Print Story On the Ineptitude of Albion
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By yicky yacky (Fri Oct 19, 2007 at 12:13:59 PM EST) football, footie, monkeys (all tags)

It may have come to certain of our members' attention that, with the defeat of our Association Football collective at the hands of the Tsarists, England are in grave danger of not qualifying for next year's European Championships in the Austro-Swissenland.

In this brief pamphlet, we seek to advance the thesis that this may, in fact, be no bad thing.



In the manner of tedious and horrid business meetings worldwide, we resort to the bullet-point list format in outlining the positive aspects of such an outcome.

Structural

  • The current manager -- one S. McClaren -- will find that his position is largely untenable. Given the circumstances surrounding his appointment, the evidence available regarding both his tactical ability and his "man-management" skills, the results during his tenure, and the tepid affection in which he is held owing to the aforementioned, this, we argue, is a beneficial outcome, not least because of the damage inflicted upon the "Must be English" school of philosophy partially responsible for his instalment.

    We note, with some despondency, that this occurrence may not transpire, given the lingering questions of 'due diligence' hanging over his employers, but we trust that the fevered, voracious and undistracted press, together with the heatedly irrational invective of the fans, will be sufficient to shift the balance of probabilities to this end.

  • In light of the above occurring, it is to be hoped that the braying blood-lust will be of such magnitude that the summary dismissal of one manager will be insufficient in its quelling effect and that certain jowelsome and equivocating heads further up the chain of command will also have to roll. Should this occur, it is hoped that the excision of the incompetent continue unabated in such a way as to demand full, systematic reform. The power of inertia, however, renders this as being of low probability, however desirable.

  • The English players will have a whole summer off in which they can rest and recuperate in time to begin the serious business of attempting to qualify for the World Cup the following season.

    Furthermore, the invective aimed in the direction of the players will hopefully sting them into some form of self-analysis and improvement, resulting in a rekindled hunger (Note: not 'desire', but hunger) in time for the next qualifying campaign. Given that this ought to have occurred on several previous occasions, it may not happen now, but one can hope.

Diplomatic

  • The Swiss-Austrian authorities will be able to deploy their resources more effectively, not having to worry about three hundred drunken junior gorillas singing 'Ten German Bombers' while molesting passing women and throwing assorted missiles at anyone who asks them to calm down. Yes: We know they're a minuscule minority, but this doesn't prevent them from also being a royal pain in the hole.

  • On the home front, any reports of violence and police clashes can be received in a spirit of wry amusement, curiosity and vicarious enjoyment of others' transgressions, rather than with the desperately optimistic hope that it wasn't 'our lot', followed by the sinking feeling of shame, disgust and embarrassment that is usually so endemic to these affairs.

    In addition, the "waiting game" aspect will no longer apply. Unlike the parents of some sociopathic toddler at a tea party, we will not have a permanent anxiety over what may, possibly, within reason, be about to occur; nor will we silently have to greet every passing flash point with a sense of trepidation, followed by an all-too-temporary sense of guilty relief should nothing untoward transpire.

    It simply won't be a factor.

Cultural

  • Those of us who actually like football will be able to take in the Euros in relatively enjoyable comfort and discretion, unassailed by the several-dozen tabloid-derived opinions thrust upon our persons daily by people who typically show all the interest of a hagfish. No longer will we have to hear the shrieking and over-demonstrative support (or exaggerated disappointment in the case of a missed goal opportunity) from a co-watcher who then asks, in all sincerity, "Who does Ronaldo play for?"

  • There will be no horrendously tacky corporate tie-in opportunities. One may even find aggregations of beer in the supermarket without a football and a cross of St. George on their casings. Not every advertisement will follow the "Football!! Now buy our shit ..." paradigm of brand awareness.

  • There will be no glut of shoddy songs from has-beens, cynical opportunists and, worst of all, the 'official providers' infecting the lower reaches of the charts; no false-dichotomy bullshit discussions over "which one is best".

  • Perhaps most importantly: There will be no lingering and grey sense of disappointment over how a group of essentially decent players fail to perform as we know they can; no false dawns (beating a lesser team four-nil); no poor performances (losing to the same). Neither the highs nor lows will be as amplified or masochistically masturbated over by all and sundry. Most shockingly: There will be no quarter-final exit on penalties.

  • For those who dislike football, there will be no football. For those who genuinely like football, there will be nothing but.

Do not misunderstand. I still hope England qualify (but have strong doubts as to whether they will). I'm just saying that it's not all bad should they fail.

Half-full, people. The glass is half-full. I'm quite looking forward to it.

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On the Ineptitude of Albion | 19 comments (19 topical, 0 hidden) | Trackback
Whoa, I'm confused by georgeha (4.00 / 2) #1 Fri Oct 19, 2007 at 12:15:54 PM EST
I thought you were talking about the rural town to my west that has some of my inlaws and doesn't like to pay for the library.




And the answer is Ronaldo plays for himself. by Christopher Robin was Murdered (4.00 / 4) #2 Fri Oct 19, 2007 at 12:52:29 PM EST
When you are Ronaldo, the only challenge left to face is the never-silent, seductive, and fatal voice of the little sexy demon-Ronaldo within. It hisses again and again: "You, Ronaldo, can slow down. You, Ronaldo, have done it. The world is yours, Ronaldo's."

But you, Ronaldo, know, because you are Ronaldo!, that there is no "done." You play to best yourself, Ronaldo, to quiet the raging devils within, and because, when you kick, you hear angels weeping, for they are just crappy angels and can never be you, Ronaldo.

So you play on, alone, triumphant, tragic. Ronaldo.

At least, that's what I tell people when they ask who Ronaldo plays for. To tell you the truth, it doesn't come up that often.



Genius. [nt] by yicky yacky (4.00 / 1) #4 Fri Oct 19, 2007 at 12:55:57 PM EST

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Excellent ... parallel universe ... by BlueOregon (4.00 / 3) #3 Fri Oct 19, 2007 at 12:53:50 PM EST

Reading this made me feel as if it came from a parallel universe.

Off in the world of Marvel Comics the "New Excalibur" title, which features Captain Britain, has been dealing with Albion for several issues. There's also the Alan Moore -- or rather, I think Moore's daughter -- comic of that name.

But with Albion, the Tsarists, and Astro-Swissenland I'm envisioning this football world of yours as one created by Philip Pullman -- The Golden Goal, The Subtle Kick, The Amber Ale.

_
"The german quoting guy is a little bit out there." (fleece)


Touche, sir. by yicky yacky (4.00 / 1) #5 Fri Oct 19, 2007 at 01:11:41 PM EST

The possibilities in Astro-Swissenland boggle the mind.


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Sounds reasonable... by Metatone (4.00 / 3) #6 Fri Oct 19, 2007 at 01:55:32 PM EST
It would be nice if the "Must be English" faction got suppressed until an English manager who can, well, manage turns up.

Certainly it's a lot easier to enjoy the football when England aren't involved.

I'd like to hope we'd see some changes at youth training level. There's this foreign concept those Ruskies were toying with.. it's called "possession football" I understand and involved passing to a player in the same shirt as you. I'd like to hope we can pick up on this innovation and see where it leads us.



Not to pick on Gerrard specifically, by yicky yacky (4.00 / 2) #7 Fri Oct 19, 2007 at 02:56:35 PM EST

(they're all at it), but had you seen this? (courtesy of GU).


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I hadn't seen it! by Metatone (4.00 / 2) #8 Fri Oct 19, 2007 at 05:06:08 PM EST
Ouch.

Perhaps we can offer Riquelme a British passport?

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no-one is as vicious as fans of your own team -nt- by clover kicker (4.00 / 2) #11 Fri Oct 19, 2007 at 07:54:34 PM EST


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He's been having a bad patch by nebbish (4.00 / 2) #17 Tue Oct 23, 2007 at 07:15:01 AM EST
All it proves I think is how fucked we are without him.

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It's political correctness gone mad!
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Not a good thing at all. by ambrosen (4.00 / 3) #9 Fri Oct 19, 2007 at 05:13:47 PM EST
They want Martin O'Neill and we're actually in the top half of the table.



No doubt with Mr Lerner's by Metatone (4.00 / 2) #10 Fri Oct 19, 2007 at 05:38:46 PM EST
millions you'll get Fabio Capello or someone in, so it'll be ok...

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The problem is by leviramsey (4.00 / 2) #14 Mon Oct 22, 2007 at 03:16:17 AM EST

Villa are already over a year into the five-year plan with O'Neill. The odds are that no other manager will have the same plans as O'Neill, effectively wasting the past year.

Admittedly, the new board have made dramatic progress with regard to other aspects of the club (cf. Bodymoor Heath, the Holte Pub, Nike, more extensive marketing, and improved relations with the supporters (how many other club directors are willing to post in an official capacity on fan message boards)), but the team on the pitch is O'Neill's part of the plan (by all accounts, Lerner, Krulak, Fitzgerald, and company have basically no involvement in the transfers). Still, transitioning to a new manager will entail adding at least one year to the plan as he gets a sense of his surroundings (O'Neill didn't really get that sense until at least January of last year).

I, for one, hope that the Must Be English syndrome strikes again and results in Fat Sam being hired... the Geordies'll have to find another manager who will underachieve at a Massive Club. They'll have to act fast, though... word is that David O'Leary will be the next Ireland manager.


--
Could I be the next Lee Abrams?
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Hmmm by yicky yacky (4.00 / 2) #15 Mon Oct 22, 2007 at 09:13:32 AM EST

Villa are already over a year into the five-year plan with O'Neill. The odds are that no other manager will have the same plans as O'Neill, effectively wasting the past year.

That's true, but then again it's Villa, so I'm not sure anyone will really mind.


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Fear your wishes. by Tonatiuh (4.00 / 2) #12 Fri Oct 19, 2007 at 11:01:11 PM EST
If England does not qualify then they may be seeded in the 3rd tier of European football, that could mean to be in a similar group to the one in which Scotland was seeded this time.

Italy (or Germany and France (or Holland) in the same group are frankly not  a desirable outcome....



Yes please by komet (4.00 / 2) #13 Sat Oct 20, 2007 at 03:21:17 AM EST
send over the hooligans - I'm counting on them for a number of fraudulent insurance claims.

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<ni> komet: You are functionally illiterate as regards trashy erotica.


We're still going to qualify by nebbish (4.00 / 2) #16 Tue Oct 23, 2007 at 07:10:05 AM EST
IMHO. Russia won't beat Israel on their home turf. Croatia will be tricky but eminently doable. We'll see - all speculation of course.

I'm torn on the management question. Half of me thinks we need to stop knocking managers and let them get on with it - there is so much luck in football it seems stupid to sack them at the first disappointment. McClaren has made some very good decisions along with the bad ones, and it seems that he's finding his feet after a bad start.

On the other hand he quite patently isn't the best for the job. I'd rather see Scolari, O'Neil or Mourinho in his shoes. But how much better would they actually be? I think the difference would be marginal - and that we'd probably only see the difference if we let them get on with the job for a few years.

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It's political correctness gone mad!


I hope you're right. by yicky yacky (4.00 / 2) #18 Tue Oct 23, 2007 at 11:40:51 AM EST

I can't really see Russia not winning in Israel, though.

At this point, the Israelis are out. They've still got a mathematical chance, but it relies on a.) England losing to Croatia, b.) them beating Russia, c.) them beating Macedonia, d.) Russia losing to Andorra and e.) them scoring 12 or more goals without reply in two games. Not happening.

The one upside is that Israel would probably quite like to beat Russia anyway, given their respective histories, but I'm not sure of the extent to which this applies to the team members themselves.

You're right that McClaren has made some good off-field decisions, but the problem is as much his tactical awareness as his results. Russia didn't just beat England; Hiddink out-witted McClaren by exploiting a left-side hole which should never have existed and could have been fixed in real-time. We're far too eager to sack managers in this country but, in a number of cases (including McClaren's), we've been far too eager to hire them, too.


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You're probably right by nebbish (4.00 / 2) #19 Wed Oct 24, 2007 at 07:43:15 AM EST
I just can't help thinking that when we lose a game, which is inevitable for any side, it's easy with hindsight to find tactical failings. But yes, our defense left a lot to be desired.

Like you say, I'll be enjoying the European cup whether we're in it or not. I'm almost as worried about Italy getting through as I am about England...

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On the Ineptitude of Albion | 19 comments (19 topical, 0 hidden) | Trackback