Lack of Objectivity re Sean Connor
The stark absence of objectivity (with some notable exceptions) on this forum in relation to Sean Connor continues to astound me
While I can understand that Sligo and Bohemians fans have reasons to be blinkered (he took a lot of good players with him from Sligo, and of course he took a lot of good money with him from Bohs), I wonder about the lack of perspective from others.
So what did Sean Connor say, and what was his purpose?
Its pretty clear that the fundamental objective of his article is to galvanise support from the local supporters at a time when Dundalk are 2nd from bottom, face a crises of injuries and suspensions, and have four crucial games imminent. Whether this “siege mentality” call has the desired effect remains to be seen – I suspect that it may be of help in deflecting the growing dissatisfaction among some Dundalk supporters with the current league position.
So, apart from this rallying call for all the clubs supporters to get behind their team, what did he say that was so objectionable to so many foot.ie posters?
Referee's decisions in the Bohs game
The reality is that referee was abysmal. His failure to award even a free kick in either of the Paul Keegan fouls was beyond belief. Sean Connor reaches the conclusion it is part of a bias (Buttimer also gave a wrong decision against Simon Kelly for a penalty against Bray), while others might suggest that it is a grossly incompetent referee who is consistent in his ineptitude
Hostile atmosphere for visiting teams / Nastier approach in games
There is nothing wrong with the aspiration of creating an intimidating or daunting environment for opposition teams on the pitch, once the game is played fairly.
His “nastier approach” is simply advocating more resilience, toughness or physicality.
Naturally some here have chosen to interpret these aspects in a more sinister way - Sean Connor could have (should have) chosen better language. But then I doubt if he is particularly concerned about others intentionally misinterpreting them.
The test is if his comments have the desired impact on the pitch against Galway on Friday (and in Drogheda, Pats & Sligo games to follow).
The next few weeks should certainly be interesting!