Apparently Delaney voted for Brian Robson last time they interviewed for the job & that was the post-Middlesboro unemplyed Robson.
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Apparently Delaney voted for Brian Robson last time they interviewed for the job & that was the post-Middlesboro unemplyed Robson.
We have Shay Given, we have Damien Duff, we have Robbie, and Roy Keane, so we have players who can compete at the highest level.Quote:
Originally Posted by wws
Unfortunately, the current boss is naive, and out-of-his-depth at this level. He is dull, negative, and conservative. He plays the wrong players, he chooses the wrong tactics, and he has no Plan B. Every big game we play, we don't win. Throwing up 4 points to Israel from winning positions was catastrophic to our chances of WCQ. Things have got worse, not better since then. I have no confidence in his ability to do the job, and if he's given more campaigns to prove himself, the current situation will deteriorate further, and is merely postponing the inevitable. He must go before he does more damage to the confidence of the team, and the country at Senior International level. As we are now out of the WC, the sooner he leaves the better for all concerned.
mypost your verbal scours are worse and more annoying than usual. :rolleyes:
This is not true,be fair on the man and wait until the current campaign is finished ehh.Quote:
Originally Posted by mypost
In competitive games, Hand beat Holland, France, and Spain. Charlton beat Spain, Italy, and England. McCarthy beat Holland, Croatia, Yugoslavia, among others.Quote:
Originally Posted by Dublin12
Who has Brian Kerr beaten? World-beaters Albania, Georgia, Cyprus, and the Faroe Islands. On that form, what's the chances of us getting two wins from two must-win games, particularly as one of them is against our bogey side, Switzerland? None. He's had his chances and he has failed. If you want us to become as bad as Scotland, and Northern Ireland, then by all means keep him. If you want us to qualify for tournaments as I do, we need a new boss to do that. Unfortunately, Brian Kerr is not that man. :(
I agree with that bit. He has been given two campaigns now, and to be fair he has not delivered. People here are correct in saying we have the players and the team to qualify, and do well. However, at this stage I would seriously question the manager. Against all the big sides and in the big games he comes a cropper. The Israel results look terrible now, especially the away one where we sat back disgracefully instead of killing them off.Quote:
Originally Posted by mypost
His tactics against France at home were woeful, "no Plan B" is an absolutely correct description. He should have taken Kilbane off before half time, he was awful and made no impact. We had Roy Keane playing like a demon and winning everything, even if he had thrown in Kavanagh or Holland alongside him they would have made a huge difference. Steven Reid was the man to bring on though, but he didn't have the balls to do it. Reid in the centre, with a licence to push on, would have pushed the French back. Even when we went 1-0 down, Andy Reid should have been moved in to the centre to add creativity, with Finnan coming on out wide. What did he do? Brings Harte on for Kilbane (who shouldn't have been on the pitch at that stage) and pushes the walking disaster that is John O'Shea in to midfield. To cap it all off, one word - Gary Doherty. It should have been Duff playing off of Robbie, as Dufff was getting nowhere out wide. Terrible, terrible stuff, and not at all impressive from Kerr. These are basic tactics that an ordinary fan like me can see. The bottom line is, Kerr is not doing enough to win the games. Which is very worrying. My major worry is that the Swiss will come to defend en-masse in October, and if so we can forget about it because Kerr just doesn't have the tactics to out-wit them.
Rumours of O'Neill will be no bad thing IMO. It may wake Kerr up and make him realise that his conservatism is two games away from costing him his dream job. He should of course be given until the end of this campaign, but failure to qualify unfortunately means the bullet as far as I'm concerned. It's a pity because he is a lovable manager, but that and the fact that he is Irish isn't enough in my book.
newstalk are after repeating the rumour. Their source is an alleged source in the tabloids. I cant belive either the tabloids are making up more lies or the FAI is scheming again. Kerr has been really hard done by.
Not slagging Kerr. Even if we don't qualify, I think we should keep him. He seems to be learning from his mistakes. However he certainly hasn't done better than McCarthy in his first campaign. To do that, we need to qualify. McCarthy got us to the play-offs with a weaker squad than this oneQuote:
Originally Posted by TerryPhelan
You can cross Robbie off that list of players who can compete at the highest level. He's done proverbial all for going on four years now.
Other than score a boat load of goals for us consistently he's been doing nothing, agreed.
If the FAI are sending out feelers that Kerr will be dumped and Martin O'Neill is to be offered the job then Kerr should resign now. And so should the board of the FAI.
The sad thing is we would have had a great chance of qualifying, if we had just held on to one of those leads against Israel. :( If we had taken 6 points from them, as we should have done, we would have been in a position to buy a mistake, like losing to France.Quote:
Originally Posted by 4tothefloor
He only has one tactic, that is to defend, defend, defend at all costs, but never take a game by the scruff of the neck, and play to your strengths, but hype the opposition up, and show them respect. Sometimes, his tactics work, but not nearly enough.Quote:
His tactics against France at home were woeful.
Kilbane plays for Everton. And why does he play for Everton? Because he is awful.Quote:
He should have taken Kilbane off before half time, he was awful and made no impact.
That would mean changing the side. BK doesn't like doing that, however necessary.Quote:
Steven Reid was the man to bring on though, but he didn't have the balls to do it. Reid in the centre, with a licence to push on, would have pushed the French back.
He lost the plot when we went behind. The "plan" was, boot it up to, sorry towards, Doherty. :rolleyes: Where did he think that tactic was going to get us? Don't you think that firing Hail Mary's into the box, is meat-and-drink to the likes of Thuram, Vieira, and co? These blokes have been World/European Champions before. A few aimless long balls ain't going to bother them. They've seen it all before. You need to come up with something more useful to score against them than that.Quote:
Even when we went 1-0 down, What did he do? Brings Harte on for Kilbane and pushes the walking disaster that is John O'Shea in to midfield. To cap it all off, one word - Gary Doherty.
Kerr must go, be it now, or in the autumn. I saw the French result coming after his fk-ups against Israel. His attitude is wrong, his selections are wrong, his tactics are rigid, with no Plan B in face of adversity. The FAI have backed him logistically and financially, the fans have given him the chances, and he has had decent players, and Roy Keane at his disposal. But he has failed to guide us to the European Championships, or the World Cup in 3 years, when we had qualification in our own hands both times, and he has failed to beat a side of any note, in a competitive game. With all that armoury, failure to qualify for tournaments is ultimately his fault. Awarding him a new contract, would only see us slide further down the slope, and would eventually lead to him getting the sack. He should go now, while he's still on the good side of the Irish public. He tried, but failed. There's no shame in that. But if we want to continue to compete with the best in the world, he must go now for the good of the country, before the team's results get any worse. :(Quote:
Rumours of O'Neill will be no bad thing IMO. It may wake Kerr up and make him realise that his conservatism is two games away from costing him his dream job. He should of course be given until the end of this campaign, but failure to qualify unfortunately means the bullet as far as I'm concerned. It's a pity because he is a lovable manager, but that and the fact that he is Irish isn't enough in my book.
The reason he most likely never be a regular in a decent/any premiership team is that he not consistent.Quote:
Originally Posted by Slash/ED