Hoop Blah Some of those clubs don't even play their 'strongest' side week-in week-out...
Because the managers rotate the squad to ensure that the players remain fit and fresh.
by rabidbee » 05 Jan 2009 15:10
Hoop Blah Some of those clubs don't even play their 'strongest' side week-in week-out...
by Hoop Blah » 05 Jan 2009 15:13
rabidbeeHoop Blah Some of those clubs don't even play their 'strongest' side week-in week-out...
Because the managers rotate the squad to ensure that the players remain fit and fresh.
by Stranded » 05 Jan 2009 15:18
VisionVictor MeldrewSilver Fox Which teams put out their best sides then Vic?
Liverpool
Everton
Hull
Newcastle
Arsenal
Aston Villa
Need any more?
Fulham
West Brom
Sunderland
Bolton
West Ham
Need any more?
Barnsley
Bristol City
Burnley
Blackpool
Cardiff
Need any more?
BTW those that didn't included :-
Chelsea
Pompey
Stoke
Man City
Reading
Enough clubs there for the poster to pick an alternative club I would have thought.
Liverpool WRONG (as previously mentioned)
Everton WRONG ( Feillani left out)
Hull WRONG (7 changes made )
Newcastle WRONG
Arsenal WRONG
Aston Villa WRONG
I've not the time to check the rest of your lists but given the first 6 you listed are all wrong then its not really worth the effort to check as you clearly didn't.
The only side ive seen that you could honestly say picked their strongest available line up was Cardiff. Lets be honest they struggled.
by rabidbee » 05 Jan 2009 15:19
Hoop Blah The theory that Player X is on £100k a week and so should be able to play twice a week every week doesn't really wash with me because there are limits on what the body can do, paying someone more money doesn't change those limits.
by Vision » 05 Jan 2009 15:21
Hoop BlahVision
Liverpool WRONG (as previously mentioned)
Everton WRONG ( Feillani left out)
Hull WRONG (7 changes made )
Newcastle WRONG
Arsenal WRONG
Aston Villa WRONG
I've not the time to check the rest of your lists but given the first 6 you listed are all wrong then its not really worth the effort to check as you clearly didn't.
The only side ive seen that you could honestly say picked their strongest available line up was Cardiff. Lets be honest they struggled.
Some of those clubs don't even play their 'strongest' side week-in week-out, so it's very difficult to say they didn't play their strongest side in the cup.
At the end of the day the majority of the side is one that is selected week-in week-out when it really matters and their all used to performing together in the first team. With that in mind it's still pretty much their first time and not a thrown together reserve team.
I said last week I'd be happy to see two or three changes to the side to give youngsters or the likes of Murty a game with the first team, but the way we've approached this game is, like a lot of Sven's England friendlies, just useless and miles away from being our strongest available team.
by Vision » 05 Jan 2009 15:27
Stranded Villa played the strongest XI that they had available - the changes made were inforced due to injuries suffered in the past few weeks. Agbonlahor was taken ill on the morning of the game but was originally in the team.
by eleventh earl of mar » 05 Jan 2009 15:29
rabidbeeeleventh earl of mar As mentioned somewhere on this site, the team of 78/79 played 3 games in 4 days with mostly the same players.
Reading drew the second game 0-0 against a team that finished near the bottom of the table (Bournemouth), and then won the third game against a team that was playing its second game in two days (Aldershot). Also, whilst Reading played three games in four days (13, 14 and 16 April), they had only played one previous game in the month, on the 7th. Portsmouth had played on the 3rd and 7th, also played 3 games in four days, with a win and a draw in the other two. Bournemouth had played on the 3rd, the 7th, and the 10th before playing us on the 14th. Aldershot had played on the 3rd, the 7th, the 9th and the 14th before playing us on the 16th. Between 30 March and 16th April, Reading played 5 games, whilst Pompey, Aldershot and Bournemouth played 6.
by Arch » 05 Jan 2009 15:30
Vision ...Shorey at left back...
by readingbedding » 05 Jan 2009 15:36
by Victor Meldrew » 05 Jan 2009 15:40
Thaumagurist*Victor Meldrew Just out of interest and replying to Mr Angry's suggestion that players nowadays go on till their late 30s I'm still waiting to hear about those many who are still playing.
Looking back at some Reading players from the 60s onwards these are the ages that some players finished league football at (disregarding the fact that some went on to play non-league into their 40s):-
Pat Terry 36
Johnny Walker 37 (Good to see him looking sprightly at the Saints away game chatting up birds at 80 years of age)
Martin Hicks 36
Jimmy Quinn 39
Stuart Beavon-still playing local amateur football?
Delusional?
BTW 20 games to go so our players if they play every game need to be at their peak for 30 hours over a period of 4 months.
Some will earn about £300,000 for that and ,unlike players of yesteryear,will not have to subsidise their income during the summer months by taking on part-time jobs.
It's a hard life for some.
Hmmm, did any of those players you list play physically demanding football? Footballers these days need more than one day to recover after getting through a game where they ran and ran and ran and ran.
by Thaumagurist* » 05 Jan 2009 15:46
Victor MeldrewThaumagurist*Victor Meldrew Just out of interest and replying to Mr Angry's suggestion that players nowadays go on till their late 30s I'm still waiting to hear about those many who are still playing.
Looking back at some Reading players from the 60s onwards these are the ages that some players finished league football at (disregarding the fact that some went on to play non-league into their 40s):-
Pat Terry 36
Johnny Walker 37 (Good to see him looking sprightly at the Saints away game chatting up birds at 80 years of age)
Martin Hicks 36
Jimmy Quinn 39
Stuart Beavon-still playing local amateur football?
Delusional?
BTW 20 games to go so our players if they play every game need to be at their peak for 30 hours over a period of 4 months.
Some will earn about £300,000 for that and ,unlike players of yesteryear,will not have to subsidise their income during the summer months by taking on part-time jobs.
It's a hard life for some.
Hmmm, did any of those players you list play physically demanding football? Footballers these days need more than one day to recover after getting through a game where they ran and ran and ran and ran.
You really cannot be serious.
by Hoop Blah » 05 Jan 2009 15:52
Vision And if they don't play their strongest team week in week out in the league are they not devaluing that competition? I fail to see why people make a big deal about devaluing the integrity of the FA cup when as you say it happens all too frequently in the Premier League anyway. Surely from a moral perspective its more important for league matches than cup games given the potential impact on other sides. (eg Liverpool's reserves swanning up to Fulham 2 seasons ago )
Vision The last 2 seasons in the FA cup we've taken both Spurs and Man Utd to replays so to use your phrase from earlier i think we have had a pretty decent stab at it to be honest.
One point i think is worth making thiss year rather than the last few was that in previous seasons the "cup team" actually was a team. The vast majority had played together for the reserves and in the cups so theres an argument that it was more of a team than if we'd just made 2 or 3 changes. This season with fringe players coming and going out on loan, lack of reserve fixtures and us appearing (to me at least) to have used more players in the first team than before, it just looks far more disjointed this season than previously.
by Victor Meldrew » 05 Jan 2009 15:56
Vision Good luck finding one in the top 2 divisions that picks its strongest possible line up for the 3rd round.
by brendywendy » 05 Jan 2009 16:08
by Sun Tzu » 05 Jan 2009 16:10
Victor Meldrew Reading didn't pick anywhere near their strongest side and reading through posts on here a lot of fans are not happy.
by Scarface » 05 Jan 2009 16:14
by Vision » 05 Jan 2009 16:18
by Mr Angry » 05 Jan 2009 16:18
by Vision » 05 Jan 2009 16:20
Hoop BlahVision And if they don't play their strongest team week in week out in the league are they not devaluing that competition? I fail to see why people make a big deal about devaluing the integrity of the FA cup when as you say it happens all too frequently in the Premier League anyway. Surely from a moral perspective its more important for league matches than cup games given the potential impact on other sides. (eg Liverpool's reserves swanning up to Fulham 2 seasons ago )
There is a big difference between teams making wholesale changes to their line ups and what you see in the league when teams rest one or two players here and there via a bit of squad rotation.
Some teams have been quite heavily criticised for their rotation (see the end of season games that have influenced relegation battles over the last few seasons or Sheff Utd resting players against Arsenal (??) in order to save them for a more winable league game the following week).Vision The last 2 seasons in the FA cup we've taken both Spurs and Man Utd to replays so to use your phrase from earlier i think we have had a pretty decent stab at it to be honest.
One point i think is worth making thiss year rather than the last few was that in previous seasons the "cup team" actually was a team. The vast majority had played together for the reserves and in the cups so theres an argument that it was more of a team than if we'd just made 2 or 3 changes. This season with fringe players coming and going out on loan, lack of reserve fixtures and us appearing (to me at least) to have used more players in the first team than before, it just looks far more disjointed this season than previously.
I see where your coming from, but disagree.
How many times has Murty played right back alongside Pearce & Bikey with Henry infont of him then?
When was the last time Long played upfront with Lita?
How many times have those 4 midfielders been together?
More importantly, when was the last time any of that lot really played a competitive 90 minutes?
by Alan Partridge » 05 Jan 2009 16:23
Vision I merely pointed out that scarface would be hard pushed fo find a team that fielded its strongest possible team in the 3rd round. You then listed a whole raft of teams and when i looked at the first 6 it turned out they didn't. Hull made 7 changes.
Coppell said he wasn't fielding a "weakened" team just a "different" one. O'neill says its his strongest possible team. Both sidestepping the issue that if it had been a must win league game they would have sent out a different team.
My point still stands. Very few if any in the top 2 field their strongest possible side in the 3rd round of the FA cup so if thats what scarface is looking for, he's not going to have the choice you claimed. Just because they made less changes than us doesn't alter that fact.
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