We're on the same side re: Kenny. I've never thought he was good enough and have wanted him removed since Luxembourg. Your inability to understand that, even after my last post, makes any suggestion of you being intellectually superior to a stale scone, let alone a sentient human being, beyond laughable.
I don't think I can make it any simpler than this for you (though, thankfully, dynamo kerry got the gist of what I posted).
I agree with you that Stephen Kenny is a poor manager at this level. I have held this view for a very long time. A more recent view I hold, based on your last few posts, is that's you're dangerously invested in this if the scale of your tantrum is anything to go by. You're ranting incoherantly and seemingly struggling to understand such difficult sentences in my last post as "I... have been Kenny Out for a long time".
Again, I don't know what else is lacking in your life that a bad international football result can unhinge you so much but, hopefully, Kenny will be gone soon and then you can start getting the help you need.
The ball is round and has many surprises.
Frank Lampard is available at the moment. We’ll need to act fast.
Houghton 6/1
Duff 7/1
Andrews 9/1
Lennon 10/1
Roy Keane 10/1
Michael O'Neill 15/1
Allardyce 17/1
Jim Crawford 23/1
Phil Neville 26/1
Jose Mourinho 26/1
Southgate 26/1
Given 26/1
Houghton 6/1
Never managed, never will.
Duff 7/1
Come back to me in five years. Like Chairman Mao, asked if the French student protests in ’68 had achieved their goal, it’s too soon to know.
Andrews 9/1
Unproven, likeable sort – but in the Houghton category?
Lennon 10/1
Well, a downward trajectory since first stint at Celtic so an international gig might interest. Not the worst, I suppose.
Roy Keane 10/1
And who said bookies don’t have a sense of humour?
Michael O'Neill 15/1
The only reason to appoint him would be to see the reaction among the OWC fundamentalists.
Allardyce 17/1
Comment is superfluous
Jim Crawford 23/1
Nope, the U21s have gone backward since Kenny left.
Phil Neville 26/1
So bad his mate had to sack him…
Jose Mourinho 26/1
An unspeakably loathsome human being. Next role as likely to be a Dementor in Azkaban as a manager.
Southgate 26/1
If we can’t even poach an uncapped Englishman (hello, Tom Cannon) what chance have we with an Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire? Maybe Louis Copeland could do a deal on snazzy tricolour waistcoats?
Given 26/1
Hardly Don or Shay? Must be up, at this stage…
Hello, hello? What's going on? What's all this shouting, we'll have no trouble here!
- E Tattsyrup.
Maybe. Razor tends to pop up all the time on these lists, and CH is working with Ghana. I like Hughton, but I think he's another old hand on the downward spiral and possibly a little bit conservtive.
Hello, hello? What's going on? What's all this shouting, we'll have no trouble here!
- E Tattsyrup.
Get Brendan Rodgers before he goes back to glasgow.
Actually it was Zhou Enlai:
https://professorbuzzkill.com/qnq-26-zhou-enlai/
Would likely do a good repair job after SK, but not really up to taking the team to the next level or two?
Aside from the fact you would have ZERO chance of attracting Michael, I would remind you that "the OWC fundamentalists" [sic] had no problem with Martin O'Neill managing your team, or Bryan Hamilton assisting the FAI previously, with both still very popular in NI.
Hell, we even gave you George Hamilton, without anyone giving a stuff!
I was optimistic about Kenny at the start: he had achieved a lot with limited LoI teams and seemed to have the man management skills to make players believe they were collectively better than the sum of their parts: he had enough good results against better teams to look like it was systematic and calculated.
I alway felt angry over Trappatoni’s dismissiveness of our players. When a coach of his stature says his players are rubbish, people believe him, and when his fanaticism for the system prevented them from playing the football they could, he made his condescension come true: if you tell players often enough that they’re inferior, they become inferior. Arguably, his style of play makes the qualification he achieved feel like an underachievement.
Reasons for optimism (1): Kenny doesn’t disparage his players individually or collectively, and he doesn’t instinctively dismiss flair players.
Martin O’Neill felt like a good change – some new thinking, more positive play, not a delivery on hope, but enough to keep you hoping. Behind the scenes issues, a lack of coaching, the tender compassion of Roy Keane, and a gradual decline towards the Trappatoni dross overshadowed the initial good work.
Reasons for optimism (2): Kenny assembled a coaching team that was less combative and old school, and more in tune with the current player.
Mick McCarthy, revered though he is in this house, never felt like the second coming: he’d been exposed as tactically outdated and inflexible in recent years (and subsequently) and though many were glad to see him in the role, they weren’t sorry to see him go. Some of the animosity towards Kenny has to be blamed on John Delaney: Captain Fantastic got shafted by an undeserving usurper has been a common narrative.
Reasons for optimism (3): a younger coach with Europa League group stage experience, Kenny was fresher and exposed to modern, continental styles of play.
None of Kenny’s predecessors seemed enthusiastic about capping young players and retained players who should have been phased out sooner. Young players in Premier clubs’ U23s were overlooked in favour of late bloomers down the divisions. If you’re not playing Championship-level football till your late twenties, you’re unlikely to be more than an international stopgap.
Reasons for optimism (4): Kenny had the skinny on the U21s and would oversee the transition to the senior team.
So what’s been good in all this time?
- A manage refusing to believe that highly-paid professionals can’t pass a ball, hold their shape and play a attractive brand of football – and by and large sticking to this.
- No more insulting players and Irish football by talking everyone down.
- A lot of young players in the squad – some look to be very good prospects and if not a golden generation, maybe a gold-plated one.
On the flip side:
- Blind loyalty: James McClean will win 100 caps for Ireland on Monday. That’s symptomatic of where we are. Ten of those caps would have been better invested in developing a viable alternative. Hourihane, 36 caps: a player of proven ability, but we've known for the last 25 it’s not international ability.
- Formation: are we any closer to knowing what suits us best? 532, 352, an amorphous blob? And what formation prevents teams scoring regularly from 30 yards?
- In-game decision-making: I’m not blaming Kenny solely for this. He has his coaches, and either they’re not right for the job, or he’s slow to react, but issues take too long to fix – subs are too late, tactical tweaks are too late.
To top it all off:
- Results. After a while, and allowances for the mess Delaney left, you have to win: you have to beat teams worse than you, slug it out with ones near you, and give a good account against the best. Is anyone confident we can do one of those things? I’m not confident of a win on Monday. I think we’ll just outscore Gibraltar, but will it be a win?
So, for me, it’s case of time up. Much was promised, even more was hoped for, but the few small positives are outweighed by the accumulated despair and drift.
Hello, hello? What's going on? What's all this shouting, we'll have no trouble here!
- E Tattsyrup.
We have been good under Kenny but it coincided with Barry and Eustace having time to put their stamp on the team. Based on last night’s evidence, John O’Shea isn’t a Barry or a Eustace. Talk all week from Kenny about “a big performance” – preparation and team selection suggested as such, and then nothing. Better to make the change now and build again as this qualification campaign is effectively over.
Not liking that list of replacement names posted earlier – would prefer somebody younger with fresh ideas, thinking McKenna at Ipswich but he’s probably out of reach.
But we are not on the same side. Just because you state something does not make it true.
It has been obvious to me from very early into his reign that Kenny lacked the talent, ability and experience to lead the team anywhere but into the abyss. On the flip side you have given a number of fairly complementary assessments of him on here long past the Luxembourg game. I remember one in particular after the Belgium friendly. Don't be so disingenuous to admit that you have been on my side all along now that the ship has been confirmed to be dead in the water and is sinking below the waves.
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