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[Football] Graham Potter will go to Man United







Hugo Rune

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Feb 23, 2012
21,631
Brighton
Can’t see it. Done his reputation some damage with the Chelsea debacle. New owner won’t want his first appointment to be questionable which I think GP is - certainly with his ability to manage big name players.
The ‘big name players’ are the problem at Man Utd.

He’ll be fine if they let him have a big ego clear out (see the expulsion of Knocky here).
 


JamesAndTheGiantHead

Well-known member
Sep 2, 2011
6,271
Worthing
Can you imagine trying to apply emotional intelligence theory to someone that looks like this?

IMG_7881.jpeg
 


MJsGhost

Oooh Matron, I'm an
NSC Patron
Jun 26, 2009
4,501
East
The ‘big name players’ are the problem at Man Utd.

He’ll be fine if they let him have a big ego clear out (see the expulsion of Knocky here).
I agree with this, but what would be left if they cleared out all the egos?

ETH has made a start, shipping out Ronaldo and then Sancho, so there is obviously some appetite from above to sort out the dressing room, but how far can they afford to go?
One problem they have is that just getting bought by Man Utd gives a big boost to a player's ego. They think they've made it (they certainly have financially) and get swallowed up by the hype. The arrogance just drips off the club, so it's no surprise that their players are likely to be, or become tw@ts. (Marcus Rashford seems a notable exception by his deeds)
 


The Mole

Well-known member
Feb 20, 2004
1,092
Bowdon actually , Cheshire
I always thought that GP did a great job here, changing the style of play whilst maintaining our position in the Premier league and then pushing on.

However, having seen what RDZ has achieved with the same backing from TBOBE, PBMBE, the recruitment team and the backroom staff in a far shorter timeframe does have me questioning how much of the success was down to GP and how much was down to an exceptionally well run club that he was working for.

I guess following his stint at Chelsea with another at United would give more insight into that question ???
I think one of the reasons for RDZ’s success was that he inherited a squad of players who were used to a fluid formatio. I agree that he has taken us to a new level, but I also think that Graham Potter laid down some really good foundations
 




Garry Nelson's Left Foot

Well-known member
Jul 7, 2003
13,126
tokyo
I think one of the reasons for RDZ’s success was that he inherited a squad of players who were used to a fluid formatio. I agree that he has taken us to a new level, but I also think that Graham Potter laid down some really good foundations
Well Sir Chris Hughton had the same people in the club yet the football under him was shockingly bad in his final 6 months. Potter took that same personnel and got us playing some very watchable football and by the time he left, we looked pretty much as good as we have done under RDZ's management. We finished 9th in 21/22 and were then, what 6th when he left after 7 or 8 games into 22/23?

I'm as pleased as PUNCH that it all went wrong for him at Chelsea, but the fact is we got better and better under Potter. I am astonished that RDZ has progressed things even further, but that doesn't really detract from the job Potter did while he was here.

If Bloom decides one day to take him back because RDZ has gone onto bigger things, then I really wouldn't have an issue with that. In fact, it would be interesting to know whether or not Bloom would consider it. I'd like to think Potter would have learnt his lesson over some of the things he's said, notably that "history lesson" bollocks and I'd also say that if he did end up back here one day, I think our fans would ultimately be alright with that with the caveat that Potter could not expect the same level of patience that he once had with us.
I agree with these posts.

I think its worth noting that RDZ himself has said:

1) He was very lucky to walk into the Brighton job with a squad so tactically versatile

2) It takes a long time for players to get up to speed with what he wants

The fact that he came in and the transition was basically seamless is in large part I think down to point one. Potter had built a squad of players that were tactically astute and versatile. RDZ also had the benefit of inheriting Caicedo and Ally Mac who had hit his stride after 18-24 months of settling in.

We can see point two in action with this season's new signings. They're coming in 'cold' so are taking time to fully get what RDZ wants.

I much prefer having RDZ to Potter - his football is more exciting and he has a lot more (visible)passion and character - but Potter's three years definitely paved the way for him. If RDZ came in straight after Hughton who knows what would have happened but I suspect it wouldn't have been the magic of the past 18 months.
 




Flounce

Well-known member
Nov 15, 2006
1,090
As he’d get virtually no time to turn that poisoned chalice around before fans turned it would be an enjoyable continuation of the “gift that keeps giving”

The man is not capable of dealing with superstar Prima Donnas. Proved at Chelsea

This will not happen, sadly.

Palace is where he should go but I hope he doesn’t
 








ConfusedGloryHunter

He/him/his/that muppet
Jul 6, 2011
2,047
How could he, or anyone, stay somewhere when they’ve been sacked?!

‘You’re sacked’
‘No I’m not’
Um, I was just recycling one of his classic quotes for comedic effect. Possibly the failure of my joke to actually be funny is what has confused you?
 






Home and Away

Active member
Sep 18, 2018
128
Neither the media nor the so called ManU fans wouldn't have the patience with him. He would be out the door in 6 months time... I just don't see it happening.
 






Da Man Clay

T'Blades
Dec 16, 2004
16,254
The ‘big name players’ are the problem at Man Utd.

He’ll be fine if they let him have a big ego clear out (see the expulsion of Knocky here).

But they won’t… also those players will be replaced by other big name players who aren’t going to respect him as hasn’t done much in the grand scheme of things.

Knocky with the best will in the world wasn’t a big name PL player - and the squad pretty easily moved on from him as he couldn’t quite cope at this level.
 


Man of Harveys

Well-known member
Jul 9, 2003
18,738
Brighton, UK
Some may disagree but I’m firmly of the belief that he wasn’t really all that great for us - De Zerbi’s shown that 1000-fold - and by sheer naked greed and a craven overambition laughably unmatched by his true talent he’s gone and utterly buggered up his own career. I mean what’s not to love about that?

So for the record I’d love him to make a similar mistake again. His Chelsea stint - slow-witted over-promoted boring Brummy meets thick trashy flashy Yank - was some of the purest comedy the great game has ever had to offer.
 


nicko31

Well-known member
Jan 7, 2010
17,611
Gods country fortnightly
Can’t see it. Done his reputation some damage with the Chelsea debacle. New owner won’t want his first appointment to be questionable which I think GP is - certainly with his ability to manage big name players.
Just can't see Manure taking the risk and the entitled with widely ignorant fan base won't like it
 








Silverhatch

Well-known member
Feb 23, 2009
4,316
Preston Park
And if anyone seriously thinks RDZ could have taken over from Hughton and changed the style like he did that quickly, they are completely deluded. Potter did the near-perfect job after Hughton for RDZ to take over. The squad and style was ready-made for RDZ to work his magic on. Potter was the right man at the right time.
RDZ has said this himself many times. A Brighton player under Potter had to be a good footballer. An RDZ footballer has to be a brilliant technician.
 


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