Peculiar habits of our manager
Peculiar habits of our manager
Not only is Nuno
our coach, an observer of mottos, especially ours (see the previous article),
but he now has a peculiarity of changing dressing room floors. Well, ok, not a
peculiarity as such, but none of our last couple of managers were into it. Yes,
Nuno has added a pitch layout to the dressing room floor in order to assist
with tactical instructions. That is putting a tactical configuration of the
pitch on the floor of the changing room at the stadium. He had the same design
during his time at Wolves. So we now know what tickles his fancy. Alex Ferguson
preferred to throw hairdryers around to catch their attention, while Nuno
prefers doing hopscotch on the football mat and hopefully, the players will play
follow my leader.
Thoughts
Is it a good
idea? Well, it all depends if it catches the players attention or pisses them
off.
Half-time in
football matches are usually used by managers to discuss various tactical
formations depending upon the opponents' strengths and weaknesses in the interval.
It is also a time for bollocking and, if necessary, to substitute the said
players who played in the first half (but were shite) with players he thinks
can better impact the game.
If it helps
him get his point across and we end up winning, then all well and good, but if
it doesn't affect the players, he needs to try a different tactic.
On another matter, that being on Kane
and what our Ex-player, Paul Stewart, thinks if he goes.
Our former
Tottenham player Paul Stewart has claimed that if Harry Kane leaves the club
and we fail to replace him, it could result in us being relegated. To be honest,
that is the bleeding bloody obvious.
Kane leaving
could be a massive blow for us, and Stewart has made a big claim about where
that would leave the club. He told FootballFanCast: "I'm just a bit concerned
about what Spurs are going to do moving forward. If they sell Kane and don't
get any money for the transfer budget, I'd be concerned that they may be
battling relegation next season and not fighting for the top four."
Nothing new
there, but worth reporting. I am sure the readers will have their own idea of what
will happen if Kane leaves and isn't replaced by anybody competent. Not that Kane
being in our team gave us glories and an abundance of trophies. However, Kane
is good at getting to the finals (including with England) and then dramatically
falling flat on his face. But of course, Kane is blameless, as it is always the
others.
Be safe, Glenn
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