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McCarthy: Home Crowd Can Give Us an Extra Lift
Friday, 9th Mar 2018 19:30

Town boss Mick McCarthy has urged the Portman Road crowd to get behind his side in what could prove to be crucial back-to-back home games against Sheffield United on Saturday and Hull City on Tuesday as the Blues, 12th, seven points off the top six, look to re-enter the play-off race.

“The home crowd can always give you an extra lift, of course,” McCarthy said. “I’ve always said at every club I’ve been at ‘Come and support the team’ because that’s what you’re doing essentially, you’re coming to support the team.

“And it helps if you get good support. And if it’s rubbish at the end, then boo by all means, I’m cool with that, never worried about that at all.

“At Sheffield Wednesday, what was there 22,000 there? And to be fair they were still trying to get their team going, trying to get them at it and we played well.

“So, yes, the home crowd is a big advantage if it’s partisan, noisy and they support the players.”

McCarthy, the subject of abusive chanting during games over the last couple of seasons, who many fans would like to see move on in the summer, has previously acknowledged that there is a symbiotic relationship between supporters and the team on the pitch, each lifting the other.

He added: “It’s our job to play well and to try and entertain [the fans] and win games but surely if I go anywhere, if I go to the pictures or to the theatre or to a game of football I go with the intention of enjoying it and supporting it.

“I keep saying, whatever happens here, they support this club, by doing it with their money first and foremost and then their support at the grounds. It makes a helluva a difference. You all know it does.

“Are you asking me the question because of certain reasons? I fully understand that but come and support the lads, come and get behind them, start it off, make it an atmosphere.

“Blooming heck, we went to Sheffield United and it was throbbing that place. And when we’ve had it here over the years, we’ve had it at some of the Tuesday night games I can remember looking back, Palace here when we beat them 3-0 and we were struggling then and we needed to get out of the relegation zone.

“Middlesbrough when we slapped them them down here and the place was rocking. So, I’d like to get it like that again because we all enjoy it more and, of course, the fans do as well.”

McCarthy says sometimes a particular incident in a game can spark an atmosphere.

“I went to Millwall against Cardiff and, to be fair, they were at it and partisan to start with.

“And then Shaun Hutchinson had a tackle on the big centre-half and it lifted the crowd after 20 minutes, it sparked them into life. And it sparked the team in to life. But it does help if you’ve got that support of the fans.

“What I would say is don’t come and not want to support the team. That’s a big difference.”

Referring back to that Crystal Palace match in his first season at Portman Road, he recalled an incident involving Richard Stearman, who will be in the Blades side tomorrow, which had a similar effect.

“A terrific servant to me at Wolves and here,” he said of the defender. “I’m going back to that Crystal Palace game, we were getting a bit of a doing here and Stears went flying into Jonny Parr and it was an unbelievable tackle. He won the ball but Jonny Parr was carted off [injured] sadly for him.

“That started that game, we beat them 3-0 then, I think Frank Nouble had an epiphany that night, he ran riot.

“But that one thing can set it off and it did. Stears was great, he’s a really good guy and he’s been a good servant for me but at every club he’s been at he’s done well.”

Town - four points behind the Blades, who are ninth - are currently seventh in a Championship away form table based on the last six matches but 17th in the home equivalent having picked up only five points while scoring just two goals.

McCarthy says he can’t explain the disparity: “No, I can’t. I haven’t got an answer for you. We try and do the same. We approach the game away from home at Sheffield Wednesday the same way we approach it here at Portman Road, I don’t change.

“We play the same way, so I haven’t got an answer for you unfortunately. I haven’t got answers for everything, although I try.”

Have the lower crowds at recent games - the attendance for the last home match against Cardiff was only 13,205, the lowest at a league game for almost 20 years - and flat atmosphere at some matches had an impact on performances?

“If that’s what you think then you write it,” McCarthy responded. “I’ve not got an answer for you and I’m not going to blame that either, not a chance.

“We don’t sit in that dressing room worrying about whatever’s going to go on and we don’t talk about it, we go out and try and win the game and it only happens as it happens.

“We set off with that positive intention and we try our best to win the game and we’ll be doing the same with these next two matches.”

Town have lost 1-0 twice to the Blades already this season, in the Championship at Bramall Lane in October and at Portman Road in the FA Cup in January.

Asked whether the Blues owe the South Yorkshireman one, McCarthy joked: “No, we owe them two!”


The Blues boss felt there wasn’t much in either game: “No, there wasn’t. I thought they started well up at Bramall Lane. I had to change it and we got back into the game and I thought we did all right then and we could have got something out of it. Here in the FA Cup game, there was nothing in it at all.”

Having started the season like a house on fire following their promotion from League One as champions, the Blades have been more inconsistent of late and were comfortably beaten 3-0 at Craven Cottage in midweek.

“Fulham gave them a doing the other night but I don’t think it’s any embarrassment when Fulham do it to you, to be honest,” McCarthy reflected.

“But I know Chrissy Wilder and Alan Knill, they’ll want a response because they need the response to get back in that top six if they’re going to get there.

“They’ve been there pretty much all season, so they’ll be feeling pretty sore about that. It’ll be a tough game. They’re a good side. I saw them at Reading recently and they’ve pretty much got a bit of everything.”

McCarthy has a lot of time for Wilder, who followed a 99-point League Two title with Northampton with last season’s League One championship with the Blades when they made it to the full 100.

“He has certainly got something about him,” he said. “He quite clearly knows the game, he’s a good coach and he’s done it in different leagues as well.

“He must manage his players well. I think he runs a tight but happy ship, it’s content, people are happy with him and they like playing for him. And that’s a big part of the game.”

Having previously said the Blues are out of the play-off running, does he now believe his team would be firmly back in the hunt if they beat the Blades and Tigers?

“It’s a big if that, isn’t it?” the Town boss pointed out. “Of course it’s an opportunity, but I can sit here and say, ‘Oh yes, if we win those next two games we’ll be right back in it…’.

“Of course, I fully understand that but I am that pragmatic manager with my feet on the ground, knowing that we’re not just going to go out and beat them because we’ve had two away wins.

“But we’ll be trying damned hard and, yes, if we can it would be brilliant and that game in hand on Tuesday would put us right back in the mix.

“And I hope the players ram my words down my throat. I didn’t say it with that intention, I said I thought it was unlikely we’ll get in the play-offs because I believed it, and I still think it is. Not because of us, but because of the teams that are above and they’re good teams.”

If Town do miss out on a play-off place but finish in the top 10 McCarthy says that would constitute a decent season for the Blues given the big money spent at many other clubs, a number of whom are well below them in the table.

“If we finish in the top 10 I think that is a good finish for us,” he insisted. “And if anybody hears me saying that and are screaming that we ought to be in the top six, well so be it, I can’t help that.

“I think that would be an achievement considering the level of investment at other clubs and a lot of those clubs are beneath us, some of them are in the relegation zone.”

McCarthy has said he’s likely to shuffle his pack during Town’s four games in 12 days of which tomorrow’s match is the second.

However, Bartosz Bialkowski will be in goal fresh from receiving his first international call-up by Poland, while the Blues boss is likely to continue with the back three of former Blades loanee Cameron Carter-Vickers, skipper Luke Chambers and Adam Webster.

He may well switch Jordan Spence for Dominic Iorfa at right wing-back, while Myles Kenlock will replace Jonas Knudsen on the left if the Danish international doesn’t make it having reported a tight hamstring.

In midfield, McCarthy could opt to stick with the combative trio of Cole Skuse, Callum Connolly and Luke Hyam which started at Hillsborough or may recall Grant Ward or Stephen Gleeson for Hyam.

Up front, McCarthy will be forced into one change with Mustapha Carayol out with the groin injury he suffered at Sheffield Wednesday.

McCarthy has a number of options to play alongside Martyn Waghorn, among them Joe Garner, Freddie Sears, who he said changed the game at Hillsborough, and Bersant Celina.

“Joe’s not trained as much as he ought to have done but, of course, he’s still in the squad and he’s always a threat,” McCarthy considered.

“Freddie came on and not having played so much I thought he was excellent and changed it.

“Santie’s desperate to play, so it’s nice to have some options. At least I’m not saying, ‘He’s got to play’ because I’ve got nobody else. I prefer the options.”

Waghorn netted both Blues goals against the Owls, ending a run of 15 games without a goal.

How was Town’s 12-goal top scorer in the days after netting twice at Hillsborough, the second a stunning a freekick?

“Knackered, that’s how he’s looked!” McCarthy joked. “No, he’s only trained today and he looked fine.

“You’ll see him tomorrow morning on Soccer AM there’s a nice little bit on there with him and Santie [and Jimmy Bullard] so have a look.”

He added: “Waggy’s a really lovely character, he’s a really nice man, he’s been great around the place.

“I saw him and his cricket celebration, he’s just good with other people. We’ve got a lot of good lads, but he’s been excellent since he came in.

“Freddie, all last season and this season, they come in, they train, they play, they’re selfless, they give everything they’ve got but they want to score goals. I have to say Waggy looked like he was getting frustrated.”

Blades 15-goal top scorer Leon Clarke will be assessed ahead of the match having missed the 3-0 defeat at Fulham with an ankle injury sustained in their previous match, a 3-1 win at Reading.

Another striker, James Wilson, is also close to a return from an ankle injury after three weeks out.

“He’s worked extremely hard, Leon, since coming off against Reading,” manager Wilder told the Sheffield Star.

“All my players have been working hard, they all want to be involved. There’s no picking and choosing games.

“We’ll give him as much time as needed to get himself ready. The same as James.

“But I’m not going to stick him on the bench if he’s got a big opportunity of missing a chunk of games. Hopefully the two or three days which have passed since our last game will give him that chance.”

Defender Kieron Freeman could return having dislocated his knee when colliding with then team-mate Carter-Vickers when the sides met at Bramall Lane in October.

“Kieron is back involved with the first team now,” Wilder added. “So that’s good to see. George Baldock’s performances have been good throughout the season. But Kieron is also really pushing.

“He’s a good player too and he can play in different positions. It’s good to have him where he is now. It gives us options and decisions to make.”

Reflecting on the game he said: “People will look at the table and look at the fact we’ve also beaten them in the FA Cup as well this year.

“They’ll do that and think we should be nailed-on again. But they are an established, experienced Championship club. Look at the players they’ve got and also look at their manager.

“Make no mistake, this will be another tough game for us. We know it’s an important stage of the season and they are a good side in good form at the moment. We’ve got to make sure we’re ready.”

Town have had the better of the Blades over the years, winning 23 times (22 in the league), drawing 24 (21) and losing 21 (18) of the meetings between the sides.

The teams last met in the FA Cup third round at Portman Road in January when the Blades won 1-0, Nathan Thomas smashing the winner in the 25th minute.

The Blues, who last won a match in the competition in January 2010, never looked like getting back into the game, failing to register a shot on target in the entire 90 minutes, and the visitors, who fielded a very young side, might have added to their lead in the second half.

At Bramall Lane in the Championship in October, Chris Basham’s goal four minutes after half-time saw the South Yorkshiremen to another 1-0 victory over the Blues.

Waghorn went closest to scoring for Town with a shot against the bar shortly after the Blades’ goal, but the home side deserved their victory.

The teams last met at Portman Road in the league in February 2011 with Sheffield United on their way down to League One.

Goals from Damien Delaney, David Norris and a stunning third from Connor Wickham saw the Blues to a 3-0 victory over the visitors, who were reduced to nine men.

Delaney put Town in front with a header in a very poor first half with Norris adding the second after the break.

Grant Leadbitter missed a penalty before Wickham brilliantly ran from his own half to seal the win, prior to Robert Kozluk and Lee Williamson receiving red cards within a minute during the closing stages.

The Blades squad includes former Town loanee Stearman, who moved to Bramall Lane from Fulham last summer.

Stearman spent the second half of 2012/13 on loan with the Blues from Wolves, making 15 appearances.

Canadian-born striker Caolan Lavery, a former Northern Ireland U21 international who is currently on loan at Rotherham, joined the Blades from Sheffield Wednesday in the summer of 2016.

Lavery, 25, signed for the Owls in the summer of 2012 having turned down a professional contract with the Blues during the previous season after coming through the Town academy.

Blues on-loan Tottenham defender Carter-Vickers spent the first half of the season on loan with the Blades making 18 starts and scoring one goal, on his debut at Bolton in August.

Saturday’s referee is John Brooks from Leicestershire, who has shown 120 yellow cards and six red in 39 matches so far this season.

Brooks will be taking charge of only his third Championship match and has refereed neither the Blues nor the Blades previously.

Squad from: Bialkowski, M Crowe, Spence, Iorfa, Kenlock, Chambers (c), Knudsen, Carter-Vickers, Webster, Skuse, Connolly, Hyam, Bru, Gleeson, Nydam, Ward, Celina, Waghorn, Garner, Sears.


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GerkensBeard added 09:30 - Mar 10
@outofline I don't appreciate being called an idiot. Everyone is entitled to their own opinion. Perhaps you can offer a manager that you think would have us promoted? Mick played attacking football at Wolves because he was given the money to invest in quality. Knowing that if he pushed players forward he's got the quality at the back to deal with the opposition threat. I'm sure that with this group of players trying to play attacking football we'd be relegated or close to it. Maybe you'd be happy with finishing 19th playing attractive football? The problem here is Evans who is the reason we have fallen behind other clubs with serious lack of investment. Mick every week tongue in cheek comments on the fact the opposition have “spent a few quid” which I always think is a snipe towards Evans. His press conferences this year I have to agree he hasn't helped himself and his arrogance and attitude sometimes is not what us town fans like. But I'd take Mick who is always astute in the transfer window, builds a good team chemistry and has every player fighting for him over a polite manager getting battered every week when let's face it the current crop aren't good enough to play the attractive football we all want. Have you seen us on a Saturday? We can barely string two passes together. The football ability of most (not all) of these players isn't there to do it. And the moment someone comes in wanting to go out and buy these quality players. There's no money for them to do it!
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jas0999 added 09:31 - Mar 10
Completely agree the fans should get behind the team. But it's too little too late as far as MM is concerned. Yes, we are on a good run of results and let's keep it going. But thousands have walked away from the club and it will take more than a few wins to bring them back. Folk want entertainment. Football. Good players. An apology from MM wouldn't go a miss either.
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pragmatic added 09:40 - Mar 10
Sadly some people on this site do not know the meaonh of support irrespective of who manager/owners are. @ as a supporter I will be renewing my season ticket again for the 40 year !
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blue75 added 09:42 - Mar 10
Gerkensbeard there must be someone who can play better football on our budget and keep us in this league and build a team to challenge over a few seasons. Joe Royle managed to on a reducing budget so I don't see how it couldn't be done again. A lower league manager would have a little more money as he wouldn't command the money McCarthy gets paid which increases the budget.
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GerkensBeard added 09:52 - Mar 10
Perhaps there is, Yes Joe did but we still had players who had played in the premier league as well as Bent and Ambrose coming through. The advantage of having a lower league manager coming in you're right will have the benefit and finding gems in those leagues for little money. But it's hit and miss. Ideally we'd all like Evans to invest and have a ready made 20 goal season championship striker and other players such as creative midfielders and top centre half's that are quality players.
Then again we do have some good youth coming through. Flynn Downes and Andre Dozzell I'm sure will go onto have good careers. It'd be great to have them two at the heart of our midfield over the coming years alongside say Emyr Huws. Those 3 are all ours and I'm sure if they were all fit/trusted we'd play much more football throughout the side.
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bluesfan_whatever added 10:19 - Mar 10
The best thing that could happen for our beloved club is for a number of those so called fans who continually pass negative comments on here to go off and support some one else The players and the manager deserve better than this Whether people like blueboy1981 think they are clever, talented ,or funny I do not know What I am sure about is you simply would be incapable of leading ,inspiring and managing a team of young men You would simple destroy the overall morale and individuals self confidence
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warktheline added 10:20 - Mar 10
@gerkin, I tagged two in previous post! Was it you that slammed an alternative point of view in a derogatory manner? No.....thus re read my post and pick out what applies to you accordingly !
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fransthyssen added 10:26 - Mar 10
Come on guys, we've pulled our finger out of late, let's support the team regardless of MM let's give them a leg up at PR for the next two home games and who knows what the teams directly above us will fair!
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warktheline added 10:31 - Mar 10
@blues fan whatever ! Sums you up nicely! How clueless, conform regardless of cost! How old are you? I'm hoping beyond hope, youthful!
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black_shuck added 10:41 - Mar 10
If you prick us, do we not bleed?
If you tickle us, do we not laugh?
If you poison us, do we not die?
And if you wrong us, shall we not revenge?

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RoyalAscotBlue added 11:08 - Mar 10
So he admits that he always sets his team up to stop the opposing team first...

“We try and do the same. We approach the game away from home at Sheffield Wednesday the same way we approach it here at Portman Road, I don't change.”

Away from home his tactics work better because the opposition play on the front foot, attempting to take the game to the opposition. Virtually every manager in the world would admit that it is reasonable to start an away game by trying to stop the opposition. See what they've got and nullify it, quieten the crowd and build from there. Hit them on the counter attack when they've pushed too many players forward.

At home you have to do something different! If you setup to stop the opposition, and quieten the crowd, at home (!) then you could end up having your own fans chanting that your football is sh!te.

The man is simply incapable of change.
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sidtheswan added 11:10 - Mar 10
We used to get 22,000 fans quite regularly Mick if you remember when we were in the play offs. When I go to the theatre I read the reviews and then if it's good I go and you can't do that with football so you generally go in hope rather then expectation. But if you read the Bobby Robson quote at the top of his stand than maybe you'll understand what Ipswich is about and why you get booed . Anyway there's only one certainty in football and that's MM will never get a stand named after him especially at Ipswich !
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sidtheswan added 11:14 - Mar 10
GerkensBeard sorry just read your rant . David Wagner got Huddersfield promoted by spending about the same on 11 players . Any way it's a personal choice if you want to watch boring football just enjoy it and have a good look round Ipswich and wonder why all the kids are wearing Arsenal and Chelsea shirts !
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RoyalAscotBlue added 11:20 - Mar 10
I love it when people say “I'm sure Mick would love to play expansive football with flying wingers”.

Based on what? May I ask?

The man has been in football management for 26 years and he never has, even when he was an international manager and money didn't matter... where was the expansive football?

Utterly ridiculous comment. In this very interview the man said “I DON'T CHANGE”.
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blueboy1981 added 11:24 - Mar 10
....... most Supporters, if not all, would still give you the benefit of doubt Michael - the two issues that most of us have with you is as follows:

1. Your attitude towards Supporters is at times diabolical, and needs to change.

2. Your style of play / tactics / substitutions (especially at Home) are not what most of us want to see. Sometimes more enjoyable watching paint dry. We want to see Football played the Ipswich Town way.

3. Your squad of players is more than capable within the Championship - extract the maximum potential from it.

4. Reference the above - quit playing players out of their best position, and potentially ruining them. Maximum benefit is there to be had from them.

Address the above - and most Supporters would, even now, be behind you. Myself included.

Become a true IPSWICH TOWN MANAGER - in doing so.

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Northstandveteran added 11:31 - Mar 10
Agreed royalascotblue.

I have no problem with Mick shutting up shop away from home, nicking a point and as of late, 2 very impressive wins.

Any points away from home are deservedly earned.

But at home?

While the majority of us are thinking, throw caution to the wind, we're not going down, let's go all out to attack, as we have a fairly decent strike force. We won't.

Why?

Because come negotiation time with Mr Evans, mid table will look better than bottom third when discussing his new 2 year contract.

We are not going to make the play offs. That became apparent after the dreadful Christmas period. But if we were to win the next two, it might spark a little interest and fans may return.

On that note my prediction is 0-0

Not being negative just realistic.

I hope that I am proved wrong.

Come on the town!
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Seasider added 11:32 - Mar 10
We approach the game the same when we were away,as we will at home,says Mick.

This is why Ipswich have only 3 more points at home than away;because they are set up like an away team to basically defend, and nick a goal.

This year the away form has been better than at home,which are reflected in the results,and the falling home attendances.

For goodness sake for once set up and play a more offensive game today,you may lose;but you may win,even by more than one clear goal !

I live in hope;but not expectation.
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blueboy1981 added 11:41 - Mar 10
....... just couldn't stop at "two'.

Stop making excuses 'happy clappers' - money doesn't always buy success, as has been proved if you care to 'look' - successful teams are quite often built on restricted budgets. The result being the acid test at a good Manager, and his back up team.

McCarthy would do nothing more with an open cheque book - his management style is what needs to change, his style is done for - hence our low crowds as proof.
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blueboy1981 added 12:03 - Mar 10
......... that's why he's content to sit here as long as he can with no money to spend - if he had, expectations would follow .. !!

One thing he isn't - is a FOOL.
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black_shuck added 12:05 - Mar 10
"F*cking F*ck Off!!!"
0

Bobbychase added 12:15 - Mar 10
Where to start with this thread, although it is an interesting insight into the mentality of some of our fans, who are as damaging to the club at the moment as they perceive the manager to be.

But yes, look at the sheer cheek of McCarthy, asking fans to get behind an honest, hardworking group of players who could make it three wins on the spin today. How dare he.

How dare he expect supporters to put aside their petty prejudices and get behind these players, instead of doing the logical thing which is to be cross about something, hold a grudge and use that to bind themselves to what is happening on the pitch RIGHT NOW.

Hey, did you see Bart has been selected for the Poland squad? Recognition of his performances and status as probably the best keeper in the Championship. Mick signed him of course, but he's a dinosaur who swore at fans who had been singing AT AN AWAY DERBY that his football was sh*t even though we came within seconds of winning the game. Which is unforgiveable.

Since Cameron Carter-Vickers was picked up on loan, an opportunity sniffed out by the same dinosaur, who was once mean in a press conference about supporters who were were seeking out loan signing Gleeson on Twitter and abusing him BEFORE HE HAD EVEN PULLED ON A TOWN SHIRT , we've conceded four goals in eight games. Another lucky signing by this idiot who clearly doesn't know what he's doing and wants fans to support their own team.

I mean this guy. He picks up Kieffer Moore for ten grand from Forest Green Reserves, a completely useless pub player according to our exceptionally wise and knowledgeable fans, loans him out to Rotherham and then sells him to Barnsley for meagre £750k when everyone knows he had suddenly become brilliant and should be "given an chance" at Town. And what has happened? This predatory striker who we sold for an amount that was clearly peanuts, has scored an amazing one goal in the last nine games and Barnsley are in a relegation battle, proving what our fans suspected all along, that Mick doesn't know what he is doing. And he has the temerity, the bare-faced cheek, to suggest "he is the manager and we are the fans" as though that means he knows more than us.

Then look at the awful state of our current strike force. FIrst he wastes £1m on two strikers from Rangers, neither of whom are particularly famous or expensive so therefore will definitely be failures then lo and behold, they are merely in double figures in March. This is what happens when you buy cheap and the manager is clueless. He should have surveyed the supporters to find out who we should buy.

Then there is the DISGRACE of sending some of our promising young players out on loan to get experience. Look at Flynn Downes, earning rave reviews in a high-flying Luton team and gaining valuable match time. Everyone knows you don't do that and no manager who knows what they are doing ever does that. I mean SIr Alex Ferguson, the most successful manager in the history of British football, sent David Beckham, one of the most gifted players of his generation out on loan to Preston, and Harry Kane, the best English striker playing at the moment, went out on loan when he was young, but apart from that there are no examples of it working. Unless you count John Terry going out on loan to Nottingham Forest early in his Chelsea career. Which was also a complete flash in the pan.

Then there's the ridiculous signing of Adam Webster, a very talented, skilfull defender who likes to bring the ball forward and will probably play in the Premier League one day. What was he thinking? Idiot.

Then, perhaps worst of all, are these other managers, most of them very experienced in English football, suggesting we are somehow lucky to have him. What do they know? Neil Warnock has never achieved anything of note as a Championship manager, but the bloke behind me has been watching ITFC for five years now, and says Mick is a big-nosed tw*t who plays hoofball. I know who I trust.

I could go on. This man has so many crimes against his name. First and foremost though, it's ridiculous to expect us, as fans, to get behind a team that is playing well and performing above its budget. Especially after he's criticised our own fans for merely abusing him and players during the match.

Right, now I'm wound up I'm going to sit on Twitter, poised for the team announcement at 2pm. If he doesn't start Celina I'm going to unleash. We win every game when Celina starts, except matches like Burton and Derby at home and Fulham away. And we lose every game he doesn't play in. Except the last who, which we won.

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blueboy1981 added 12:21 - Mar 10
........ and yet another 'happy clappie' excuse maker.
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Bobbychase added 12:25 - Mar 10
.......and yet another person who is allergic to facts
-1

Northstandveteran added 12:28 - Mar 10
@Bobbychase.

Some very valid points for us ' Mick outers ' to digest.

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dukey44 added 12:39 - Mar 10
You got to be joking right?? Still think he's burnt his bridges and please let's have a manager that plays football and doesn't destroy playing football. Sorry but I for one want rid now it's boring football. Yeah ok he's hands are tied blah blah blah but they are paid footballers and they only play how they are trained and told to or it's that not Micks job? I may be wrong but please change the manager and his team for next season.. Mr Evans who ever you are!!
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