Now we're getting close to a winning strategy. We need a more accurate
goalkeeper.

 

  _____  

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Steven Millward
Sent: Monday, 4 April 2011 9:53 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [NSWolves] Ince

 

You can't exepct everything for 175,000 pounds.



 

On 4 April 2011 09:44, Marcus Chantry <[email protected]> wrote:

You almost had me convinced there Steve, but then there is one major flaw, a
huge flaw, an insurmountable flaw in your strategy;  The strategy that was
so well described relies on the ball winning midfielder to pass it to the
creative midfielder and this is where the flaw is for Wolves.  Unless said
attacking midfielder (O'Hara, Milijas, Gascoigne, Cantona, Scholes) is stood
somewhere just in front of Hennessey, he is never ever going to receive the
ball from Henry.  Henry simply refuses to pass the ball in any direction
other than backwards so we may as well play with just him in midfield and 5
Peter Crouch's up front to try and win the headers from Hennessey's long
punts that are constantly necessitated by Henry making the backpass in the
first place.

 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Steven Millward
Sent: Monday, 4 April 2011 9:33 AM 


To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [NSWolves] Ince

 

You'll have to take this up with Rog.  He's the biggest fan of 442.  You
know that I prefer 451.

 

Marcus's Management Education Tip #1

Overview

In terms of who you have on the pitch in central midfield in 442, the choice
needs to support the following flow:

1.  Win the ball

2.  Give it to a flair player

3.  Create a scoring opportunity.

4.  Score

You're on the right lines with your thinking but you overlooked point 1.

 

Real world example

This is very much in the Ince/Gascoigne mold from England at the 1990 World
Cup finals in Italy.  I'd like to quote Matt Leese's opinion of Bobby
Robson's England team briefing:  "You (Ince) get the ball and give it to him
(Gascoigne)."  You can see the problems that recent England managers have
had trying to shoehorn our best flair players into a midfield two.  In the
end, they conclude that someone like Barry is required to play the
holding/ball-winning role.

 

Application to Wolves

It seems sensible to have a ball winning midfielder in Henry and a flair
player in O'Hara.  Having two flair players, as well as two attacking
midfielders, means that we don't get hold of the ball, don't create chances
and don't score.

 


 

On 4 April 2011 09:06, Marcus Chantry <[email protected]> wrote:

As the owner of the club and the board have clearly stated that they will
not be relieving Mick of his duties under any circumstances, it would be a
pointless exercise to discuss who I would rather have in place of Thick
Mick.

 

Aside from the complete lack of any organisation in the defence, the main
tactic that I have an issue with is this - he decided to switch to a 4-4-2
formation, which was a nice, bold attacking move to try and get something
from the game.  However, if you're going to play two attackers then you need
to make sure that they receive decent service from midfield, so one would
safely assume that you keep your attacking/flair midfielders on the pitch to
provide the ammunition for the strikers.  Unless you're Thick Mick.  His
attacking change of tactics involved removing Milijas, perhaps our best
passer of the ball, choosing instead to keep his incompetent buddy Karl
Henry on the field.  I can only assume this decision was made to ensure we
met our quota of back-passes for the match.

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Steven Millward
Sent: Monday, 4 April 2011 8:58 AM 


To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [NSWolves] Ince

 

Thank-you.  Now can you suggest a couple of other managers that you would
have in to replace Mick please?  I feel unfair in asking you as it will
surely be the kiss-of-death for them but we should see anyway.  

 

Perhaps Mick got the tactics wrong for this game.  I don't feel the need to
defend him for a single game, nor would I use the wins against Chelsea,
Liverpool, Man Utd etc to claim that he is a master tactician.  If I could
explain it at all it's the experiement of trying to work our how to play
with Doyle out of the side.

 

Which specific tactics did you most take umbrage with?  

 

 

On 4 April 2011 08:39, Marcus Chantry <[email protected]> wrote:

I am willing to admit that both Ince and Mooney have failed to deliver at
their respective clubs, however, I am not aware of their individual
circumstances with regards to playing personnel, funds available to them,
the level of control they may been given to influence the directions of
their clubs.  How will we ever know how either of them would have performed
with better quality players and money available to re-build.  It is a
hypothetical discussion that should be had during the off-season.

 

As for now I want to discuss something that is very real (although quite
unbelievable) and that is the fate of Wolves under the guidance of one Magic
Mick/Thick Mick depending on which way you view him.  Again, assuming you
watched the match Steve, how can you explain & support his tactics on the
weekend?  I don't know as much as you might think I do about football
management but receiving an explanation on Saturday's match will very much
help with my education, as clearly I must have missed some vital concept or
tactic.

 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Steven Millward
Sent: Monday, 4 April 2011 8:29 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [NSWolves] Ince

 

I raise Paul Ince because in spite of my repeated requests for you to
suggest an alternative to Mick, Ince and Richard Money are the only two that
you've ever suggested.  (Money is currently unemployed, by the way, after
leaving conference side Luton Town last year).  

 

If you know so much about what makes a good football manager, how come you
got it so wrong about those two?  Why don't you put another couple of
suggestions forward now, and we'll track their careers into oblivion too.

 

My detailed analysis of away performance is that it's not the away fixture
iteself but actual distance that's important.  We got good results at Villa,
Stoke and West Brom but clearly Newcastle is a long way away so we got the
worst possible result there.  It was a mathematical certainty.

 

 

On 4 April 2011 08:12, Marcus Chantry <[email protected]> wrote:

Forget Paul Ince, he's not our manager and never will be.  This is simply a
diversionary tactic to avoid discussing Thick Mick's own inadequacies. 

 

As Roger & I are the only ones who don't support Thick Mick, there should be
plenty of people on this list who can explain to me his tactics in
Saturday's game?  It's strange how there's been no discussion on this at
all.  Does silence indicate that he is indefensible?

 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Steven Millward
Sent: Monday, 4 April 2011 5:31 AM
To: nswolves
Subject: [NSWolves] Ince

 

http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/12951734.stm 



Is this now sufficient proof that he would have been rubbish as Wolves
manager?

-- 

Q: If you could change one thing about Wolves history, what would it be?
A That Peter Knowles was on the bog when the door was knocked.

The information contained in this email is confidential. If you are not the
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email in any way and should destroy any copies. Macquarie does not guarantee
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Macquarie.

 

-- 
Q: If you could change one thing about Wolves history, what would it be?
A That Peter Knowles was on the bog when the door was knocked.

 

-- 
Q: If you could change one thing about Wolves history, what would it be?
A That Peter Knowles was on the bog when the door was knocked.

-- 
Q: If you could change one thing about Wolves history, what would it be?
A That Peter Knowles was on the bog when the door was knocked.

 

-- 
Q: If you could change one thing about Wolves history, what would it be?
A That Peter Knowles was on the bog when the door was knocked.

-- 
Q: If you could change one thing about Wolves history, what would it be?
A That Peter Knowles was on the bog when the door was knocked.

 

-- 
Q: If you could change one thing about Wolves history, what would it be?
A That Peter Knowles was on the bog when the door was knocked.

-- 
Q: If you could change one thing about Wolves history, what would it be?
A That Peter Knowles was on the bog when the door was knocked.

 

-- 
Q: If you could change one thing about Wolves history, what would it be?
A That Peter Knowles was on the bog when the door was knocked.

-- 
Q:  If you could change one thing about Wolves history, what would it be?
A  That Peter Knowles was on the bog when the door was knocked.

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