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[Albion] Gus Poyet on Sky Sports News



Harry Wilson's tackle

Harry Wilson's Tackle
NSC Patron
Oct 8, 2003
50,202
Faversham
I would quite like to see him at the Amex all be it squirming in the opposition dugout as The Albion trounce his team, while the north stand sing...

We have no ceiling, We have no ceiling
Were Brighton Hove Albion and we have no ceiling.
To make that scan we would need to sing 'ceiling' as if he was our new Chinese singing.
 




Harry Wilson's tackle

Harry Wilson's Tackle
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Oct 8, 2003
50,202
Faversham
in my opinion he made a very foolish career choice after leaving us by joining Sunderland- a job which was proving to be a poisoned chalice for so many managers. He was still pretty green at the time and it was his first and so far only job in the premier league so he got tarnished by that.

He needed a similar-ish sized club to Brighton who would give him a bit of time and who were more accustomed to his style of play eg Swansea. Failing that he could have got a job at another high up Championship club and taken them up.

He won't get a Premier League job now
Reading? ??? :wink:
 


Commander

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Apr 28, 2004
12,945
London
From the age of 5 to 15, mine always consisted of a number 1, along with the 6 brothers who also had the same, job lot and cheap for single mum.
My 4 sisters were allowed to grow theirs longer, I never caught nits though.
Hi Moises.
 




Brovion

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Jul 6, 2003
19,380
Sorry, I think a lot of you have missed a very important point on this thread ...... @jackalbion was only 13/14 when Poyet joined! 😲 😲
Jack, I'm surprised your mum let's you go to so many matches when you can only be, what, 16/17 now? 😲

Talk about 'time passing', blimey, was it really that long ago?
 






Neville's Breakfast

Well-known member
May 1, 2016
13,423
Oxton, Birkenhead
In fairness, he's only contracted with Greece until the end of March, so he has every right to put the feelers out.
Maybe with a little bit more subtlety than on Sky Sports News though ? I agree with pretty much every post on this thread whether pro or anti Poyet. The football was amazing. I’ll never forget the performances at Peterborough and Charlton. Nevertheless he showed a lack of respect towards Tony and our club and no employee can be allowed to get away with that. If as suggested he goes to manage a Championship club then it may not be long before he starts publicly advertising himself to the PL once again. Unless he has grown up.
 


jackalbion

Well-known member
Aug 30, 2011
4,044
Sorry, I think a lot of you have missed a very important point on this thread ...... @jackalbion was only 13/14 when Poyet joined! 😲 😲
Jack, I'm surprised your mum let's you go to so many matches when you can only be, what, 16/17 now? 😲

Talk about 'time passing', blimey, was it really that long ago?
I had a paper round at Chernobyl.
 




MJsGhost

Oooh Matron, I'm an
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Jun 26, 2009
4,501
East
Maybe with a little bit more subtlety than on Sky Sports News though ? I agree with pretty much every post on this thread whether pro or anti Poyet. The football was amazing. I’ll never forget the performances at Peterborough and Charlton. Nevertheless he showed a lack of respect towards Tony and our club and no employee can be allowed to get away with that. If as suggested he goes to manage a Championship club then it may not be long before he starts publicly advertising himself to the PL once again. Unless he has grown up.
Oh, it's brazen, I'll give you that! I'm not sure he has a subtle setting though.

Such a shame he ruined his legacy with the manner of his exit as the journey up to that point was joyous!
 


Easy 10

Brain dead MUG SHEEP
Jul 5, 2003
61,775
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Oh, it's brazen, I'll give you that! I'm not sure he has a subtle setting though.

Such a shame he ruined his legacy with the manner of his exit as the journey up to that point was joyous!
I don't feel he ruined his legacy at all.

Within 12 months he came in and set the foundations to transform us from being struggling / bang average third division junk to swashbuckling champions - at JUST the right time to get us to that first season at the Amex. Then under him we pushed on to become competative serious contenders in the Championship, before it all went sour.

Blooms appointment of GP was a GENIUS move, and provided the spark that helped us towards that epic 2016-2017 season, and where we find ourselves now. Gus was the right man at the right club at the right time. Anyone who can't see that and who's opinion is just blinded by how it all ended is a bit of a spanner, IMO. (not referring to you specifically btw, but they do lurk amongst us).
 


MJsGhost

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Jun 26, 2009
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I don't feel he ruined his legacy at all.

Within 12 months he came in and set the foundations to transform us from being struggling / bang average third division junk to swashbuckling champions - at JUST the right time to get us to that first season at the Amex. Then under him we pushed on to become competative serious contenders in the Championship, before it all went sour.

Blooms appointment of GP was a GENIUS move, and provided the spark that helped us towards that epic 2016-2017 season, and where we find ourselves now. Gus was the right man at the right club at the right time. Anyone who can't see that and who's opinion is just blinded by how it all ended is a bit of a spanner, IMO. (not referring to you specifically btw, but they do lurk amongst us).
I've been called worse than SPANNER, don't you worry :lolol:

Tainted is probably a more accurate description than RUINED, but I still think it's a huge shame that someone who did such great things for the club showed himself up to be such a twunt. I think it's possible to separate the two and appreciate what he did for the club, whilst also thinking the man himself is a plum for the way he acted at the end.

You're dead right about the spanners though - there are also plenty who trash Potter's work too, just because of the way he left.


*EDIT* I should also say that by "legacy", I very much include my perception of him as a person too, not just how he left the club compared to what it was like when he arrived.
 
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Neville's Breakfast

Well-known member
May 1, 2016
13,423
Oxton, Birkenhead
I've been called worse than SPANNER, don't you worry :lolol:

Tainted is probably a more accurate description than RUINED, but I still think it's a huge shame that someone who did such great things for the club showed himself up to be such a twunt. I think it's possible to separate the two and appreciate what he did for the club, whilst also thinking the man himself is a plum for the way he acted at the end.

You're dead right about the spanners though - there are also plenty who trash Potter's work too, just because of the way he left.
Poyet could still be manager today if he had concentrated on coaching. His achievements up until that final phase were that amazing. He has nobody else to blame but himself.
 


StonehamPark

#Brighton-Nil
Oct 30, 2010
9,780
BC, Canada
A very fun character, but limited tactician, in my opinion.

Would love to see him back managing in England, but I can’t imagine any PL club considering him.
 




Nobby Cybergoat

Well-known member
Jul 19, 2021
7,026
The similarities with RDZ are striking aren’t they?

Found huge improvements in players who had been here a while and been decent but not exceptional.

Turned a 0-0, 0-1 or 1-0 every week team into a side playing scintillating football, scoring goals and getting results few predicted possible.

Has a football philosophy you can discern in the first 30 seconds of seeing his team play.

Skipped the “bland corporate manager speak” lesson in the UEFA B. Has the quality that if he starts speaking on the radio, you stop what you are doing and listen to every word.

Properly wears his heart on his sleeve on the touchline, argues with refs, engages with fans and displays a series of quirky latin antics.

Quickly located and shifted out players who couldn’t or wouldn’t adapt. Very loyal to those players who buy into his method.


Maybe it will all end the same? But maybe not.
 




Triggaaar

Well-known member
Oct 24, 2005
50,207
Goldstone
From the age of 5 to 15, mine always consisted of a number 1, along with the 6 brothers who also had the same, job lot and cheap for single mum.

Number 2 I could understand, but couldn't you all just wee in the garden?
 


Brian Fantana

Well-known member
Oct 8, 2006
7,250
In the field
I don't feel he ruined his legacy at all.

Within 12 months he came in and set the foundations to transform us from being struggling / bang average third division junk to swashbuckling champions - at JUST the right time to get us to that first season at the Amex. Then under him we pushed on to become competative serious contenders in the Championship, before it all went sour.

Blooms appointment of GP was a GENIUS move, and provided the spark that helped us towards that epic 2016-2017 season, and where we find ourselves now. Gus was the right man at the right club at the right time. Anyone who can't see that and who's opinion is just blinded by how it all ended is a bit of a spanner, IMO. (not referring to you specifically btw, but they do lurk amongst us).

This (or these, as CH might say).

GP changed the whole attitude of the club at just the right time. Without bleating on too much about my own interview with him, one of the most interesting things he said was that at various times during his spell with us he thought that he had too much power (although his thinly-veiled barbs at, well, Barbs showed that he didn't really like it when said power was taken away). So, he might have unwittingly had a role in creating the fairly rock-solid structure that we have today that can withstand crucial figures leaving without too many issues.
 








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