Bristol City Season Preview: Time to stand up A new dawn: Itâs always exciting, isnât it? Thereâs always that feeling of anticipation, of wondering what could be? Even if youâre expected to be relegated, fans talk about the likes of Burnley and of Blackpool and of Yeovil and they say âyou never knowâ. Newly promoted sides discard the caution that should exist and dream of âdoing a Norwichâ or âdoing a Southamptonâ and heading to two consecutive promotions. We at Bristol City so nearly did that. Despite these constant over-hyped emotions, which in many cases are shot down in a bitter dose of reality by 4:55pm on the first Saturday, some seasons just feel that much more special than others. Some just feel like itâs your time. And so it is that Bristol City head into their second League One season with a burgeoning spirit of anticipation and excitement, no, expectation buzzing around Ashton Gate. But is it realistic to be talking of promotion? Five years of decline have seemingly been halted but that upturn was âonlyâ two months of good form and was done with the benefit of a number of experienced loan signings. Wade Elliott â probably the most important of those â has been secured full time but others, Simon Moore and Nyron Nosworthy in particular, with the support of Simon Gillett are not on the roster this time around. Moore may still arrive â boss Steve Cotterill appears to be waiting for him to be made available once the future of Cardiffâs excellent number one, David Marshall, has been cast. Weâre always seemingly âbig fishâ in this division, big spenders with big targets and this season bears very little resemblance to the feeling around the camp last season. Last year we were being told it would take some time, we were going to build with youth and we all bought into that, at least until the season started and we couldnât win a game or keep a clean sheet. This time around weâve signed some impressive names and spent some impressive money. Luke Freeman, Luke Ayling & Korey Smith have all been invested in, whilst Wade Elliott & Aaron Wilbrahim add the experience from a higher level. A change of direction?: So, is this a departure from the strategy? A move away from one of the âPillarsâ we were told so much about 12 months ago? On the face of it, yes it is. We had nothing like this sort of money to spend last summer, despite the departure of so many seasoned Championship performers, and what we did have was spent on Aden Flint, which was misguided at best. However good he may become, he wasnât the immediate answer we needed for that outlay. Despite the chatter amongst many fans, transfer fees are rarely the issue these days, itâs more about the signing-on fees and wage commitment which translates directly into the on-going budget. Now stalwarts Carey, Fontaine and (Marvin) Elliott are off the wage bill, itâs clear we can make more use of âone of the biggest budgets in the divisionâ that we seem strangely proud to boast about (and presumably inflate the prices weâre charged). So, the journeymen are back? Is the big money being splashed yet again on a group of players just looking to feather their pension pot? Well no, not quite. Despite assertions early in the summer that youth might not be the way to go â Cotterill was seemingly preparing the fans for an array of signings aged 27-32 - aside from Wilbrahim and Elliott, the average age of the recruits is just 23 years old, whilst possible remaining targets Simon Moore and Kieran Agard are both only 24 years old. What weâve done is bring in young men who have had a few yearsâ experience around the middle two divisions and should be ready to press on. Players who, if they impress with us for a year or two, might just have a substantial sell-on value and be pushing for a move to the Premier League. Donât kid yourself weâre not a selling club if the right bid comes in. Ultimately thereâs still a desire to break even and run this club sustainably and thereâs only one way to easily do that without 25,000 coming through the turnstiles each week. Itâs exciting though! It should be a team full of energy and pace and that will naturally increase attendances and provides noise and atmosphere at the three-sided rectangle that is now Ashton Gate. The gaffer: What of the manager? I was one of many unimpressed at the timing, the manner and the reasoning behind the decision to sack Sean OâDriscoll last November. I was certainly less than enamoured at the appointment of a guy Iâd viewed as a bit of a journeyman himself, someone who was still living off past successes in getting jobs. To date, Iâm delighted to say, Iâve been proven very wrong. Cotterill ignited the team with something â Iâm not inclined to say passion because I think we seriously overdo this perception of need for passion in this country (Luiz & Scolari vs Muller & Joachim Low anyone?), but thereâs no doubt there was a different feeling and positivity around the place, even before the truly golden run of form started and he deserves full credit for that. There are still question marks though, big ones. Iâm still not quite sure that the boss has any real idea what our best formation is. Now Iâve argued long and hard before that the days of old-fashioned 4-4-2 are long gone and formations need to be fluid to adapt, but as a player you still need to have some clue as to where you should be on the pitch. I sense he still favours a traditional 4-4-2 but we still havenât got strong enough defenders to make that work in my opinion. I also sense Cotterill thinks the same and 3-5-2 is the likely way forward early on. What that formation results in is immense pressure on the wing backs. Itâs been fascinating to hear Luke Shaw talk this week of the vast step up in fitness required to play a wing-back position under new Manchester United manager Louis van Gaal. This is a chap who looked pretty nippy, agile and fit all of last season. Have we recognised that fact and understood who is likely to play this role? Thatâs why you canât just shove someone out in that position, not least a centre-half by trade in Karleigh Osborne, as was proven so evidently at Wolves last season. Have we got enough true options to make that formation work? The squad - goalkeeper: Iâve already mentioned Simon Moore twice and it seems Cotterill shares my view that Frankie Fielding isnât quite âthe manâ, even at this level. Many will see a great shot-stopper and equate that to a good keeper. Of course itâs a hugely important facet, but equally critical skills for a top keeper are his organisational ability, his presence in and around the box and his decision-making on coming from crosses and through-balls. Although it may seem harsh after a decent end to last season, I feel Fielding is lacking in all three of those latter areas, and that does nothing but lead to occasional mistakes and an ultra-nervous defence. Defenders then make errors of judgement because theyâre not quite sure what the man behind them is doing and it looks as if theyâre the ones at fault, not the keeper. The net result is a shaky looking back-line. We showed last year weâve got plenty of goals in us but there are only so many times we can score more than the opposition. Most titles are won on those hard-fought 1-0 scrappy wins that the best teams know how to grind out when the going is tough. The squad â the defence: In front of the number one we now have five players seemingly vying for three spots, with major question marks still remaining against Adam El-Abd and Aden Flint. I wasnât the only to notice our improvement at the back last season came not just with Nosworthyâs signing, but it coincided (or was because of?) the absence of the two Aâs. To be fair to El Abd, he couldnât be blamed for the lack of a clean sheet until January, so Flint must be wondering how much that tightening up will come back to haunt him. However he is strong, great in the air and a threat going forward, and I wouldnât be at all surprised to see him feature regularly, but he must learn the difference in positioning when playing in a three, and quickly. The same must be said for El-Abd who came with much fanfare and a fair degree of disappointment from Brighton fans and it seemed weâd found our leader â our bulldog whoâd put the wind up the opposition and strengthen the back line. Unfortunately that never happened and with his apparent falling out with Cotterill at the end of the season, it would appear too simplistic to put it down to adapting to a new home and a new position in a back three. Whether El-Abd will play much part or even still be here in September remains to be seen, but he simply cannot have been as bad as he was for us for Brighton for all the years he was there, so something must be disturbing him behind the scenes. Perhaps a full pre-season and a fresh start may help, but you sense he wonât be given many second chances. That leaves two right-backs-come-centre-backs in Ayling and Osborne alongside the only left-footer in Derrick Williams who, despite all the mayhem around him, had a reasonable first full professional season. Iâm personally a bit surprised we havenât tried to tempt Nosworthy on a one-year deal â perhaps we have in fact â but despite five bodies in there (if Ayling doesnât play wing back), I feel weâre relying on a massive improvement from Flint or El-Abd to ensure we can properly tighten up on last yearâs often shambolic performances. Cunningham, Bryan, Little & Wagstaff appear to be the main options out wide and will need energy in abundance but also enough of a defensive mind to help out the middle three. As alluded to above, itâs a very tough role to get right and us fans should remember itâs as much about their defensive tracking back as looking good bombing past a full-back and whipping a cross in. Another lesson from Brazilâs capitulation in the summer. The squad â the engine room: Thereâs an abundance of options in the middle whichever formation we play, but having lost Marvin Elliott and not re-signed Gillett, we desperately need Korey Smith to be in form from day one and be the enforcer we need, sitting in front of the backs to support and protect them. Pack and Wade Elliott can play alongside him to manoeuvre the ball around whilst Wagstaff, Reid, Bryan, Freeman and others can support or tuck in from a wider position. Itâs a big year for the much-heralded local lads too. Reid and Bryan undoubtedly had far less of a part to play in the second half of last year, as Cotterillâs loan signings helped us up the table but equally left fewer chances for development. This remains the angle Iâm most interested in terms of Cotterillâs approach. He talks a good game about bringing through the youth but aside from calling Wes Burns into the squad for a few games, which he proceeded to talk up at any opportunity as per his Patrick Bamford claim to fame, he showed little inclination to play the youngsters in my view. Yes, theyâve got to earn their place, but they wonât develop by playing reserve games and it would be a dreadful shame if we get in that Catch-22 situation Gary Johnson always found himself in where the stakes get so high that the manager feels they simply canât be risked with the responsibility. The squad â the hitmen. âWeâre Bristol City, weâll score more than youâ: Undoubtedly the huge positive to take out of last season, the only consistently, obviously strong area, was our attacking line. For all their quiet moments, (allegedly) disinterested spells, missed one-on-ones and moments of immense frustration, JET & Baldock were the most potent partnership in the division and one of the best across the country. Only Ings & Vokes or Suarez & Sturridge were comparable, and neither of them will consistently pair up again this time around for differing reasons. Various alternatives were tried at different times but Paterson, Barnett and the rest were never able to break the mould. I canât help but still feel that Cotterill doesnât fancy JET as a player too much, but I was pleasantly surprised how he stuck with him and seemed to be giving him his confidence back by the time the lighter spring days were with us. The signing of Wilbrahim could well be a marker for a more traditional front-two partnership (and a more direct approach?), allowing Baldock to feed off his scraps and lessen the burden of him leading the line and being the premier goal getter, but JET wonât go without a fight and some early season form like last years will make him a hard obstacle to budge. And if Baldock goes â sorry, but youâre naïve if you think that still isnât a possibility â then Kieran Agard would be an intriguing replacement. A chap who was released by Yeovil two years ago has had one, sensational season and it would be a big challenge to repeat that at a club with greater expectation, but if he can then heâd be another quality addition. And then thereâs Luke Freeman. Still a bit tricky to say exactly where heâll play but no doubt the fans who saw him stand out in a 4-1 defeat over the Christmas break last year will be rushing to their seats in anticipation to see how he can support the front men. This could just be the signing of the summer in this division. The squad â overall: It feels a better balanced squad than last year â and to be fair even OâDriscoll consistently admitted he was still a year away from getting the balance he wanted, but weâre still 2-3 players short in my view. An organised, better all-round goalkeeper, a more solid, stronger centre-half (possibly left-footed to help cover Williams) and a better defensive wing-back might be on the radar. I canât help but feel weâll have to rely on outscoring the opposition to win the majority of games (thatâs not the simpleton statement it sounds!), and not too many teams other than the very best are ultimately successful utilising that approach. Itâs a big second season for many. Fielding, Williams, Flint, El-Abd, Osborne, Reid, Bryan, Pack, JET and others â early signs of promise or initial rustiness canât remain unsubstantiated for long now weâre clearly aiming for the top. Itâs also a big second season â and first full season â for the gaffer. Cotterill has started well, heâs certainly achieved his first objective which was to keep us up last year, emphatically in the end. He ticks a lot of boxes but he must be clearer on his best line up and set-up than he was last year. He must also deal with the expectation he now faces having spent a fair whack of the ownerâs money â he was in an almost no-lose situation last year and could only really become the unlucky inheritor or the hero. Heâs started on the path to the latter but a promotion challenge â as we found out last time we were in this division, is a different matter entirely. If he does survive the year then weâll be doing OK, certainly in and around the top 8. Heâll also have become our longest-serving manager since Gary Johnson, five incumbents ago. If captain Sam Baldock stays then that will be a huge boost. I was, still correctly in my view, critical of him last winter when he was missing plenty of chances. I just didnât see a striker who could score 20+ goals because he missed so many simple chances. More importantly they were often at critical stages of the match and it ended up costing us a number of points. But boy did he prove me wrong in the end and Iâll be as delighted as anyone if he is still here come next May. However, despite what some fans seem to think, if a Championship club comes in with an offer in excess of £1.5m then Iâm pretty sure the club would look at it, with only one year left on his contract. And if a Championship club on the edge of the potential play-off picture comes in, say a Brighton, then despite his captaincy and the fact heâs first choice, heâll want to move. No player would refuse when thereâs a chance of playing a part in a promotion to the Premier League. Thatâs simply a fact of life and it happens all the way up to the top. Look at Liverpoolâs complete inability to even try to hang on to Suarez when the bigger club came calling. Opening Day: So what of the first match? Away to Sheffield United is quite simply the most difficult match of all 46 possible permutations we could be facing. The favourites and the biggest club in the division, away from home at a venue we havenât been successful at for about 200 years. But weâre second favourites overall and arguably the second biggest club (Preston, amongst others, may dispute that fact), hence the reason Sky TV have picked up on this blockbuster and got us to launch the divisionâs fixtures. The fact we might be bottom of the league once again by 2pm on Saturday shouldnât concern us given the 45 matches still remaining Whichever way that first result goes it seems certain weâre in for an exciting season, but will it be a promotion season? It certainly could be. You couldnât look down our squad list, or review the players weâre still seemingly after and doubt our ambition and ability, but that doesnât always lead to success. Iâve seen more than one or two fans talk about being as excited about a squad as they have been since 2005, when Marcus Stewart and Michael Bridges were the big signings ready to fire us to the glory weâd missed out on so often under Danny Wilson. Two months later Brian Tinnion stood alone in an empty Liberty Stadium in Swansea in his final moments as manager following a 7-1 defeat. Bridges and Stewart didnât last a whole lot longer. Letâs hope that not only there is no false dawn this time, but that we can get something at Bramall Lane, follow it up with a profitable start at home and make sure weâre never out of the picture. My prediction? Top six is distinctly possible. I guess anything else will be disappointing given the way we finished last season and some of the signings weâve made. I think the top two might be a stretch too far at this stage, bearing in mind many of this squad were bottom of the league just a few months ago. Iâll stick my neck out and say fifth. Last year I said 10th-12th, although I didnât quite anticipate getting there in the way we did! Letâs hope Iâm as accurate this time around! Itâs nearly here, the only thing left to say is⦠COME ON YOOOOUUUU REEEDDDDSSSSSSSSSSSS!!!!!
Lot of words. Total change of direction away from the embarrassing talk of pillars. Expect to see no local lads in then XI and maybe even the bench. Going down the poor mans Man City route. Freeman will have come on big money. Top two no excuses.
Has anyone noticed that Junior hasn't really said much this season? Everything I've heard has come from Daddy Lansdown's mouth and the manager, and there has been very little "business talk" surrounding the club. I don't doubt that Jon Lansdown is capable, but the whole pillars thing is double-speak for "We don't want to spend any money to fix the mess we've caused".
As always, thought provoking words from the "exiled robin" which covers our situation in his usual analytical way and doesn't just stick to the positives but adds some negatives for good measure. I almost see a "remember we are Bristol City" air to the piece and based on our roller coaster rides over the decades he couldn't have hit the proverbial moving nail anymore squarely on the head. The frustrations of handing over your hard earned cash to go and watch a bunch of lower league underachievers must get very tiring and yet we are like lemmings heading for the Bristol Channel. Many times I have asked myself why I even bother but then I realise that I have entirely missed the point of being a Bristol City supporter, which means long term suffering and emotional turmoil in abundance. Will, or can, this season be any different than so many from the past? Have we put all the right players in the right places? Is our current manager savvy enough to sort out the long term problems that have hung around Ashton Gate since those heady days of the Championship play-off final? Let's hope the answer to all those questions is a resounding YES but the only way we can all be part of the excitement is to get our backsides down to BS3, or in my case to turn on Radio Bristol at the ungodly hour of 7:00 am and here the good news. Have a great season guys and let's hope our beloved team can do the same.