Transfer Rumours New Manager

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Something had to change and as Rick says the biggest gamble of the lot was appointing Knapper with his youth based philosophy.
The "youth-based philosophy" isn't Knapper's, 1950. Knapper was appointed because his profile best fitted the club's youth-based and data-centric philosophy.
 
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That's a rather over-simplified view of the basis on which such decisions are made. It's not Knapper's decision to make. Knapper's job is to draw up a short-list based on a brief given him by the board; that's where his "judgement" comes in, not in deciding who actually gets the job. The board may well ask him which candidate he would recommend; but he'd have to give his reasons for favouring one rather than the other. Do you think the board would have simply accepted his recommendation if his preferred candidate were to be Tony Pulis?
The gamble is on the part of the Board, IMO. Knapper is a gamble, Hoff Thorup is a gamble, and the dependence on youth is a gamble. It might have been prudent to maintain continuity with an experienced head coach while the new SD carries out the recruitment plan and the youth development model is implemented.
 
Yes, but a gamble with a Head Coach who got us into the playoffs in spite of serious injuries and a complete lack of support in January.
But surely as there were discussions with the new coach months ago and a work permit obtained for him the decision to no longer employ an experienced Head Coach had already been made. I would argue that compromises seldom work.
 
I am not sure how you can ascertain that a "compromise" has been made. And discussions with a coach months ago? I would guess for Knapper to be doing his job he would be checking the situation of many persons of interest for future developments.
 
But surely as there were discussions with the new coach months ago and a work permit obtained for him the decision to no longer employ an experienced Head Coach had already been made. I would argue that compromises seldom work.
You made a comparison with business operations earlier, but what business would change everything at once? New co-owners coming in, new SD, new manager and new players to replace the six leaving. Don't get me wrong, I hope it works, but if we finish below 6th it will constitute a failed gamble, especially with Leicester, Ipswich and Southampton going up and Burnley, Luton and Sheffield United coming down. Finishing 6th or above will be a success but if we drop down in the table how long will it be before fans start asking how long do we give him?
 
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Only the other day this

Everybody, including the Board, knew that Wagner was going at the end of the season - if they didn't they should have done. Initially it seemed that the young Coach from Arsenal had already agreed to come and I thought ' great. At last the Club have executed a well worked out plan' but no. Nothing firm happened and we were back to its A, no its B, no its C, no we back with B etc etc. Now we are back to a story that we have appointed somebody and got him a work permit but, hold on, a day later we were interviewing somebody else. I accept that we do not know fact from fiction but the impression appears that,yet again, we are involved in a disorganised f**k up. Why ever was I daft enough to think that NCFC were capable of organising the proverbial piss up i a brewery?

And now this

Having originally feared that, as usual, the Club had no real plan I suppose I am delighted that I have been proven wrong. We couldn't carry on as we were. Webber had gone leaving us with 4 central defenders over the age of 30 and a 'runner' up front who is even older. The last two Managers have been experienced but with a high failure rate. Something had to change and as Rick says the biggest gamble of the lot was appointing Knapper with his youth based philosophy. The Board were obviously prepared to take that risk and Knapper was quick out of the blocks getting Thorup in discussions and getting him a work permit. I had little time for Wagner but I have to admire his professionalism in carrying on regardless when he must have realised his days were numbered. Two of the oldies have gone and a lot of youngsters now see a path ahead but as well as looking for new talent the next major job is getting the remaining experienced players signed up to the new plan.

When the wind changes again, you'll no doubt jump to another ill thought through snap conclusion.
 
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Only the other day this



And now this



When the wind changes again, you'll no doubt but jump to another ill thought through snap conclusion.
What I put up earlier was how I saw things then but as I said in the second ' I am delighted to have been proven wrong ' What is wrong with that? I do not know what I have done to upset you but every time I post lately you are on me like a ton of bricks. I hope it is going to stop.
 
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Yes, but a gamble with a Head Coach who got us into the playoffs in spite of serious injuries and a complete lack of support in January.
I can see it both ways. On the one hand, Wagner achieved the realistic objective (playoffs) in a season where three of the top 4 were heavy favourites, because financially Leicester, Leeds and Southampton were in a different league to us already. Given the same squad to run it back next season, I don't doubt he'd make the playoffs again, especially given the relegated teams are unlikely to be as strong, and hopefully Wagner won't be as unfortunate with injuries to Sargent, Rowe, etc.

But Wagner had flaws that don't align with what management want going forwards:
  • He was over-reliant on experienced players. Sainz, Idah, Rowe, McCallum were the only U23s in our senior squad to play more than 1000 minutes. Outside of the cup game vs Bristol Rovers, Kellen Fisher has only played 24 mins in 2024, and Gibbs hasn't played more than 24 minutes in a game since December. In the play-offs, he rushed back unfit players he trusted, which hurt us, and was his own fault because he hadn't given other players the opportunity to grow and impress.
  • Our results were heavily dependent on Josh Sargent's availability. That spell mid-season without him saw us win just 7 in 20 (all against bottom half teams), losing 10. We can't go into next season knowing the only way we make automatic promotion is if Sargent can play 40+ games, we need a manager who can adapt better.
  • Possibly more opinion than fact, but I don't think we've had more than a handful of games under Wagner where we've looked greater than the sum of our parts. Farke, Lambert both built teams that worked with individuals that weren't superstars. In Sargent, Sara, Rowe we had individuals capable of winning a game by themselves, our system didn't maximise what others could offer, and so we suffered as soon as those star players were unavailable, or marked out of a game. Given financial restrictions, I don't think it would be a total shock to anyone if all three were to leave this summer, could Wagner make it work without them?
There's clearly unknowns going forwards. The managerial hire needs to be right, bringing a playing style that makes the most of what our squad has and can be supplemented by clever recruitment - and then we need that recruitment to have more hits than misses. We need some players on the fringes to have break-out seasons like Rowe did, ideally as a result of the manager. But I can see the sense of using this summer for a transition when it matches a 'natural' turnover in the squad, rather than spending more money on building a Wagner squad that doesn't help the wider objectives of the club, and doesn't appear to be a style that can overachieve.
 
Does this sound like someone on the cusp of becoming our manager?

"I have huge ambitions here [Nordsjaelland]. The two seasons we have played now have lifted us in a really exciting direction and taken this club to a level that many have wanted and dreamed of for many years. Up where we can join, where it's really fun.

"It shouldn't just be a one-time pleasure, but something you can hope for and count on when the season starts.

"To that extent, we are in the process of doing so. And we must continue with that - and get a little better all the time. So that at some point we can honestly say that we are now aiming to become Danish champions. I have an ambition for that here."

Thorup did confirm that he holds aspirations of challenging himself abroad at some stage in his career - but said it would have to take 'an exciting' project to tempt him to depart Nordsjaelland at this stage.

"At one point or another it can be fun to try another league, country and another culture," Thorup said. "But it must really be an exciting project, because it really takes a lot to beat this, I would say."

https://www.pinkun.com/sport/norwich-city/24344229.johannes-hoff-thorup-norwich-city-links/

To answer the question I posed at the start, I'd say "No! It doesn't." It sounds to me like sincere, thoughtful, as it is, Danish honesty. It would take all one's home-bred cynicism to think these were the words of a young man about to jump ship.
Does this sound like someone on the cusp of becoming our manager?

"I have huge ambitions here [Nordsjaelland]. The two seasons we have played now have lifted us in a really exciting direction and taken this club to a level that many have wanted and dreamed of for many years. Up where we can join, where it's really fun.

"It shouldn't just be a one-time pleasure, but something you can hope for and count on when the season starts.

"To that extent, we are in the process of doing so. And we must continue with that - and get a little better all the time. So that at some point we can honestly say that we are now aiming to become Danish champions. I have an ambition for that here."

Thorup did confirm that he holds aspirations of challenging himself abroad at some stage in his career - but said it would have to take 'an exciting' project to tempt him to depart Nordsjaelland at this stage.

"At one point or another it can be fun to try another league, country and another culture," Thorup said. "But it must really be an exciting project, because it really takes a lot to beat this, I would say."

https://www.pinkun.com/sport/norwich-city/24344229.johannes-hoff-thorup-norwich-city-links/

To answer the question I posed at the start, I'd say "No! It doesn't." It sounds to me like sincere, thoughtful, as it is, Danish honesty. It would take all one's home-bred cynicism to think these were the words of a young man about to jump ship.

Oops, there you go again, jumping to the wrong conclusion.
 
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What I put up earlier was how I saw things then but as I said in the second ' I am delighted to have been proven wrong ' What is wrong with that? I do not know what I have done to upset you but every time I post lately you are on me like a ton of bricks. I hope it is going to stop.

Yes you made your first comment to which I responded

The first line of your post is opinion not FACT. There is an information gap at the moment. Your view of the current narrative is based on information predominately based on sources who have very little idea of what is actually going on. Those in the know aren't talking. Maybe it's a case that the club are just working to their timescales and not rushing into something, because so called fans and the media stamp their feet whilst shouting "I want to know and I want to know now". Jigsaw pictures are often difficult to make out, when you can only see some of the pieces.

Looking at the way our recent head coaches have been treated, by the very vocal, so called fans, I'm very skeptical that a young up and coming coach will get the support and time he'll need to develop both himself and the squad.

You then took umbrage at my post, however now it would appear you are of the view that my alternative narrative was perhaps nearer the mark than yours. Hence my comment " When the wind changes again, you'll no doubt jump to another ill thought through snap conclusion".

You say / suggest you have some specialist knowledge around accounting and how organisation function, which you may well have. I would have thought this would lead to you making more nuanced, rationale arguments than you are currently making.

Anyway it's nothing personal, I just don't think emotive, irrational statements that are that ill supported, or indeed not supported at all, and dressed up as fact should go unchallenged.
 
You haven't done anything to upset him; the club has.

The club hasn't upset me, but I agree I haven't bought in to its current trajectory. I think in recent times the club has lost it's way a bit and on the available information I'm of the view that the sackings of both Farke and Wagner are not only poor decisions, but out of step with mine and what I thought were the club's values. I never saw the appointment of Smith as an up grade on Farke, although I tried to see the positives and I'm currently struggling to see how the appoint of Thorup increases our changes of gaining promotion next season, over keeping Wagner. Both Farke & Wagner have got teams promoted from the Championship in the past, took teams to the playoffs this season and have Premiership experience, although they are still developing as coaches. What does Thorup have that they didn't ?, most people on this forum had never heard of him before Wagner's sacking. He might come in and do really well and get us promoted, but in my view its a massive gamble.
 
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This board is split between 3 types of "supporter".

From the eternal optimistic RiverEndRick to the Doom goblins .

I always gravitate towards optimism & hope for the best , others seem to revel in misery bordering on depression.

A few weeks ago certain posters did a full 180 on our chances of promotion but shifted the expectation to survival , which we would obviously fail at .

It all becomes very tiresome.
 
I believe that Wagner represented the Webber years , he was appointed as an easy option as they knew each other from Huddersfield.

Knapper was close to pulling the trigger when he took over but results & improved & Wagner was given the rest of the season.

Knapper wants a fresh start with his own man & a clear progression path from the academy conveyor belt to the first team .

Wagner's reluctance to play on loan Van Hooijdonk or any of our academy kids meant that our more experienced players were never rested & pushed back half injured .

Without parachute money the club needs to drastically change things & that will unfortunately mean losing our star players to keep the lights on .

The American baseball guy seems to be more interested in marketing than investing in players , his business model doesn't include taking on any of the club's debt or risking his own money .
 
Oops, there you go again, jumping to the wrong conclusion.
I prefer to sometimes get things wrong through my propensity for thinking the best of people, rather than from always thinking the worst of them <ok>