Sep 30

man_nani

There’s an interesting discussion on the Who at the moment about the role of Gianluca Nani. The poster Youngie, who has proved themselves a very clued-up person when it comes to inside information, posted a long explanation of Nani’s role at the club…

Nani’s job;

Identifying players – Our scouting network is 100 times better than what it was under Curbishley or Pardew. For example we can watch any match of any team worth its sort at Chadwell Heath now, very few clubs can do that. We have scouts based all around Europe whereas in the past we used to just send our own scouts.

Developing commercial relations – See the relationship we have Cesena, Ujpest & Brescia for example. In the past we just used to be good mates with people at Bournemouth whereas we now have clear commercial relationships in place. He’s also formed a good relationship with AC Milan allowing us use of their medical facilities which are considered best in the world whilst ours are being redeveloped.

Signing players – Pretty self explanatory but having a sporting director allows him to fly abroad to meet players / clubs / agents. In the past we had to either get the player here for talks or let the manager fly out and miss taking training. Nani is also multilingual so there’s no need for translators.

Tying players down to new contracts – Again pretty self explanatory and it’s one less thing for the manager or CEO to do giving them more time to concentrate on their jobs.

Redeveloping the infrastructure of the club – See the new training ground as an example. Nani oversee a complete redevelopment of these facilities as well as the two foreign academies.

Selling players – Nani acts as a super agent and touts any player we have for sale around Europe. This wasn’t possible before as there just wasn’t enough time for the CEO or manager to do it. He heads discussions now with buying clubs particularly if they’re abroad. He’s also the first point of contact for any agents wishing to offer their player to us and is able to filter out the shit or unrealistic targets before consulting Duxbury & Zola. Likewise buying clubs will contact him as opposed to Duxbury and Nani is able to inform them of the availability of certain players without bothering Duxbury.

A link between the players agents and the CEO / manager – Again pretty self explanatory, something else that allows the manager and CEO to concentrate on their own jobs.

Appointing / identifying personnel – Nani is able to search for new staff and deal with the current staff as required.

There’s more too but they form the basis of his job.

That’s a pretty thorough description of Nani’s role, and that sort of information can only come from very high up within the club. It shows that far from being a hands-off adviser, Nani is at the very heart of everything that Duxbury and Zola are trying to achieve. It is a Director Of Football role with a very hands-on approach – it certainly would seem from that description that he certainly outranks Zola in many of the crucial areas of the running of the squad.

As I’ve written many times before, I think this structure absolutely suits a club like West Ham for one very simple reason. We aren’t big enough to guarantee the loyalty of any manager. If Zola does brilliantly he will be poached. If he does badly he will be sacked. So we need to be absolutely prepared for losing the manager for one reason or another. Nani gives us continuity, and has overhauled many weak areas of the club.

At the moment there are question marks over Nani’s contribution in terms of signings. Many of his signings come from foreign shores and have yet to really contribute on the pitch. Franco, Di Santo, Diamanti and Jimenez. Time well tell on those.

But to criticise Nani’s record on the basis of Savio’s lack of success at the club is absolutely ludicrous. Nani picked up Behrami for what was rumoured to be around £5m, and he is now worth at least £15m and is our best player imo. Ilunga cost £3m but is worth more than double that. These two bargains alone justify what Nani has been doing.

What we will have to measure in the long-term is the contribution of the young players that he has brought in. Players like Daprela, Kurucz, Nouble and others. Nobody in their right mind expects all of these to develop into premiership players, but realistically if only one of Nani’s young signings makes the grade it would justify the whole strategy.

I think the introduction of Nani is the best thing the club has ever done. It has brought us out of the footballing dark ages. If we do succeed as a club, it will be the key moment in our history. That’s how strongly I feel about it.

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Sep 29

It’s so early for a panic, but then again 4 defeats in a row is 4 defeats in a row whichever way you look at it. I thought it would be worth comparing our performances with similar fixtures last season…

Vs Wolves (A)
This season Won 2-0
Last season: No fixture.

Vs Spurs (H)
Last season: Lost 0-2.
This season: Lost 1-2.

Vs Blackburn (A)
Last season: 1-1
This season: 0-0

Vs Wigan (A)
Last Season: Won 1-0
This season: Lost 0-1

Vs Liverpool (H)
Last season: Lost 0-3
This season: Lost 2-3

Vs Man City (A)
Last season: Lost 0-3
This season: Lost 1-3

When you look at it like that, you can make a case for saying that the only difference between the two seasons is that we lost a close game at Wigan rather than winning it. Hardly enough evidence to spark a panic. We scored more goals this year in the same fixtures, and the victory away at Wolves is one of those rare away wins that will show up as one of our best results at the end of the season.

There are lots of mitigating circumstances. The first is injuries, which continue to frustrate any plans we have. The second is the introduction of a bunch of new, foreign players whose first job is simply to get used to their new surroundings and the new league, which is notoriously difficult to settle in. The third is the unsettling off-the-field situation, with new owners being sought from the holding company in charge of West Ham – not an ideal situation by any means.

The fact is that we haven’t been too bad so far. We should have certainly beaten Bolton in the cup in the position we were in. The Spurs, Wigan and Liverpool games were close affairs. We had a legitimate goal disallowed last night, and I thought Lescott committed a red card foul in the opening minutes that wasn’t punished.

The disappointment is only that we haven’t nicked more points in games that you might not expect us to do well in. We all know that occasionally we will beat a better side like Spurs or Man City. This season we haven’t yet, and that puts more pressure on fixtures against more lowly teams… like Fulham on Sunday. If we lose that then the knives will be out. But Fulham are no pushover at all, and look capable once again of outperforming their reputation in the Premier league this season.

Sep 16

man_zola

There’s some criticism of Zola floating around at the moment. It arrives on the first anniversary of his appointment.

Some of his selections and tactical decisions do seem inexplicable at times. Playing a straight 4-4-2 with only one fit (and totally inexperienced) winger seems nonsensical, particularly with Kovac and Parker as just about the least dynamic central midfield partnership in history. The match up at Wigan is disappointing, despite reports suggesting that we probably deserved a draw.

But to judge Zola’s first year these minor failings have to be put into perspective. A year ago we appointed a manager with no experience. The club was in desperate financial problems off the field – our owner near-bankrupt, a hugely expensive legal action hanging over us. In short there were some extremely bad vibes around the club.

I think Zola was hired on the basis that he would have little money to work with, and would be overseeing a period of financial contraction if we were to survive. The long-term Nani-inspired plan of overhauling the youth intake would take years to bear fruit, and in the meantime a series of cost-cutting measures would both reduce the squad size and the significant wage bill. Zola may have wanted to whine in public about lack of funds since, but he has had no basis to do so – I think he joined the club with his eyes open.

Since he joined the club have overhauled the squad further for significant savings, yet seem to have made progress at the same time. Although great credit goes to Nani for spotting some great potential signings (Ilunga, Behrami, Kovac, Jimenez), the main reason for our success is Zola and Clarke. I don’t always understand or appreciate all of their decisions, but I am not so blind as to dismiss their major achievements in charge.

Ninth place in the league – that’s an excellent benchmark. It’s not that we haven’t had the players – I think we do have somewhere near the ninth-best squad in the league. But in terms of what was going on off the field it’s a major achievement. We lost Bellamy, and it has been revealed there was significant pressure to sell our best players over the past 12 months. Zola and the club held fast, and have done so again this Summer – the basic spine of a mid-table Premiership team has been retained.

I’d love to know where critics would expect us to place in the Premiership. Some point at Fulham’s 7th place last season, but they did have outlandish luck with avoiding injuries last season (rather like we did in that FA cup final year under Pardew). But realistically we have had no right to finish above Man City, Spurs and Sunderland as we did last season. In short, Zola did great and we must give him credit when he does all that could realistically be asked of him.

And during that time Zola has encouraged young players who other managers may well have cast aside. Tomkins was always a sparkling talent from the off, but Collison and Stanislas needed a leap of faith from the manager, and delivered magnificently when given extended runs in the side. I think Zola has created Premiership standard players that other managers wouldn’t have discovered, and I would back him to do so again this season. Hines played at the weekend and looks like the next talent to be given a chance. I don’t think these are talents to compare to the Coles and Ferdinands of our recent past, but in a way that makes their progress under Zola all the more impressive. And speaking in purely financial terms, I would say that Zola has uncovered £15m of talent simply by trusting and then developing good young players – that’s a skill that many managers don’t seem to possess.

What more could Zola have done? Well the jury is still out on our creative football, although the basis seems to be there somewhere for an improved system of play. It still delivers only in fits and starts, and that is something we would all like to see improve. The injury problems that plagued Curbishley don’t really seem to have gone away under Zola – if we could sort that out we would be in a much stronger position to play well consistently.

And there is still criticism of our performance in the last transfer window. In short, I think this complaint is ludicrous. For a club with no money, we managed to bring in Kovac, Ilunga, Jimenez and Diamanti on a budget – all potential first-teamers. How many other clubs brought four first-team players into their squad this Summer? The only player we lost was Collins, and looking at the squad we were ludicrously overstuffed with defenders – he was the best player to sell. It sounds like the Mexican Franco will join us as a short-term measure – much better to do that on the cheap than blow a few more million on strikers with little chance of matching Cole’s ability.

Being realistic, I feel that the problems under Zola are few and far between, and are best explained by problems largely outside his control. I struggle to think how much more he could have done with the squad that he has. I would like us to be playing better, along with every fan of every club in the World. Whether any other manager would have this group of players performing any better than Zola has is debatable. I see little more that the little man could have done.

Sep 02

It has become the most over-used metaphor in sports journalism – the transfer window, which was still tantalisingly ajar, has now been shut, and the Premiership curtains have been drawn. The shutters of mediocrity have been well and truly closed. The free transfers vent still offers faint possibilities ahead, but in terms of the window the locks have been applied and the key is back in the kitchen drawer.

So James Collins went to Villa. The papers are saying £5 million. I really don’t know how we will cope without him – there’s nobody to play for us at centre-back now, apart from Upson, Tomkins, Gabbidon, Spector, Kovac, N’Gala and new signing Da Costa. A good sale – a player who has blown totally hot and cold for us over the years, and who perhaps needed a change.

Savio also went. There’s nothing to say. We spent some money (nowhere near the £9 million quoted) on a young talent, and he didn’t hit the ground running so we’ve decided to cash in. I think it was a good decision – if Savio had have stayed he would have to have gone out on loan anyway, because he was just nowhere near a first team place.

I know nothing about the Italian players – Da Costa and Diamanti. If they turn out to be good, then that’s a bonus. If they are average then we got what we paid for. If they’re rubbish then we string up Nani.

I’ve become dulled to the concept of the transfer merry-go-round. I just don’t think you can judge a club by what they do in the transfer market. And certainly you can’t judge West Ham. If we develop one excellent youth player this season into a viable Premiership player, then that is worth £5m+ to us in cash terms. What are Collison, Tomkins and Stanislas worth after last season? They cost us next to nothing.

The bottom line is that we haven’t spent that much, if anything at all, in this transfer window. There obviously isn’t a lot of money floating around within the club, for well-documented reasons. But I don’t think there was a need to spend too much anyway. We’re an improving side, we’ve been strengthened over the Summer, we have excellent prospects at youth level. I’m happy to see us continuing that development.

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