Wednesday, 22 June 2011

Great Expectations Under Allardyce

This is the fifth time I have contemplated a post relegation season since I can consciously remember supporting West Ham (1965). There’s a pattern. If we discount the first time (1978) when the difference in quality and earnings between the two flights was not quite the chasm it came to be. It goes something like this.

We fans are devastated, of course, but then as the prospect of winning more games than we lose looms with the publication of the fixture lists, a certain optimism begins to creep back. It is usually not clear which players we will retain and which we will lose. We keep some we did not expect to and lose some that we did.

The first clutch of games bring slightly disappointing results; we are still perhaps winning more often that we are losing but it is suddenly not as straightforward; our rivals simply refuse to roll over and die; worse they fight like dogs- suddenly we are an ersatz Manchester United but ultimately we lack the resilience and killer instinct of the real thing. On only one occasion have we bounced straight back. (1993).

For the rest there’s been ructions on and off the park, a sacking, a new manager and a few judicious signings coupled with the emergence of the odd home grown talent and up we go to repeat the whole sorry process of under achievement again.

One of our problems in the Premier League/ top flight is that in common with most clubs our owners and managers have never been very good at creating stability or a cogent long term plan and then sticking to it- at least as far as I can discern. The big plan- if there ever was one under Terry Brown and the Cearns before that - has been confused or mealy- mouthed.

The club has never been good at understanding its true status- in denial when times are thin and lacking the balls and wit to capitalise when we had a shot (1986 and perhaps 1998/9 ?) Thus we settle for looking backwards and snuggle under the comfort blanket called the ‘West Ham Way’.

Not that discerning one’s true status is easy. One of the unrelenting pressures in football is the chronic short termism; as the saying goes you are never more than a fortnight way from a crisis on the pitch. In any given sequence of say five results, the press and we as fan,s demand to extract meaning from a series of statistics that, as much as anything else can be down to dumb luck.

In the course of 38 games dumb luck can be factor too but less of one when it comes to the final reckoning. In half a season we ought to be able to tell the difference between a team that’s playing well but unlucky and one that’s poor but occasionally lucky. This was Gollivan’s biggest blunder last season. They believed they were dealing with the former and three good results shortly after Avram’s reprieve seemed to show them in a clever light.

Extracting meaning from a given string of performances in the Championship is even harder than in the Premier League; it is a more balanced competition and a longer one; it is not uncommon for a team heading for relegation at the end of December to battle its way to the play–offs come May; and vice a versa. While the best teams always prevail in the Premier League; the most able to cope with the rigours of that league do not always get promoted from the Championship.

Past experience suggests this season is likely to be a grind. My advice is ; do not be quite as quick to jump on bandwagons of joy or despair. As it happens my expectations are greater than at any time in our second tier history. We have appointed a manager with the best win to lose ratio of any we have employed previously, has experience of every level of professional football in this country, a personal profile that’s a match for any big time player and has no time for slackers. It could be the start of something beautiful!

(Submitted by Kev in Manchester)

10 comments:

the headmaster said...

Kev in Manchester, son, that was a top post. Thanks to HF for posting it too.
Those in the 'we'll win the league' at a canter camp have very short memories indeed, or just blind devotion.
The facts are as you state them.
Playoff place, for me (although I may change my mind depending upon comings and goings in the next month!).

Anonymous said...

Just as I was going to comment "Fcukin hell HF,what a good post for a change",I then realised it was from Kev,maybe you should just pay the web hosting HF & let other more sensible & less cynical people write the articles.Well done Kev,it was like a breath of fresh air.

Anonymous said...

Excellent post - 100% sensible.
As for this club having a plan, we never had one, except in the real old days [1960s/early 70s]. We always have had owners who lacked any vision, beyond that of exploiting the working class talents of postwar kids like Bobby M, Geoff, et al. Since then - and it's along long time ago, we have had worse owners. Now we have the Porno boys and they do have a plan of sorts, to make money out of the club in the new Olympic stadium. Some say they will then sell out to some rich foreigner - who knows ? As for Sam Allardyce, he's the right man for the job - no frills, blunt talking - especially about the 'West ham way' and he don't even care about appearing on TV with a big sore on his lip !! No 'image', just reality..!

gateman

Sav said...

Sam categorically stated in the Evening Standard, and I believe him, that "My team will never throw away a two-goal lead". That is exactly how we got relegated last year (didn't pick up a single point after thowing away a 2-0 lead with MU at Upton Park!) and it is why I keep saying that just about any other manager, including of course Allardyce, would have been able to organise and inspire the team and taken us out of trouble. That is why I still can't get over the stupidity of the owners for sticking with probably the manager with the worst possible record in the Premiership. I mean, who else can claim that he has managed to get two different Premiership teams relegated in consecutive years and in the last position!

Anonymous said...

Sam Allardyce faces accusations that he won't stick to the 'West Ham Way', West Ham Way is actually located on a new development of modest family homes, just off the A987, and not yet open to traffic, so Big Sam would probably be better off going down Green Street.

See picture http://bit.ly/jLzp6Y

Hammersfan said...

Pay web hosting? I don't pay! I keep turning down advertising revenue streams!

If you wish to contribute an article 0728, I would be happy to carry it providing it is lucid, literate and pertinent. Simply email it via the address in the right hand panel and leave it as a "comment" and I will then put it up as an article. I can't say fairer than that can I?

Anonymous said...

kevin in manchester writes..

thanks for the kind comments. i would point out that HF enlivens us with two or three posts a day; quite a different matter from lobbing a story in every two weeks; sometimes we need damn fool provocation and humour and sometimes we need analysis and argument all of which we get here both from the articles and the often vigorous postings - long may it continue

the headmaster said...

HF / Kev - both of you are under valuing yourselves.
HF - articles on this site reach a high standard, mate. I would suggest that 'lucid, literate and pertinent' does not quite hit the mark.
And Kev, that article was class - tho I take your point re HFs proliferation!
Love-in over.

Anonymous said...

is it me or is the dog in the background having a dump? or do i have too much time on my hands?

Hammersfan said...

That's the point oof the picture. Don't just look at what is going on in the foreground.