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Lambert: You've Got to Look at Yourself
Wednesday, 10th Jun 2020 11:08

Boss Paul Lambert says there were “one or two things” he would have done differently during Town's curtailed 2019/20 campaign, in which they finished 11th in League One, their lowest position for 67 years, and admits “you’ve got to look at yourself”. The Blues manager is aiming to "put it right" next season, although is currently in the dark about when that might start.

In a wide-ranging interview with Radio Suffolk (3hrs 9mins 10secs), Lambert again expressed his frustration that the EFL took so long to come to a decision on whether League One should be played to its conclusion or curtailed and decided on unweighted points per game, as was finally confirmed yesterday.

“I think the length of it has been shocking, I’ve said that before,” he said. “I thought the way it was handled was really, really poor. I don’t think there’s ben great leadership and if the Premier League plays and the Championship plays then League One and League Two should play.

“The issues go right down the pyramid really and I don’t think it’s a good thing to curtail it, I don’t agree with the points per game system and I said that when we were even in the play-offs.

“We were sitting first at the end of January. Two months, February and March, have certainly cost us. Darren Ferguson up at Peterborough [missed out on a play-off place due to points per game having been sixth] and Wycombe go in. It’s not a fair system.

“It should have been sorted sooner, that’s the thing. What’s absolutely apparent and evident is that the game’s nothing without the supporters, 100 per cent. You look at the Bundesliga, which I’ve watched quite frequently and done some TV work on, without the fans it’s not a game.

“You need the fans to come in and Ipswich being the only team in the town, it’s so important the community’s right behind it and we’re going to need them, without a doubt. The football club’s going to need the supporters.”

Lambert says that at present he doesn’t know when 2020/21 might start or when the players need to come back to train.

“Not officially, that’s the frustrating thing,” he added. “Obviously the season’s been curtailed now but the start date, you’re hearing different dates, whether it’s September, but that’s us playing. I don’t think fans will be allowed in at that time until everybody’s safe, and I totally get that.

“And you’ve got the added thing of the testing as well. You’ve still got to get tested. I think there’s still a lot of water to go under the bridge before we can say when we’re going to start.

“There’s got to be a lot of heads together and talking, we’ll have to get tested, that goes without saying, and the next step is to try and get supporters back into the stadiums when it’s safe.”

The Scot isn’t a fan of playing matches behind closed doors: “Without the supporters, that’s the game, the game is for them. The game is for the fans, they come and they generate the atmosphere and give us the support that we need, and you need that, without a doubt you need that.

“As I said before, I’ve watched the German games and it’s a high standard of football but without the fans it’s not a game.

“When they will come back, I really don’t know, hopefully it’s soon. The idea of closed doors is not a great idea but if that’s what’s got to happen then you have to do it.”

Looking back at last season, Lambert was asked where a campaign which looked so good - the Blues were top in the opening months and again in January -

“It was bizarre because at the end of January I think we went to Wycombe [sic] and we were sitting top of the table and we were never outside the top six, we were always between one, two, three, four or whatever it was.

“But in the last two months, February and March, we came right off it. I’ve analysed it, there will be things I’ll do differently without a doubt. You’ve got to look at yourself as well, where you went wrong and hopefully put them right.

“But for so many months we were in really good form, we were top of the league in January. We lost a lot of players through injury at certain times, big players as well.

“The last couple of months, February and March, we came right off it and couldn’t get it back.


“We were hoping that in the last eight games, five at home, [we could push on]. I think we had to win about six of those games to get into the play-offs, which we’re more than capable of doing. Everybody would have been back fit, but we had to go on a run. February and March definitely cost us.”

Asked what he’d change, and specifically his controversial rotation policy, he responded: “There are one or two things that I would do differently. The rotation thing, that was working at the beginning when we were winning and nobody was really bothered, it’s only when you start to lose people start to have a go at it.

“I get all the arguments about it, it’s one side I would look at. We were forced to change [the team] because of the number of games they were going to have. We blooded some young ones which I think was important for the football club going forward, the young ones in the Leasing.com Trophy, I think it was important for them to gain experience.

“And this pandemic has put those kids where they might make a mark on the first team because the finances won’t be the same as they were. So there are loads of positives out of it, but there are definitely certain things I would look at.”

Quizzed on whether he has considered his future and whether he is the man to take Town forward, he said: “Absolutely, I’ve been in the game long enough to know the pitfalls of everything that goes on. But we’re going to give it a right good go and try and correct everything that was wrong last season and try and put it right.

“We go again, we try and get everybody upbeat, we try and get everybody going again and hopefully the lads come back ready to go again and we’ll try and get out of the division. That’s what we have to do.

“We were top of the league at the end of January but February and March was when we came right off it and never performed.”

Does he accept the season was a failure? “When you don’t win any trophy it’s a failure, or any title it’s a failure. In my career I’ve had so many highs, winning a lot of stuff at the highest level of the game. And when you don’t win it hurt like hell, and it’s something that doesn’t sit right with me and we’ll try and put it right.”

The calamitous way the season fell away has soured Lambert’s relationship with fans, which he spent a lot of time working on in his early days at the club. How can rebuild that bridge?

“The fans are so important to the football club,” the 50-year-old added. “Whether I’m here or wasn’t here, they’re so important to the club. All we gave everybody was enthusiasm when the club was ailing.

“As I said before, I watched a game before I came in, I always go back to it, the game against Middlesbrough, nobody booed and I think they were tired, there was nobody turning up. Now you’re getting over 20,000 people, which is great.

“But I’ve played in front of big crowds and I know what it’s like, I know the criticism comes with the game, but I tell you, you meet it head on, you go through it again and you get the crowd back again.

“And you only do that by winning and trying to play exciting football, and that’s what we’ll try and do. It’s not something that’s going to put me on the back foot, you meet it head on and you go again.”

Lambert says he has spoken to owner Marcus Evans and they will speak again next week: “We spoke yesterday and we have done over the last few months and we’ll have another meeting again.

“He’s obviously disappointed with the season being curtailed and disappointed with the finish, but he knows himself that for long parts of the season we were right up there and should be better than we were.

“But that’s the reality of it, we didn’t perform in February and March and when you don’t perform, results go against you.

“He’s disappointed, but he’s a realist as well, he’s got a realist’s instinct in his head to think ‘Where does it go wrong?’ and next week we’ll talk about everything that we think is relevant and going to help us going forward.”

Inevitably fans have expressed their concern that the club’s prized assets, the likes of Flynn Downes and Luke Woolfenden, might be targeted by sides from higher divisions hoping to get the for a relative song given the financial situation across the game and particularly in the lower leagues.

“That can happen anyway at the best of times,” Lambert said. “If big clubs come in for players and the money’s right, clubs can’t stop it.

“The money would have to be right but you’ve got to realise the position the club’s in and where this pandemic is.

“When big clubs come in with X amount of money, sometimes it’s very difficult to stop it and that’s why you’ve got to have a conveyer belt of younger ones coming through and then you blood them and then they go again.

“There’s so much to discuss on where this pandemic has hurt football clubs, not just ours but I think everybody.”

Those youngsters who were blooded this season are likely to get more opportunities in the campaign ahead, whenever it starts.

“We can only go by what we see in training with the kids and the games that they play,” he said.

“And I’ve always said that if you’re good enough you’re old enough to come in, that’s always the case with me, that’s always the way I look at it. I needed a manager to do that for me and I do that myself with the kids.

“It’s going to be entirely on their heads to try and get in the team, that’s the game of football, you know you have to perform to force a manager’s hand to get in the side, and if you’re good enough it doesn’t matter to me what age you are. And that goes right across the board, you’ve got to perform to get in the team.”

He says he and Evans will discuss the squad and where it might need strengthening and which players might move on at their next meeting.

“Myself and Marcus will have a chat next week to see where we are with everything like that,” he said.

“But there’s got to be this realism now about what’s happened with the pandemic and how it is going to affect football clubs. I think that’s important.

“You’ve got to remember as well that fans won’t be allowed into the stadium, so really we have to take a lead from Marcus and see what says about the finances, and everybody has to respect that because of what’s happened.”

Yesterday general manager of football operations Lee O’Neill’s said “Our target was to try and make the play-offs this year” to the consternation of many fans, who believed the top two was the Blues’ goal, and Lambert believes first should always be the aim.

“When you’re in any sort of professional sport, it doesn’t matter how you dress it up, you’ve got to try and win to be successful,” he said.

“That’s always my mantra and when next season starts we’ll try and win the league, not to come second, we try and win it. Second is always failure in any professional sport, you want to try and win.

“And again, the most important people at the football club are the supporters and the players.”

Given fans’ current disenchantment at another disappointing season, what is Lambert’s message to them?

“Come again, come in your thousands again,” he said. “The fans have been absolutely brilliant since I’ve been here, they really have.

“Sometimes they criticise, which is totally part of the game and it’s not something I think is new. As long as they keep supporting the team and come back, and I’m pretty sure they will because the stadium in the good times was absolutely rocking, and we have to give them that back again.

“We have to get performances up to where they were again and we have to get everyone really bang at it through this period. We certainly need them, without a doubt, we need the supporters to come in their thousands and do exactly what they did when we stopped.

“That’s the nature of the game, you take the good and the bad but the good times will come again, that’s for sure."


Photo: TWTD



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Karlosfandangal added 16:25 - Jun 10
I watched the interview with Harry Reddnapp. He said that his son in law was offered the job at Ipswich (Lampard).
Lampard said to Harry “there is no money to spend” we all know what happened he went to Derby and brought Waghorn for £8 million.

Lambert will have to work with what we have and the only way to get money is to sell Downes Wolfenden.

Did not like McCarthy style of play but goes to show he did well on no money. Hurst turns up and spends a fortune on poor players.

Lambert did well to get Norwood and KVY so I think he will do ok in getting players who are better than we have it's only if he can keep the good ones.
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Dolphinblue added 16:32 - Jun 10
Dirtymagee....Lambert just repeats himself.......what u mean unlike you who has spent the last decade wrapped in a bubble of negativity.....POT.KETTLE.BLACK ANYONE!
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Carberry added 16:46 - Jun 10
We are just being taken for a ride. From the Evans to O'Neill to Lambert it's just PR spin. The best young players will go, we'll be left with the dross and we will bring in a couple of cheap journeymen who will add nothing. Apparently our suggestion for ending the season - basically anyone who wanted could join in the play-offs - has left us a laughing stock. Whose bright idea was that? There are no positives, nothing to look forward to, the future is bleak.
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Westy added 17:12 - Jun 10
I think Paul Lambert has made mistakes but agree the way this has been handled has been shocking. We are one game and should be treated as such. There has been consensus between the FA administered Premiership and the EFL administered Championship but not between all of the league's administered by the EFL e.g. Leagues One and Two. I find this perplexing and incompetent. Yes Paul. If it's safe for one it's safe for all especially as the season was so nearly concluded. As for money, the EFL could have paid the relatively small amount of money for virus testing that they could have easily afforded. They do not seem to realise the consequences of their decision, or should I say their inability to make one. Season ticket sales will plummet for all clubs as people will be aware that this virus may hang around for a long time, maybe years and there is no guarantee that next season won't be effected too. By not finishing the schedule of fixtures when there was every chance to do so has undermined the integrity of the game and of the EFL themselves. They have done huge damage with their incompetence.
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jas0999 added 17:28 - Jun 10
He is very lucky to still have a job.
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StavangerBlue added 17:54 - Jun 10
WHAT IS YOUR PLAN? WHAT IS THE STRATEGY?

We cannot have more of the same as it is NOT working.
3

therein61 added 18:11 - Jun 10
So onwards and upwards with the same ridiculous rotation policy selecting the two creeps(who think they are bigger than the club they openly admit they often speak to the owner, loves a crawler does Marcus) leaving young players looking bewildered and wondering what the effin hell is going on, if the gruesome twosome are invaluable off the park then stick em in the laundry room they might just see some sweat on shirts and mud they would wonder what the hell it is.
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DifferentGravy added 18:23 - Jun 10
Yes...it will cost a lot to pay PL.....which is why Evans will have no intention of doing it....and Lambert is in a cushy place either way.

None of that changes how i feel and the fact that Lambert has nearly a 50% losing rate at the club. Just by stats alone, how can anyone but the deluded(Dolphin Blue) defend. him?!?. Yes he has done good work off the pitch. But surely, in terms of the team moving UP the table and the divisions...............we are going the wrong way under Shambert.

'Len Brennan' and 'Running out' made excellent points, from fans who actually WATCH the games......the results really did paper over the cracks. I fail to see how the same players(minus Woolfie n Downes who will be gone).... with the ever ageing Calamity and Skuse in the spine......are ever going to turn it around
4

Steve_ITFC_Sweden added 18:50 - Jun 10
I'm willing to give PL another shot. He didn't get the results on the pitch (might have done with just a little more finance) but he created a much better atmosphere ariund the club.
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Shawsey added 18:57 - Jun 10
Amazed he couldn't see it at the beginning. Most of us could see that it was a lucky start and things would soon turn against us. Just go man, for the good of our club, just go.
3

ringwoodblue added 19:15 - Jun 10
Wow! 3 hrs, 9 mins and 10 secs of utter bulls**t, that must be a world record!

And I genuinely think he believes in what he's saying which adds delusional to Lambo's long list of faults. He's going nowhere so we must suffer this shambles for a lot longer I'm afraid. How long did it take Coventry to finally get out of Lg1, well I can see us taking as long unless Mr Sheehan buys the club.
1

ringwoodblue added 19:17 - Jun 10
Sheeran even
0

runningout added 19:42 - Jun 10
Marcus Evans didn't wish to get rid of MM and I think he's still burnt from going with what he thought the fans wanted. It was the right decision except he decided to employ an inept manager in Paul Hurst. Personally think it would have worked with Ross from St Mirren. What's going to happen is we will win a couple of games in 6, get a nose bleed and lose the next six with team of jokers that cannot handle success with going OTT. Ashley situation maybe interesting but not sure it's us. It wouldn't be much different on the popularity front. I hope I'm very wrong and we learn how to score more than 3 a game. We have a few players not showing it for us in Kenlock and I'm afraid Nydam won't cut it, with what I saw and below average loans. Got to be harsh before we hit another sorry season
0

runningout added 19:44 - Jun 10
meant without going OTT
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planetblue_2011 added 19:53 - Jun 10
Give him one more season & if he fails again then he's gotta go.
We might have to sell Downes & Woolfenden for Lambert to get any money from Evans. It's a shame because we should be selling some of the under achievers like Judge!! Then again we might not sell & Evans finally splashes the cash because we need a good team Built around 2 good players.
Pigs might fly Haha😂
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herfie added 21:24 - Jun 10
I listened to Mark Murphy's interview ‘live', this morning. Thought MM, In showing just the right amount of respect, asked PL some of the key questions that we, the supporters, would want answers to.

From the summary detailed above, it's clear that PL's responses were either lacking real depth or insight, or verging towards well-worn sound bite cliches. I always get the feeling - probably wrongly - that PL is somehow semi-detached from the nitty gritty of management/coaching responsibilities, and talks more like a director of football - large hand, small map. I don't dislike him, acknowledge his past playing and managerial credentials, but am increasingly unconvinced that he's right for us. Time, and possibly luck, will tell.
2

dirtydingusmagee added 21:48 - Jun 10
Dolphin lol youve surfaced again where you been ?searching for Nimo ? Decade of negativity,?
mmmmmmmm yer pretty much, since Evans rolled into town, with big ideas and f####d up . I may have missed something , but arent we now mid table Lg1 team . But you carry on, you keep wiping the egg off your face , lol.
3

Letchworth_Blue added 22:33 - Jun 10
1 or 2 things!??.....jesus we are in trouble.
0

KiwiBlue2 added 02:23 - Jun 11
After the home loss to Rotherham on 28 January things really went pear shaped, 4 points out of a possible 27 (up to 7 March) including the Rotherham game. That said we would have had a good run in with more home than away games but we had already shot our bolt and we got what we so richly deserved, i.e. nothing. It was also nauseating watching O'Neil and company trying to manoeuvre us into the play-offs. Thankfully that farce failed and we can now look forward to preparation for the new season.
If anyone thinks that rotation is always a smart move they should look at former All Black's coach Sir Graham Henry's failure at the 2007 World Cup. In the lead up to the competition he arrogantly boasted that he did not know his best XV. In other words he had a squad the size of 2 teams who could win it. While the format of League 1 is obviously different (2 round robins) the key to success is developing and maintaining effective combinations so that when you are under pressure the team plays coherently and effectively as the players are very familiar with their teammates. Multiple unnecessary changes are usually very corrosive leading to disjointed displays. Any manager who claims not to know his best combination after a month or so of competition games should ideally be replaced by someone who could. Anyway lets see what happens from here. Hopefully PL has absorbed the lessons from this season and we see more consistency of selection and the riding of momentum when we have it.
In conclusion I would like to convey my best wishes to all posters with the hope that the UK is soon on top of COVID-19 and that we can do better in the upcoming season whenever it gets underway. Kia Kaha.
3

Nobbysnuts added 08:58 - Jun 11
Burley and Dyer as his no 2. It's a no brainer really. They are there ready and waiting and both love the club like we do.
3

Cloddyseedbed added 09:18 - Jun 11
Nobbysnuts, it would be a very interesting combination and would get my vote when Lambert departs.
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Dockerblue added 09:45 - Jun 11
Have a look at yourselves? Great idea, starting with the worst captain l have ever known, no leadership skills on the pitch, always a mistake in him but then looks for someone else to blame. Get rid, he has been captain for the duration of the worse period of our club s history. Need l say more?
4

KiwiBlue2 added 10:27 - Jun 11
Burley and Dyer could be a great combination as manager and assistant, especially as there would be absolutely no doubt about their commitment to the cause and of course their footballing nous.
Identifying a captain who is actually worth his place in the starting line-up is a somewhat more difficult task.
0

Nobbysnuts added 10:28 - Jun 11
And for those people who say it will cost to much to get rid of Lambert well Evan's was stupid enough to give this clown a five year contract so he should pay him off out of his own millions.
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Razor added 10:40 - Jun 11
If the contract was drawn up correctly then it should cost nothing to get rid of him as surely one of the caveats must have been that if you dont at least reach the play offs than that is failure and you are OUT.

Len Brennan-----spot on my friend and that is a great game to pick----we had a brilliant first 20mts and took the lead and then spent the rest of the game hanging on and I thought then how lucky we are and this will not last.

Buster-----glad to see you siupport my choice which I mentioned days ago----NIGEL CLOUGH is the man and obvious choice.

Was O"Neil speaking out of turn earlier and without Evans knowing-----I hope so cos he can then leave as well and get an experienced bloke back at the helm-----like Derek Bowden for example.

Everybody have a good summer and lets hope we are back to normal soon.
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