Saturday, 8 August 2015

Championship Season Preview

With the new season upon us and squads gradually taking shape ahead of the transfer deadline at the end of the month, C offers a view on the final Championship table...

Champions: Middlesbrough

I don't know, eh! All these other Championship clubs crying foul at QPR's spending ought to sit up and take notice of Middlesbrough's financial clout - over £5m splashed out on Stewart Downing, £2.5m on a striker from Espanyol, the vast majority of last year's playoff finalists still in the squad and even an EIGHT figure bid for Jordan Rhodes!! I genuinely thought Boro were going to win the playoff final this year and definitely think that Aitor Karanka will ensure they don't "do a Derby". Many of the bookies' favourites, and easy to see why.

Runners Up: Hull City

Another club flexing their financial muscles, this time using parachute payments following their relegation. Moses Odubajo is an excellent signing and I can't help but think that they got a better deal in going for him than Norwich managed for Robbie Brady. Andre Gray is also linked and it does look likely that Hull's business for the Summer isn't finished just yet. Defence is just a bit too suspect for me to have them down as champions - losing James Chester was a big blow. They'll be back up in the Premier League come May I am sure.

Playoffs: Derby County

I still don't see these guys as the finished article. Paul Clement is an appointment I am definitely jealous of, but it feels like the same calibre of players as last year and the year before that have finished up as bridesmaids (or capitulated in the case of last season). They are what Cardiff were for many years - stuck in a rut. Maybe the playoff lottery will deliver for them this year. At least they feel like a cert for the playoffs this time around. Predict that they will lose fewer than five home games at the iPro, but it's the Tuesday night away game problem again that will trip them up. Carlo Ancelotti won't be able to advise you on those, Paul.

Playoffs: Wolves

This is a solid outfit that is hard to beat. They will miss Bakary Sako but Dicko and Afobe will be banging the goals in and there were no further losses to the squad which took the Championship firmly in its stride after winning the League One title the year before. They look capable of taking the next step but are not good enough for automatic promotion.

Playoffs: Burnley

Burnley have lost some but recruited adequate replacements in Matt Lowton and Jelle Vossen. Crucially, they have kept Sean Dyche on to manage them and he found an excellent formula to Championship success which made a little go a very long way last time around. I predict the same again, albeit with some better teams to compete with this time. 

Playoffs: QPR

I can't help but think there is a great deal of unknown about QPR this year under Chris Ramsey, with some solid Championship signings made and it not being clear yet if there will be any high profile departures before the transfer window is out. Let's hope this time we've not decided on one formation to use for the season, bought players to play that formation and then abandon it after two matches of the season. That's what happened to the 3-5-2 wing back formation Hoddle and Redknapp recruited for last Summer!!!

Tjaronne Chery is highly rated in his home land as a free kick specialist and creative midfielder but how will he cope on a Tuesday night away to Blackburn?

Jamie Mackie and James Perch have brought much needed professionalism and determination to the QPR squad and I am certain our defence against Charlton is still not the fully assembled defensive lineup for the new season.

I do think QPR can make the playoffs - just because I think there are as many as 18 squads worse than ours in the division!

Relegation: Rotherham United

This isn't only because I hate Steve Evans, by the way! I toyed with the same three going down that came up but I am convinced that MK Dons will be hard enough to beat to stay in the league. Evans has signed a couple of Sheffield Wednesday cast offs and Emmanuel Ledesma, who in spite of a number of spells at Championship clubs and his obvious talent, hasn't managed to deliver the goods on a sustained basis in his career thus far.

I sure am glad they stayed up last year though - The New York Stadium is required!

Relegation: Bristol City

These guys stormed to the League One title last year however there were a number of players let go and the Championship really does require strength in numbers. As it stands going in to the opening day they have just eighteen senior players on their books, including highly rated Ryan Fredericks, signed in the week from Tottenham. That size of squad will not cope with the Saturday-Tuesday-Saturday-Tuesday demands of the Championship, as Blackpool found last year. I have real concern for Cotterill's paper-thin side.

Relegation: Preston North End

Simon Grayson has a solid League One outfit that appears to have accidentally pitched up in the Championship after buying a winning lottery ticket in the playoffs. Jermaine Beckford will score goals but the supply line to him doesn't look of the standard of the new division they are in. Will Keane has made a career out of having Manchester United on his CV so far, and failed to impress in spells at QPR and Sheffield Wednesday. I hope I am proved wrong as Preston and Bristol City do feel like Championship clubs, but I can see them both returning to League One after one season in the sun.

Predicted table:

1 Boro
2 Hull
3 Derby
4 Wolves
5 Burnley
6 QPR
7 Ipswich
8 Brentford
9 Blackburn
10 Foolham
11 Forest
12 Birmingham
13 Cardiff
14 Leeds
15 Sheff Wed
16 Bolton
17 Charlton
18 Brighton
19 Reading
20 Huddesfield
21 MK Dons
22 Rotherham
23 Bristol City
24 Preston

So there you have it! Straight to the Bookies now I presume!

Tuesday, 12 May 2015

Progress

For years everyone has laughed at Arsenal for celebrating fourth place in the PL. Now the shoe is on the other foot. After years celebrating titles, it felt strange to be celebrating Liverpool failing to win at Chelsea and all but guaranteeing United fourth place this season. How the mighty have fallen...

Following on from C's fantastic appraisal of QPR's season, J is following suit with an assessment of United's season and where we can go from what seems like a fourth place finish (barring 2 losses and a 14 goal swing).

Review: 

It's been a strange season where United started poorly - losing at home to Swansea, drawing at Sunderland, drawing and failing to score at Burnley etc. but United have unquestionably progressed since last year. We've competed for the top four all year and looked far more entertaining (for the most part) as well as more confident and resolute.

The results picked up at the back end of the year, draws at home to Chelsea and wins at Arsenal & Southampton showed results were heading the right way even if performances were still stuttering.

For all the world it looked like everything had clicked with the run of six wins on the trot including Tottenham and the mauling of Citeh at home. Fellaini looked like a beast and it seemed like LVG had had his 'Juventus' moment that he'd been going on about all year...Only for the recent run of 3 defeats on the trot without scoring and the return of boring, predictable football again. Saturday saw United scrape through against Palace and it was fitting that it was two men who LVG has revitalised that won it for the Reds - Ashley Young and Fellaini. This and a special mention for our player of the year David De Gea, who made some unbelievable saves yet again to secure the points.

So now we have to avoid defeat in just one of our last 2 games - Arsenal at home and Hull away - to finish in fourth position and enter the qualification rounds of the Champions League.

So what should be the plan for next year?

The plan:

This year the plan was arguably to finish in the top four. Next season? Surely it has to be to challenge for the title - challenge being the operative word!

First of all, and most important of all - keep David De Gea. This is a big ask - Madrid is his home and when Real Madrid come calling you pretty rarely see someone saying no. United need to do whatever they possibly can to keep him here and get him signed up on another contract. Do whatever it takes to show his girlfriend that Manchester is much lovelier than the back of a fridge - get her on a tour of the Northern Quarter with Juan & Ander, just do whatever it takes to sign the man up! He's showed time and time again this season how he is one of the very best keepers in the world and has saved this team at least 12 points this season if not more.

Secondly - sort out the Angel Di Maria situation. Di Maria clearly hasn't settled in England and isn't enjoying life here whatsoever. He started the season looking like the quality footballer we all know he is and he can't have lost that ability and the form he showed for Real the year before. Di Maria is the type of next level player the team needs but at the moment it looks like United are putting a square peg in a round hole whenever he plays. He clearly isn't comfortable on the wing where he's playing. The system that LVG is now employing is clearly the one he likes and it looks to be staying - so is Di Maria redundant? The board and LVG need to work that out quickly. Either get him playing in this system and confidently, or call it quits.

A lot has already been said by more esteemed observers than me about who United should sign, but in my humble opinion we need four players at least. Even that depends upon whether they sign Falcao permanently and whether RVP is staying or if they wipe the slate clean and go for a breath of fresh air up front (Which personally appeals to me on both counts).

So if I were in charge I would sign a right back, a central midfielder, a central defender and at least one striker.

A winger is already sorted and I am seriously excited to watch Memphis Depay at OT next season. He's torn the Eredivisie up this year, and while that isn't always a guarantee for success he looks like one of the best prospects in European football currently. Plus, to snatch him from under the Scouser's noses is always nice! He's also scored four free kicks in his last four games - we haven't had a free kick specialist since Ronaldo and I'm sick of the amount of dire free kicks in good positions we have put up with this year.

So, the right back - all the talk is about Nathaniel Clyne and he would seem to be a very good signing. He knows the PL and has steadily improved over the years. Apparently United were in for him when he left Crystal Palace but he opted for the Saints and the move has obviously worked wonders. He's now surely got to be rated as England's best right back (Johnson, Walker? No thanks). He'd probably cost a pretty packet but he's only 24 and could be the future right back for 10 years for United and England. It's a shame that Rafael seems to be out of the picture completely but Clyne would definitely be a serious upgrade on Tony V particularly defensively where he is always suspect.

Centre back - who else but Mats Hummels? The Metro have got a story today stating that the Reds are in advanced talks with Dortmund to sign Hummels who would cost £37m. Every man and his dog has their opinion and everyone's an expert now. I've read a huge amount of talk that he's too slow for the PL etc etc blah blah blah. LVG had him at Bayern Munich and Klopp has built a team on the foundations of Hummels and Subotic at Dortmund. If those two coaches rate him then that tells me all I need to know. Sign him up, Ed. Get Jones or Rojo fit and consistently playing and we have a very decent centre back line up.

Central midfielder - Gundogan, Pogba, Khedira, Vidal, Wijnaldum? In an ideal world if this was Fifa 1998 and any bid for a player at the right price meant that they'd move to you I'd say Pogba. He has everything. We should swallow our pride and put the fact that we had him on our books to the back of our mind and just pay what it takes to get him. But I seriously can't see us getting him. Pogba will have his pick of teams to go to and in all likelihood he'll go to Barcelona (when their transfer ban is up) or Real won't he? In that case, I think we should go for Gundogan. He's got a great range of passing but can put a foot in as well. He's a great mix of qualities that we need and he's realistically "available".

Striker - I'm going to plan that we don't have RVP and Falcao. In which case, I think we probably need two strikers. I'd try and poach Danny Ings from the clutches of Spurs, Liverpool, Arsenal or whoever. He's available on a free (well a tribunal fee, but considering what he would be worth it's peanuts), he's young, he's English, he can score in the PL and he is direct and pacy. At OT he stretched the play very impressively and ran the channels better than anyone else I've seen this season. In short, he's exactly the kind of player I think we've missed by getting rid of Chicharito and Welbeck. The other striker? I think we should sign Jackson Martinez from Porto. At 28 he's got Champions League experience and has shown consistently that he is better than the Portuguese Liga. In three seasons at Porto he has scored 31, 29 and 28 (and counting) goals. Martinez scored 7 goals in the CL this year so the argument that he's good in the Portuguese Liga but that doesn't guarantee goals is somewhat nullified by that. It would be a slight gamble but I don't fancy Cavani and I'm not sure someone like Benzema is realistic.

In an ideal world if those gaps in the team are plugged I think we stand a very good chance of getting into the group stages of the Champions League plus getting into the knockout stages, challenging for the PL title and potentially winning a domestic cup as well. It might be pie in the sky but this year has seen us progress and we've ground out a lot of results playing badly. I have faith that next year once LVG has a full summer to build his own team, the sky's the limit! (hopefully this hasn't jinxed United for Sunday now!!!)

J





Sunday, 10 May 2015

A blank canvas

With the terminal illness of QPR's relegation now over, C is quick to assess the size of the task ahead for Tony Fernandes and Co. this Summer...

QPR = QUICK PREMIER RELEGATION. Well we should have known last Summer when we robbed Derby County of their Premier League place and the budget we had was spent in the wrong areas and on too few players. Kidding ourselves that Loic Remy would stay a Hoop didn't help either (though I reckon he privately wishes he did now - look forward to seeing him follow in Demba Ba's footsteps and heading for Turkey - Chelsea FC: ruining careers and world football with dirty Russian rubles since 2003). As it happens, I much prefer the Championship; give me cold away Tuesday nights at Rotherham over £60 tickets to Arsenal away and half and half scarves for Chelsea and "Q P Rangers" any day!!!

This is all a bit raw having had to put up with watching game after game of defeat, including today's mauling at City, which, by the way, was pathetic. But I've taken the "Child playing Football Manager for the first time" approach to my planning for life in the Championship.

For Sale (regrettedly)

Two names on everybody's lips in this category are Charlie Austin and Matty Phillips, and I think it's fair to say that their ambitions plus the need to rebuild a near entire team will lead to the inevitable sale of both of them given the prices they would fetch in today's market. 

Charlie Austin - Liverpool, £14m plus Rickie Lambert

The biggest loss this Summer will be the man without whose goals QPR would be even worse off than the last time they were a Premier League side. Seventeen goals in this team in a struggling season show just how good a marksman this guy is and there is no way that will have gone unnoticed by the rest of the league. He has proved at every level he has played at that he has that goalscoring knack, and the good news is that because he is English we should get a sizeable fee for him. My suggestion is that a team on the fringes of European football will be his destination and despite dealings with Tottenham having been frequent following invasion of their mafia at the top of the club in recent seasons, I can see Liverpool being a more favourable destination for him. 

Liverpool do, of course, have a potential small sweetener for the deal in Rickie Lambert, who is getting on a bit but a bit younger and more nimble than Bobby Zamora, and a decent penalty taker too. I think Rangers should bring him in to the deal to ensure that one of the starting eleven berths in the Championship is filled. Will he drop down a level though? Depends if Uncle Tony can sweet talk him over a game of FIFA.

Matty Phillips - West Brom, £4m

Matty Phillips will feel that up until Chris Ramsey's appointment he was being overlooked and unloved by the fans. He showed glimpses of what he could do but rarely could string together a coherent performance. Since the turn of the year he's been a revelation, the top assist provider in the Premier League. I think he will use the remaining two fixtures to put himself in the shop window and the club will not and should not stand in his way when an opportunity arises this Summer. 

Robert Green - Chelsea, £1m

He has saved many points for QPR and his kicking continues to be his main weakness, but I think Rob is at the stage in his career where he'd fancy a squad role at a top club, much like the Mark Schwarzer job at Chelsea, who have indicated they would be interested in a new number three (possibly even number two if Petr Cech continues to get restless behind Courtois). Meanwhile QPR will promote Alex McCarthy to being the main man between the sticks in his absence. I do rate 'Greeno' as a shot-stopper but I do think it's time for a younger man to take on the mantle.

In addition to these three, we know that Mauricio Isla and Eduardo Vargas will be heading back to their parent clubs and I see very little persuading them to return. I don't think it would be appropriate anyway. 

Niko Kranjcar will also bid farewell to QPR at the end of the season and now that Harry's gone I can't see him signing again. I suspect you'd get good odds on him following Harry Redknapp to the Cherries (once he joins Bournemouth as Director of Football, that is).

For Sale at whatever price (I'll drive them to their next club)

Junior Hoilett - Hannover 96, £1m

This guy has been such a let down since signing from Blackburn, where he was all the rage, had "pace to burn" and "wanted by top European clubs". The amount of times I've screamed at him to beat his man or to clear the first man with a cross is unparalleled with any other winger since I've been attending QPR games. He is genuinely toilet. Only someone outside this country wouldn't know that, hence why I suggest we tout him to the Bundesliga where I understand he is rated because of two successful loan spells out there a few years back. I'll happily do the negotiations for the club so that we scrape a seven figure sum for him.

Steven Caulker - Watford, £3m

In my mind, all three of QPR's big money signings last Summer were huge disappointments. With Mutch already moved on (and rightly so) I think that Fer and Caulker will also head out of the revolving door at Loftus Road. An £8m signing that looked exactly like what we should have been going for last Summer has not delivered to expectation in the slightest. So many of the 70 odd goals QPR have conceded this season have been partly or fully preventable, and more often than not reports would state "Caulker should have". An error-strewn year coupled with his own career aspirations appear to spell the end of the big man's QPR career.

Seeing as Matthew Connolly was only on loan at Watford for the season and every time he has been part of a promotion-winning defence he has been sold immediately back to the Championship, I think that Caulker will continue to appeal to the market, as a young England potential centre back that will come good trading off of a good season at Swansea and a couple of appearances at Spurs. In reality his spells at Cardiff and QPR in particular have revealed his many shortcomings. As such Watford appears an ideal destination for the centre half.

Leroy Fer - Feyenoord, £2m

Marketed last Summer to QPR fans as the marquee signing, the "box to box midfielder" that would wear the number ten shirt reserved for special players at QPR down the years, the Dutchman has been a major let down. Whilst he undoubtedly has an excellent shot on him, he has had a lazy season and just not tried hard enough nor looked interested enough whilst donning the hoops.

Having had a dabble in English football and flattered to deceive, I think Leroy will look to go back to the division in which he made his name, possibly even the club he was playing for back there.

Armand Traore - Caen, £350k

I'm unsure how Traore has stayed at QPR so long, especially after Crystal Palace's offer was reportedly accepted last Summer. I will never forget when Warnock had to give Traore a lecture on throw-ins at the Emirates after his repeated foul throws throughout his QPR career up to that point. He clearly has no defensive ability whatsoever and is best off in a left midfield role, which is where I hoped QPR would start playing him after it was revealed he would be staying. He has a good crossing ability that was largely untapped at QPR (apart from at the Etihad that famous day in 2012). But he is injury prone, not pacey enough and inconsistent. And absolutely NOT a defender in a million years.

He may actually be out of contract and I don't know it, but put it this away, it's time to say Au Revoir to Armand. I see a ferry trip to Caen who will take him upon glancing at his CV and seeing Arsenal on it.

Sandro - Gremio, £1.5m

Sandro has shown QPR fans in fits and spurts just why he was so highly regarded at Spurs, and in equal measure why they were keen to move him on; for the amount of the Medical Team's time he took up! If he could stay fit he'd definitely be on the keep list.

Unbelievably it looks like we spent £6m plus on this guy and didn't check when his work permit was due to expire. A sign that there are a bunch of clowns behind the scenes at Loftus Road as well as on the pitch.

I predict he won't want to stay and will take the relegation as an opportunity to return to his home land.

Adel Taarabt - Inter Milan, £3m

A player that has often been hailed the messiah at QPR has eaten one too many take aways for my liking and clearly doesn't have the right mindset to be a professional footballer. We will always remember the amazing moments of brilliance in the Championship and the excellent goals against Arsenal and Tottenham in the survival season, but it's clear he doesn't really want to be here and we shouldn't keep giving ourselves false hope that he is the answer. 

Suggest he will leave English football for a more laid-back low tempo game in Italy, settling for a bit part role at somewhere like Inter Milan.

Nedum Onuoha - Leicester City, £2m

Perhaps of the list above this was the hardest to rule on. The Chief has shown potential over his career at QPR and can be solid when in form. But this season he's had far too many off days and his performance versus Liverpool last weekend typified this. It's time to wave goodbye to him, but I think he'll remain a Premier League player.

Out of contract and not renewing

Rio Ferdinand - Match of the Day, Television pundit

Maybe it's because Anton didn't do anything for us but I sense that many QPR fans were underwhelmed when Rio pitched up at the club last Summer for a final pay day. It felt a bit like Shaggy bringing out another song to pay the bills, and much like Kranjcar it felt like Harry signing one of his old mates again.

Whilst enjoying god like status at Manchester United the man has benefited from a solid midfield in front of him throughout his career there and for England, so to be given a new setup where the line in front of him comprised Joey Barton and Karl Henry was always going to test whether Rio really had much in the way of defensive abilities beyond aerial prowess. He was dropped early on in the season following a series of jittery performances which confirmed the fans' suspicions. 

Clint Hill - Tranmere Rovers, Assistant Manager

What a fantastic servant this man has been and I almost want to keep him around the club to try and rekindle the spirit of the 2010/11 promotion winning team. As it happens, I can see Clint returning to Scouseland and starting his badges at a club dear to his heart, Tranmere Rovers. Thanks for the memories, Clint.

Shaun Wright-Phillips - New York City, Free Transfer

I can recall one good performance from Shaun - his debut versus Newcastle under Warnock in 2011! He scored the winner at Chelsea in 2013 which of course deserves a mention but even in that game his contribution was limited. Other than that he appears to have been playing under hyponosis for four seasons where he loses all footballing ability and effort. In exchange, we've continued to give him 70,000 magic beans per week which has kept him happy at the club. Finally the four years of this parasite are up this Summer. Sod off, Shaun.

I predict he'll follow his brother Brad to America and given his cult status among Manchester Citeh fans I think he's guaranteed a job and nice long contract over at their American flavour outfit.

Joey Barton - Leeds United, Free Transfer

I think QPR needs an identity transplant, and as much as some of his performances and efforts have been admirable this season, this man is not what we want to be the symbol of Rangers going forward, and this chapter in QPR's history should be closed once and for all. I've heard rumours of Leeds having a bit of cash this Summer - sounds like a match made in heaven to me!

To keep

Well, this will be brief...

Alex McCarthy

Seems like the logical number one jersey holder for next season. He's a decent Championship goalkeeper and I'd say with Rob Green unlikely to be around next season that he is ready made to step in. We've not seen much of him yet at QPR but at Reading he showed he is a capable young man that should now get the chance to establish himself as QPR's Custodian for the next few seasons.

Yun Suk-Young

He's had a wretched four months having come back from injury completely out of form, but the performances earlier in this campaign have persuaded me we can still get the best out of the young Korean. He's clearly got potential and deserves a season of starting again.

Richard Dunne

Probably not as a first choice, but I just feel that it is important to have the Irishman around the club as he can offer a lot to the rest of the squad as a vastly experienced professional. His presence in the team was sorely missed when he was our injured and the team does need strong characters who have been there and done it before, but who are ultimate professionals. I cannot see a motive for him to move on himself at this stage in his career - especially as QPR took a chance on him when nobody else was prepared to do so after a injury-ravaged career at Villa. 

Karl Henry

After a poor first season in the Championship for QPR, the Midfield Enforcer has actually had a relatively good season this time around when put into perspective. He does lack the ability to have a starring role and definitely is not a Premier League player, however I think he's got the right mindset and some Championship know-how that leads me to conclude he is worth hanging on to next season in that division. Not an essential, but I can think of more reasons to keep him than not, plus there are few suitors that would pay the fee I would take for him (£400k plus).

Alejandro Faurlin

Having kept faith in this man following a series of serious injuries, QPR will I'm sure keep hold of the Argentinean who was so consistent in the 2010/11 promotion winning season. A good pre-season and a few prayers for the man and I'm convinced he can roll back the years and feature prominently in the Championship.

Summer wish list

Assuming a budget of £17m for Summer transfers can be raised by these sales, here are four of my suggestions for inbounds to join Rickie L:

Matthew Lowton, Aston Villa, £1m

A player capable of the odd wondergoal and senior enough now to be a first choice Championship right back rather than settle for a squad rotation role at Villa, who I'm sure will look to move on from their Paul Lambert ethos of buying in youth from the Football League and look to experience to stop their annual flirtation with relegation. 

Tom Ince, Hull City, £3m

Rumoured to be a Rangers target last Summer, this man hasn't quite lived up to his billing in the Premier League but has consistently proved he is well equipped to deliver in the Championship. He should be available at a reasonable price and I'm convinced he is an able replacement for Phillips.

Bakary Sako, Wolves, Free

Out of contract this Summer, Sako has consistently appeared on the scoring charts wherever he has played and QPR were certainly making enquiries in January. J only knows too well the capabilities of the Wolves striker. I think he's a different kind of forward to that which QPR have had in recent years and would be a welcome addition. Whether he could be persuaded to come here over anywhere else is a different matter.

Demarai Gray, Birmingham, Free*

The very talented winger has been credited with many of the plaudits for turning Birmingham's season around under Gary Rowett and he has scored some excellent goals during that time.

It is my understanding that he is available this Summer but as he is a youth player compensation would be due to Blues. 

This would almost certainly go to tribunal - but for an exciting 18 year old winger? Well worth the hassle!

The Manager

Many QPR fans will tell you that they think we have played better football under Chris Ramsey. Well yes we've scored some more goals and not looked quite as toothless on the road, but when you look at all the other clubs that were in the relegation mire that changed their manager mid season, Ramsey has delivered the poorest results. No team has been worse than QPR in the Premier League in 2015, which speaks volumes. The Home performances in particular, a major feature in the pre Christmas revival of QPR, have completely dried up. The amount of chances created in the winnable games like West Ham have just not been comparable to that period, and the worrying lack of energy in the last ten minutes has paralysed us throughout the season and remained unrectified under Ramsey.

So who is the right man for the job? 

Paul Clement

Real Madrid's highly regarded coach was linked with the QPR job in January but I think there was no real truth in it. However the man is the son of a QPR legend and would certainly be the fans' choice. His brother Neil enjoyed his many visits to Loftus Road in his career with fans breaking out in to rousing applause. He is credited for being Ancelotti's tactical right hand man and I'm sure would fancy a job in the English game in a managerial hotseat somewhere. Given the success in English football that managers who in previous lives have been assistants at top Spanish clubs, can you blame me for wanting to see a bit of Iberian flair on the pitch at Loftus Road? 

Wednesday, 15 April 2015

A Tale of Two Derbies

This weekend C&J were in attendance at 2 derbies on Sunday. C was in attendance at Loftus Road for QPR v Chelsea, while J was at Old Trafford for the Manchester Derby between Manchester United and Manchester City...

J -

It's official. Manchester is Red again. Sunday was arguably Man Utd's best performance of the season. Here are J's thoughts on the game:

First point to make is that there is no Moyes-bashing here but it's funny to think that just a few months ago the papers were questioning whether LVG was not progressing the team and was just the same as David Moyes. A quick Google search showed me that on 17 January the Daily Mail asked this very question and concluded that progress had been minimal, particularly for the £150m outlay of the Glazers. What a difference 3 months makes...there is now a clear difference and hopefully the pointless comparisons will stop now. After 32 games last year, United were on 54 points and in 7th position. This year they are now 11 points better off after the same number of games and 4 places higher in the table. From a fan's perspective, there has not really been any comparison this year. The confidence has been restored and even when the team weren't performing particularly well, they still appeared like they could grind out results which they couldn't do last year. Now the performances have clicked the style of football is vastly different and the attacking verve that fans have come to expect of United is back. Importantly, the club have improved in front of the home crowd as well. Last year at home, United picked up a grand total of 30(!!) points at home over the course of the whole season. They had the 9th best home record in the Premier League. After 32 games this year they have 43 points and hold the best record in the league at home. The aura around Old Trafford and the belief in the team is returning, as is the enjoyment watching attacking and winning football.

Moving on to the game...it was striking how polar opposite this year's Old Trafford derby was to last year's. Last year United were meek and rolled over easily. They dominated possession in both games (they had 53% possession last year, compared to 59% this year) which just shows that having possession amounts to nothing if you aren't clinical and prolific with your possession. United's style has been criticised for being too direct this year but since the Tottenham game at Old Trafford it has been direct football with a purpose and has been fast paced with a real gameplan in mind, as opposed to sterile possession. United had 7 shots on target this game and scored with 4 goals. Simply put, they were clinical with their finishing and were dominant throughout the game. It looked like it could have been more more after Smalling got the 4th goal and Citeh just didn't turn up after they got their early goal.

The resurgence of Marouane Fellaini continues. I will hold my hands up and admit I thought he was way out of his depth at United after last season but he has well and truly won me and the majority of United fans over judging by his standing ovation on Sunday. He was absolutely dominant all game and ran Yaya Toure ragged. Fellaini won 9 aerial challenges on Sunday and this was again in stark contrast to his performance in this game last year where he won just 3 aerial challenges. He only had 49 touches in the game last year and was largely absent, exerting no influence at all. This year he had 61 touches including the 2nd goal for United, and he won the ball back in the move which led to Mata's goal. Defensively he had an influence as well and made 2 clearances and 2 interceptions, which again compares to last year where he had 1 interception and 0 clearances. Fellaini has shown character and ability this year in abundance and is due a lot of credit for his turnaround, as is LVG who has played him in his perfect role. It begs the question why Moyes didn't when he knew the player inside out?

Michael Carrick has been called under-rated so many times, it has to come to a point when this is no longer the case but his influence was clearly evident on Sunday. He exerted a calm presence over the midfield and marshalled Jones and Smalling in the centre of defence as well. It's no coincidence that the periods of bad performances came primarily when Carrick was absent. He has been excellent this year and his one year contract extension was an excellent decision by the United hierarchy.

C- 

It was a case of the age old hard luck story for QPR under Chris Ramsey. They fought admirably and tactically were set up perfectly for the match with the village idiots from SW6, but yet again a moment of madness cost the Superhoops so so dear. This was the most gut wrenching of all the recent frustrations, not just because it came at the hands of that lot, but because it genuinely showed we could compete with the best in the Premier League once again and make them very very uncomfortable.

Chris Ramsey was quick to leap to the defence of Rob Green after the match and insisted that the blame would not lie with him, but with the defence for their slow reactions to the situation. Whilst I agree that QPR did not use the thirty-odd seconds they had to scurry back and ensure they each had a Chelsea man very well at all, I can't absolve 'Greeno' of all blame. His kicking has always looked dodgy to me and I think he knows it is his weakness, hence his decision to throw out to his nearest defender so often. He panicked here for no apparent reason and that was inexcusable. Of course, painful as it is to say, the Chavs showed the kind of performance that was worth its weight in dirty Russian Roubles (by the way, how on earth can Jose Mourinho have the audacity to declare the fascist institution as being "Financial Fair Play compliant" and then accuse Manchester City of being the bad guys? I think if it's going to be applied, it should be applied retrospectively right back to the first time Red Rom said "I buy it!"). 

I still can't believe how ordinary we made Chelsea look, how we clearly rattled them and how they only managed one shot on target and 70% pass completion. "Still beat you though" - I can hear those smug b@stards now...

Oh, special mention for the "Captain, Leader, Fascist" John Terry, the treatment of whom by the home fans disgusted many Chelsea fans, I note. How anyone can defend the actions of that man and his family is beyond me - and don't even talk to me about the people that wrote "John Terry" and "class" in the same sentence, as some deluded Village Idiots did. They will argue 'til they're blue in the face that we are hypocrites for saying the same about Joey Barton - I don't see any QPR fan writing "Joey Barton" and "class*" in the same sentence - "class" implies role model status. Neither of the pantomime villains are anything like "class". The missile throwing was unacceptable but will the FA punish the Chelsea players for incitement? Of course not, the top teams are untouchable when it comes to that sort of thing...

*Joey Barton did, in fact, put in a Man of the Match performance - a tenacious, determined performance where he really hassled the Chelsea midfield, not allowing them any time on the ball, as well as providing a driving force as QPR sought an unlikely goal. Still not class, though. Just to clear that up.

Matty Phillips deserves a mention for his progress under Chris Ramsey. Listed for loan in the January Transfer Window and almost joining Derby County, Phillips has been a revelation since the change of management. His confidence has grown week by week and he looks more and more like the player I hoped we had signed when we spent £5m on him from Blackpool two Summers ago (wonder what the Oystons did with that money?). Second top assist maker in Europe behind Messi since the turn of the year?! You bet!

A two week break now (as we're a game ahead of the rest of the pack) this will be a horrible Saturday afternoon spent in front of Jeff Stelling and Co. praying teams around us slip up. It's crap when it's not in your hands! We must win our remaining home games and get a point somewhere on the road in our last three aways to at least have a chance. 

Whatever happens, I really don't think we'd have got this far and shown this much fight and determination under Harry Houdini. Chef Ramsey has done an excellent job since taking over. Unfortunately he can't seem to bring confidence to the fragile defence, the damage to them seems irreparable and this may yet prove to be the trigger for relegation. But he's at least instilled confidence and a new way of playing that means we're having a right good go!

Tuesday, 7 April 2015

Match Review - Wolves bite back to beat Leeds at the Death

J was in attendance at Molineux on a glorious Monday evening to witness a spectacular match that encapsulated this madcap Championship season.

Wolves 4 - 3 Leeds

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Wolves have been on a great run at the moment, but if this season has taught anyone in the Championship it is that there are no easy games (except Blackpool) and that one result can change so much (see Middlesbrough's fall from 1st to 4th with one result on Monday).

Wolves came into the match unbeaten in 5 and having won their last 3 games and sitting just outside the playoff places. In contrast, Leeds were languishing in mid-table, and had lost their last game to Blackburn. Leeds have been again mired in controversy off the pitch - Neil Redfearn said that he was considering his position after his assistant, Steve Thompson, was fired in the week; Redfearn had also been requested not to play striker, Mirco Antenucci in their game against Blackburn as it is reported that he will be automatically given a new contract with 2 more goals this season; and there have been more rumours about takeovers from Red Bull amongst others.

However, at this stage of the season the pressure of a promotion chase can either make or break teams (note: Derby for 'break'). This pressure appeared to get to Kevin McDonald. He allowed himself to be pressured into slamming his clearance straight into Richard Stearman right in front of his own goal in the 11th minute, gifting Charlie Taylor his first senior goal for Leeds with a relative tap-in.

The goal came completely against the run of play and Wolves seemed confident in their game and continued to play as they had before, dominating possession and constantly looking for their deadly trio up front - Dicko, Sako and Afobe.

This paid off in the 19th minute as Afobe got the ball from the adventurous Dominic Iorfa on the right hand side. Afobe took his man on and flashed a shot across goal which was going wide until Dicko stole in at the back post to finish from an extremely acute angle.

J has been to a couple of Wolves games this season now and a key feature in their game is the directness of the passing that looks to feed one of Sako, Dicko or Afobe. When there is pace to burn in all 3 it is a very effective tactic. Just before half time a similar through ball from Sako played in Dicko. He was one on one but still around 20 yards out but chose to hit it early hard and low at the goalkeeper's near post. It took him by surprise and it flashed in off the post. Silvestri will probably think that he should have saved it, but it meant that Wolves went into the break in high spirits.

This showed from the outset and they scored again 3 minutes into the second half. A cross caused mayhem in the Leeds box and it looked for all the world that Danny Batth would score when he struck a shot from about 12 yards out until it hit Dicko in the six yard box, luckily the ball rebounded to Benik Afobe who gobbled up the rebound for his 29th goal of the season.

Afobe now has 10 goals in 16 games for Wolves and has been worth the money spent on prising him from Arsenal. Wolves upturn in fortune has coincided with his capture and he now has more goals than Harry Kane in total this season. According to whoscored.com he has 2.4 shots on average per game for Wolves, proving he has a keen eye for goal with a goal in every other game for them so far this season on average.

At this point in the game it looked like Leeds were there for the taking, but Wolves seemed to be struck by nerves and sat back. They invited pressure from Leeds who duly obliged with Alex Mowatt seemingly at the heart of all their good moments. Mowatt was based in the middle but also on the right hand wing with licence to roam inside as and when he wanted to put the ball on his favoured left foot. One such foray inside the pitch brought Leeds a way back in as his cross was turned into his own net by Batth. Carl Ikeme in goal must not have given him a shout as he came out to collect the cross and it was a comical own goal that invigorated Leeds.

They pushed forwards in search for an equaliser and were getting increased control in the middle of the park. Kenny Jackett responded by throwing in Dave Edwards to go into midfield in place of Dicko. It was a bold choice and Jackett clearly wanted the numbers in midfield and added defensive protection that Dicko just wouldn't provide.

It didn't stop Leeds equalising when Mowatt again cut inside on his left foot taking on the defence before curling a glorious left footed strike into Ikeme's right hand post, sending the travelling Leeds fans wild.

The game was then anyone's and it seemed like Wolves were happy to settle for a point having weathered the storm. But then on 88 minutes up stepped Dave Edwards to gloriously flick a header into the far corner sending Molineux into raptures. Kevin McDonald atoned for his earlier error with the beautiful in-swinging cross which was begging to be headed in. This was McDonald's 11th assist of the season meaning he has the joint second highest number of assists in the division.

Wolves held on for the win and look like they are peaking at precisely the right moment for a tilt at the play-offs. But then again, we all know how quickly things can change...

Man of the Match - J will give this to Dicko for his brace with special mention to Afobe who was given MOTM by whoscored.com. Leeds couldn't deal with Nouha Dicko in the first half and his finish for both goals showed that he has a lot of quality. Wigan should be kicking themselves for offloading him given their travails this season!

J


Friday, 3 April 2015

A Good Friday ramble

THIS IS NOT A RANT, BUT...

Eat Sleep Drink Blog Football is back, and yes, two years on C is still moaning! But for good reasons I'm sure you'll agree. 


1. Raheem Sterling, he does what he wants

"I don't want to be perceived as a money-grabbing 20 year old". Well, Raheem, it's funny that - it's a bit like telling me not to think about a pink elephant with spots sat on a car bonnet! The warning signs were there when he chose to leave QPR (the club that spotted him) aged just fifteen and not having ever played a senior game for them to sign for Liverpool. 

The same player has now publicly come out and effectively declared himself bigger than his club, and indeed bigger than the national team, feeding us lines that his personal trainer life coach agent has pre-prepared for him about being "too tired", "suffering burnout" and "wanting to win more trophies". I translate this as someone who has had his head turned by the poison in football influencing him to be demanding too much too early in his career and basically planting the thought in his head that he is too good to appear for England Under 21s or indeed for Liverpool and could sit on the bench at somewhere like Chelsea doing far less and earning far more. You're only 20 for Christ's sake, mate! Oh and PS there's this other young player called Harry Kane who wants to play every game he possibly can for club and country and doesn't grumble about it!! Quite simply, a ridiculous interview and major own goal Raheem...

2. Steve Evans


I could just leave it at the name couldn't I? I've mentioned poison in football above, but how the big red Scottish criminal continues to make a living managing Rotherham United with his managerial style of "go ballistic at everyone and everything and blame them when we lose, but take all the credit when we win" I do not know. What kind of a role model is this man to young Millers fans or indeed fans of any other Championship club who have to put up with his demeanor for 180 minutes a season? This week he managed to successfully demolish the FA's "Respect" campaign once more, effing and blinding on the touchline. Then after the game he had the audacity to say "I'm not questioning the integrity of Dean Whitestone (referee), I'm just saying he was atrocious today. You can write that in capitals for the Football League... Certain people don't want us in the Championship". This bloke is deluded and scum.

3. AFC Bournemouth - a "success story"?

I do enjoy watching the style of football that Bournemouth play, however this feeling they have managed to infiltrate the press with that they are "underdogs" and "wouldn't it be amazing if they made it to the top flight" is ridiculous - they, just like fellow nouveau riche Wigan and Fulham before them, have been bankrolled up through the divisions - let's be honest, how many clubs of Bournemouth's stature are likely to attract people like Kenwyne Jones to sign on loan for them? They would fade in to nothingness without the millions of Max Demin and Eddie Mitchell. I bet Harry Redknapp can smell the bank notes and should think he is a shoo-in to pitch up at his "local" next season as Director of Football.

And if they are so good and such a tremendous genuine lower league success story then what is the point in the blatant diving of today's televised fixture against Ipswich (Callum Wilson and Yann Kermorgant with particularly embarrassing examples of Ashley Young impersonations)?

On the plus side, watching the Nationwide Division Three West London derby between Foolham and Brentwood unfold was very entertaining - it's just a shame that five teams can't be relegated from the Championship this season! 

Felix Magath pictured enjoying the demise of the Cottagers

Finally I suppose you want to know my prediction for QPR tomorrow - 2-1 to West Brom. Individual errors to cost dear as usual. Performance summary: "Edit copy, edit paste".

C

Wednesday, 1 April 2015

Guess Who's Back

After a brief 2 year hiatus, guess who's back?!

C & J are now back with the new and improved ESDB Football.

Colorado fans celebrate the first touchdown of the 2013 football season during the 85th Rocky Mountain Showdown. The Buffs defeated in-state rival CSU 41-27. (James Bradbury/CU Independent)
(credit - James Bradbury/CU Independent)

There won't be the same format as before necessarily and we're sure that you'll be excited to know that from now on...anything goes!

We'll be providing as regular updates as we can so please follow/like us on social media to stay in touch. Our relevant accounts are -

Please contain your excitement and we will be back with full articles very soon!

C&J