-3-5 formation, from which modern soccer evolved. No one has played the 2-3-5 for quite some time, but even so the terminology of that formation has had the odd habit of sticking around. Obviously, in the 2-3-5 you had 5 forwards, 3 half-backs, and 2 fullbacks. Over time, the center halfback, shortened to center half, dropped back to become the central defender, the fullbacks taking up wider positions. Eventually, the center half was given a partner, and fullbacks took up even wider positions; this also explains the confusing British habit of referring to central defenders as "center halves". At any rate, Fullbacks are the outside defenders in a "back 4" defense.
    Center back: See above. The old "center halves" ought to really be called center backs. And here's a twist: in a "three-man" defense, all three defenders are usually considered "center backs". On the surface, this doesn't make much sense, but it eventually will, and I hope to help explain that.
    Wingback: This term bothers some people, but the "wingback" is evolved from the fullback, and is best described as the wide defensive mids who support a more central back three in a "3-man" defense. This leads some to question if the back 3 is really a more defensive formation, with wingbacks essentially being fullbacks lined up in the midfield. More on that in a bit.
    CDM: Central defensive midfielder. Yes, he (or she, i guess I should be equitable) is probably best thought of as a defensive player. This may bring on the question of what happens if a team uses two CDM's, as in a 4-2-3-1? While in some cases this does throw a wrench into my way of thinking, it is also worth considering that in many 2-man CDM partnerships, one of the two is really more of a deep-lying playmaker, while the other is more of the bulldog type; and it would be that bulldog type we would include here.
    Back 4 vs. back 3
    If you want to upset people, suggest that a back 3 is really a MORE defensive tactic. I don't want to turn this into comprehensive breakdown of ramifications of "spare defenders" and single-striker systems and midfield match ups and width, but given that in all but the rarest exceptions the outside mids are expected to help provide wide defensive cover (as explained above in the "wingback" definition) this seems to have some credence. The key to running a back three is often on how free your wingbacks are to attack, and your opponent running a narrow system (like a midfield diamond or 4-3-1-2) can help this cause. We saw this is Serie A last season, with narrow formations almost de rigeur but a few clever teams decided they could run 3-4-1-2 (or similar shapes) and allow their wingbacks to run rampant.
    Before the season, I suggested that the best way to look at it is that a "back 3" really includes 3 players on the deepest defensive layer and a "back 4" uses 2 players on the deepest defensive layer. Both use essentially 5 defensive players, just arranged in different configurations.
    The CDM:
    What we are seeing more and more is that the CDM is becoming more of a "sweeper," which is to say an "auxiliary" center back free to push forward into the midfield. This has led to back 4 systems becoming more and more hybridized between a "back 3" with wingbacks and "back 2" with fullbacks and a CDM. The CDM evolved to counter the classic "#10", "enganche" or "playmaker" but that player has gradually faded away with the decentralization of the playmaker role. But the CDM has stuck around and seems to be evolving into a reprise of the "libero"
     
    #1815
  16. Fez

    Fez Well-Known Member

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    http://www.sounderatheart.com/2011/9/14/2425896/fullbacks-wingbacks-soccer-tactics-analysis-roles

    Part 2 (Sorry - size restrictions)

    Wingbacks vs. Fullbacks:

    And here's the crux of the conversation. Asking whether the difference is if wingbacks are really midfielders and fullbacks defenders entirely misses the point, as they are essentially the same player, the difference being the freedom they have to attack based upon who is in the middle of defense and who they have in front of them on the other team. An opponent with a tridente of a center forward and two forward wingers can pin those wingbacks back, leaving 3 CB's to cover one man in the middle and wingbacks little freedom to go forward; and you find yourself bunkering with 5 defenders. Of course you can respond by freeing a CB into a "libero" and have him essentially become a midfielder, and now you have a back 4 with a spare man - which is always the goal on defense. A opponent running a diamond would allow those wingabcks a lot of freedom, with their defensive responsibilities primarily being against the opposing fullbacks (although the diamond generally calls for fullbacks to push high in support of the narrow midfield); you have 3 defenders against 2 strikers in the middle, leaving you the desired spare man.
    But I digress, as in the interest of keeping this to some reasonable length it simply does not make sense to break down every possible tactical matchup, what I provide above is only for the means of illustrating the greater point.
    On the importance of Fullbacks:
    Fullbacks are pretty important, and the level and style of your fullbacks seems to serve as a pretty good litmus test of the overall quality of the soccer involved. I think that it could be fairly said that we don't see the type of fullback play at the MLS level that we see in other parts of the world, and this speaks to the overall level of MLS. Fullbacks are so often some of the quickest, fittest, and more well-rounded players in soccer, and are often really box-to-box players.
    But this isn't to say that MLS fullbacks are unimportant, as few things could be further from the truth. One thing I have observed from perusing the chalkboards of Sounders matches is how many touches the fullbacks in those matches get, and how it is usually the case that the fullbacks are 2 of the top three in touches in a match - with Alonso at CDM being the other. What this seems to illustrate is the impact of that second layer of defense, the three higher players in the "W", and how much of an impact they have on the game in both possession and defending.
    If there is anything "total football" has taught us is not that anyone plays any position, but that everyone plays TWO positions. Fullbacks retain their original name, but they are in fact also wide midfielders. The CDM retains his original name, but he is in fact also an ACB (auxiliary center back). When a fullback pushes forward, it is not the outside mid who covers for him - as outside mids are also forward wingers - but the center back who slides outward, the center mid(s) thus sliding back to cover.
    We have become accustomed to multiple roles within one position and multiple layers within the forward bands and the midfield bands, but this way of thinking has seemingly not yet crept in to how we view the back third of the pitch. Perhaps it is high time that changes.
     
    #1816
  17. Boothferry2Wembley

    Boothferry2Wembley Well-Known Member

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    The problem is agents telling players, be careful here son, you could end up in the third division.
     
    #1817
  18. Amin Yapusi

    Amin Yapusi Well-Known Member

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    I'm sorry but that's a load of bollocks. Whenever Huddlestone played well the whole team played well, he has/had a massive effect on our team, where as Quinn would play well every week but he never took control of a game or picked up the whole team, he just ran around making short sideways and backwards passes, keeping the ball but doing nothing with it.

    Quinn has certainly been more consistent than Huddlestone but to say he's more effective is just delusional to an extreme.

    Face it, he's not very good, he's easily replaceable.
     
    #1818
    Steven Toast and londontiger like this.
  19. kccircle

    kccircle Well-Known Member

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    Quinn has gone - why can't we move on.

    I'm waiting for the McShane posts to ramp up later when he also signs for Reading.
     
    #1819
  20. tigers 2008

    tigers 2008 Well-Known Member

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    Thank you for your response, it seemed a long time since any new threads concerning transfers were created, the sheer volume of the dedicated one can prove somewhat tiresome at times.
     
    #1820

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