Gareth Ainsworth.Stranded wrote:If Bowen goes, what next?
Not sure I can see him dropping down a division next season.Old Man Andrews wrote:Gareth Ainsworth.Stranded wrote:If Bowen goes, what next?
So under Bowen we have won more than we have lost and he is a League 1 manager at best? At what point do Reading fans want to sack a manager? Every two or three months?Royal Rebel wrote:Let's be honest Bowen is totally out of his depth but I do kind of sympathise with him. He's a Div 1 Manager at best ?
I can't say I've been enamoured by the last 3 appointment as Reading Manager but ultimately they were all the "choice" of the Board.
If anyone is to blame for the decline it is surely they ?
If you want to be ambitious and successful appoint the right people and back it up with a certain amount of investment.
It happens in my place of employment. You don't employ the janitor to increase your sales revenue do you ?
Pay peanuts, get monkeys.
Simple.
Also nearly every single corner Wigan had their number 5 came unchallenged for a short corner. who trains this lot?Ascotexgunner wrote:I think last night reminded me of the Fulham defeat where all of a sudden the manager not only looks lost and out of his depth, but you just wonder whether the players are "with" him. Did Bowen panic last night and run out of ideas or did he really not know what to do or try?
The subs and the tactics were just awful......I mean did anyone notice all 11 players were back defending a corner with no outlet and Wigan literally surrounded the Reading box because they didn't need to leave men back. Just utterly baffling.
We're crying out for a manager that plays a high tempo, high intensity level style on/off the ball. Can't remember the last manager we had that actually got us playing decent, attacking, high tempo football. Maybe one month under Adkins where we were scoring for funStranded wrote:If Bowen goes, what next?
Surely it's time the focus is on the squad? We have been in this pattern for the last few seasons and a lot of the current squad have been part of the malaise.
Manager comes in, form picks up, we look half decent at times, move up the table a bit then the player appear to either revert to mean or down tools.
Pattern seen under Clement, Gomes and now Bowen as well. Could even argue it was there under Stam too but the up tick was just prolonged because some of the players tried "harder" due to being in awe of a playing legend.
Until we have a set of players who simply won't accept a performance like last night from themselves, then we will be stuck in this cycle. The lead has to come from the captain, and given Moore has been captain for most of these cycles then there should be an enchanced focus on his role in the squad.
But in order to play that sort of football, a team really needs to know each other and its tactics. You can't go bombing around the pitch, playing pass and move football, unless everyone knows each other's role. Players have to have confidence in each other and the system the manager has instilled in them.URZZZZ wrote:We're crying out for a manager that plays a high tempo, high intensity level style on/off the ball. Can't remember the last manager we had that actually got us playing decent, attacking, high tempo football. Maybe one month under Adkins where we were scoring for funStranded wrote:If Bowen goes, what next?
Surely it's time the focus is on the squad? We have been in this pattern for the last few seasons and a lot of the current squad have been part of the malaise.
Manager comes in, form picks up, we look half decent at times, move up the table a bit then the player appear to either revert to mean or down tools.
Pattern seen under Clement, Gomes and now Bowen as well. Could even argue it was there under Stam too but the up tick was just prolonged because some of the players tried "harder" due to being in awe of a playing legend.
Until we have a set of players who simply won't accept a performance like last night from themselves, then we will be stuck in this cycle. The lead has to come from the captain, and given Moore has been captain for most of these cycles then there should be an enchanced focus on his role in the squad.
Every manager since then has either played it too cautiously or we pass it around with no purpose. Unfortunately, for Bowen, both of these factors are relevant to him
yep this very muchElm Park Kid wrote:But in order to play that sort of football, a team really needs to know each other and its tactics. You can't go bombing around the pitch, playing pass and move football, unless everyone knows each other's role. Players have to have confidence in each other and the system the manager has instilled in them.URZZZZ wrote:We're crying out for a manager that plays a high tempo, high intensity level style on/off the ball. Can't remember the last manager we had that actually got us playing decent, attacking, high tempo football. Maybe one month under Adkins where we were scoring for funStranded wrote:If Bowen goes, what next?
Surely it's time the focus is on the squad? We have been in this pattern for the last few seasons and a lot of the current squad have been part of the malaise.
Manager comes in, form picks up, we look half decent at times, move up the table a bit then the player appear to either revert to mean or down tools.
Pattern seen under Clement, Gomes and now Bowen as well. Could even argue it was there under Stam too but the up tick was just prolonged because some of the players tried "harder" due to being in awe of a playing legend.
Until we have a set of players who simply won't accept a performance like last night from themselves, then we will be stuck in this cycle. The lead has to come from the captain, and given Moore has been captain for most of these cycles then there should be an enchanced focus on his role in the squad.
Every manager since then has either played it too cautiously or we pass it around with no purpose. Unfortunately, for Bowen, both of these factors are relevant to him
I'm sorry, but there's no short-cut to creating that. A new manager can't just come in and magically get the team playing like they're Liverpool. Even when McDermott quickly turned things around after Rodgers, he was someone that the players knew very well and was taking over a squad that had been playing decent football only a year before.
I have no idea if Bowen has the ability to build that sort of team - that's the problem of consistently hiring unproven managers. But what I do know is that he's not going to achieve miracles overnight, and some times things get worse before they get better. The same sort of people on here that were talking about play-off places 3 weeks ago are now talking of relegation - both are pretty stupid ideas. Lets just stick with a manager and see where we are this time next year.
Not to the extremes of yesterday, but it's been comingHound wrote:yep this very muchElm Park Kid wrote:But in order to play that sort of football, a team really needs to know each other and its tactics. You can't go bombing around the pitch, playing pass and move football, unless everyone knows each other's role. Players have to have confidence in each other and the system the manager has instilled in them.URZZZZ wrote:
We're crying out for a manager that plays a high tempo, high intensity level style on/off the ball. Can't remember the last manager we had that actually got us playing decent, attacking, high tempo football. Maybe one month under Adkins where we were scoring for fun
Every manager since then has either played it too cautiously or we pass it around with no purpose. Unfortunately, for Bowen, both of these factors are relevant to him
I'm sorry, but there's no short-cut to creating that. A new manager can't just come in and magically get the team playing like they're Liverpool. Even when McDermott quickly turned things around after Rodgers, he was someone that the players knew very well and was taking over a squad that had been playing decent football only a year before.
I have no idea if Bowen has the ability to build that sort of team - that's the problem of consistently hiring unproven managers. But what I do know is that he's not going to achieve miracles overnight, and some times things get worse before they get better. The same sort of people on here that were talking about play-off places 3 weeks ago are now talking of relegation - both are pretty stupid ideas. Lets just stick with a manager and see where we are this time next year.
Bowen said the right things at the start, about creating the higher tempo, playing football in the oppo half and being in their faces. It happened for a while, and then dropped off again - maybe few a number of factors inc Bowen picking the wrong players at times.
We're probably 3 wins away from saying Bowen has done a half decent job this season. Admittedly the performance against Wigan was every bit as rancid as everyone has pointed out, but it wasn't particularly indicative of recent performances
I actually suggested that perhaps he shouldn't have been appointed in the first place................ He was the "cheap" option and had zero experience. Perhaps we should endeavour to appoint someone with a little more in the way of credentials if we wish to progress. If you'd cared to have read my mail properly you'd have realised that I'm not blaming Bowen completely for this.He just seems out of his depth in my opinion.The decisions that he made last night regarding line up and substitutions were to my mind very odd.Zip wrote:So under Bowen we have won more than we have lost and he is a League 1 manager at best? At what point do Reading fans want to sack a manager? Every two or three months?Royal Rebel wrote:Let's be honest Bowen is totally out of his depth but I do kind of sympathise with him. He's a Div 1 Manager at best ?
I can't say I've been enamoured by the last 3 appointment as Reading Manager but ultimately they were all the "choice" of the Board.
If anyone is to blame for the decline it is surely they ?
If you want to be ambitious and successful appoint the right people and back it up with a certain amount of investment.
It happens in my place of employment. You don't employ the janitor to increase your sales revenue do you ?
Pay peanuts, get monkeys.
Simple.
Little wonder we continue to struggle with zero continuity.
If he is out of his depth how come we have won 11 and lost 8 whilst he has been in charge? The calls for his sacking after one very poor performance are over the topRoyal Rebel wrote:I actually suggested that perhaps he shouldn't have been appointed in the first place................ He was the "cheap" option and had zero experience. Perhaps we should endeavour to appoint someone with a little more in the way of credentials if we wish to progress. If you'd cared to have read my mail properly you'd have realised that I'm not blaming Bowen completely for this.He just seems out of his depth in my opinion.The decisions that he made last night regarding line up and substitutions were to my mind very odd.Zip wrote:So under Bowen we have won more than we have lost and he is a League 1 manager at best? At what point do Reading fans want to sack a manager? Every two or three months?Royal Rebel wrote:Let's be honest Bowen is totally out of his depth but I do kind of sympathise with him. He's a Div 1 Manager at best ?
I can't say I've been enamoured by the last 3 appointment as Reading Manager but ultimately they were all the "choice" of the Board.
If anyone is to blame for the decline it is surely they ?
If you want to be ambitious and successful appoint the right people and back it up with a certain amount of investment.
It happens in my place of employment. You don't employ the janitor to increase your sales revenue do you ?
Pay peanuts, get monkeys.
Simple.
Little wonder we continue to struggle with zero continuity.
South Coast Royal wrote:I think a lot of the dissatisfaction is to do with our home record (2nd worst in the division) and I am nowadays like most fans in that I generally now only go to home games (80 miles each way is enough).
With the emphasis on defence that is fine when we play away but we make so few chances at home and the games are mostly dull as our 2 strategies are (1)long ball to nobody in particular or
(2) hope that the opposition commits enough players forward that we can hit them on the break.
Unfortunately we (especially of late) have nobody big enough nor strong enough to make anything of the long balls and we don't have the pace (no McClearly, Barrow etc and thinking of Wigan, no Nicky Forster) to cash-in on breaks.
More thought needs to be given by the manager and his coaches as to how we can play especially at home and have a strategy that the players buy into-last night they just looked lost.
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