MickA
Player Valuation: £10m
Thing is mate, we have been not taking risks with managers for ever, Martinez and Koeman and then Allardyce, all 'prem proven', all failed because ultimately one never understood the club or connected in Koeman, one is a stain on football and again doesn't understand or care about the club, the first in Martinez, did get us, ultimately he was let down by his own stubbornness.
Playing it safe guarantees nothing, look at West Bromwich, we aren't in a position to attract the proven best managers, so by its nature anyone will be seen as a risk.
Fonseca, could argue he failed in his biggest job at Porto, now dominating in a weak league with shakhtar, and doing well in cl, but is able to fully focus on the CL games due to the weak league etc, can he handle it at a more high media profile club, can he adjust to the league and adjust to not having the better players in each game in 95% of games?
Silva, vibrant positive young manager, or failed manager, the jury is out on him, is he Martinez mark 2?
Dyche, a twenty years younger big fat Sam, Burnley bubble well and truly burst like so many sides before who had one great season till Xmas and went down within the next two...
Howe, but he's a blue.... Ignoring the only time he left Bournemouth he was an utter disaster and as a near 40yo man got homesick... Martinez mark 2 again, but maybe more proof with that than with Silva.
So in short, anyone's a gamble, but some have clear glass ceilings in what the will ever achieve due to being limited, Artetas is a huge gamble, but he also has huge potential as well, I like it to going with young players over experienced ones, short term it's risky but long term it's the only chance unless you're city of doing anything...
I think there is too much weighting on experience as in number of games/years doing the job, teams coached, safe pair of hands etc. I'd like to see us appoint somebody who has experience of coaching players and developing them and their teams both collectively and individually.
500+ PL games as manager does nothing for me if all it offers is dull pragmatism and water treading. Doing research and going out to employ the best coaches you can who actually coach and have a progressive mindset is much more appealing to me and that's the route we now need to go along.
Maybe so mate, but more to gain also.
The way I look at this is really, thus league us so terrible outside 6 sides, that we will comfortably stay up despite the worst transfer spend waste in the games history, despite having three managers in one season, and despite not being able to do anything away from home.
You think in reality that someone cherry picked for his team by Guardiola and who has the most buzz about him by miles amongst young coaches here could actually be worse, I honestly don't.
Players who flop tend to be ones whose reputation as players got them over elevated, with Artetas career he's not getting statues built for him let's face it, his rep comes from those who taught or where on coaching courses with him, and from the managers who wanted him on there staff that badly.
This is a really good point too. Look at Swansea last year, Palace this, dare I say it Sunderland with Lardiola, all sides looking utterly doomed yet survived. As long as you have a core of quality you ahould be clear of relegation even if you have a disastrous spell. Arteta wouldn't be my first choice but if the proper due diligence is done and it seems he's ready for the task why not?








