Oct 27

man_redknapp

A thread on the WHO made me consider what I think of Redknapp’s time in charge of the club. He was the manager from 1994 to 2001 – a long time as manager.

Evaluating Redknapp’s reign is complicated though. Not least because he hasn’t really appealed as a character since he left the club. It’s far harder to take his cheeky-chappy routine when leaving Southampton in turmoil, or the shady circumstances of going back to Portsmouth, or the police investigations into some of his transfers, and the continuing rumours about his dealings, and his indignance in the media, and the fact that he’s now fluked a superb job at Spurs.

He was at West Ham for the best part of 10 years. Some of them were good, some were pretty bad.

He was in charge during the period when football became massively lucrative and there was an influx of foreign talent. Many teams in the Premiership benefitted in terms of entertainment and the talent coming through their clubs. I remember that we were exciting to watch, but I also remember that Derby had a bunch of exciting players at the time as well. Leicester were entertaining back then. It was a really good time for football.

Some of his signings were inspired, some were awful. Di Canio obviously. Sinclair was pulled from nowhere and turned into an England International player. Boogers, Radicioiu – not so much.

He was clearly good at getting the best out of some players, yet we were always a soft touch away and blew incredibly hot and cold as a side over his time at the club. We often simply wouldn’t turn up at matches, especially away from home – so incredibly inconsistent. We were basically considered a circus act by the media – they loved Redknapp though, and a day wouldn’t go by without a cringeworthy bit of crap from the Redknapp mouth.

Even if you take the misgivings over his dealings, and his actions after leaving the club into account, it’s still not clear what to make of his period in charge. I would say that at the end of it we ended up nowhere as a club, and that’s Redknapp’s biggest negative. 10 years wheeling and dealing and you end up pretty much where you started. Except by the time he left the wage bill was totally out of control, and could have brought the whole club down when we were eventually relegated with Roeder.

Still, it’s a part of our history now, and there’s no doubt that Harry is a huge part of our history now. Yes, a legend I suppose. And I would shake his hand and wish him well as a part of the ‘West Ham family’. With slightly gritted teeth.

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Oct 08

whu_gate

The club’s delayed reports for 2007-2008 make fascinating reading. It paints a fairly clear picture of the mess the club has got itself into over the last few years.

The first key statement is on the Tevez affair.

“It is clear that the original recruitment of Carlos Tevez and Javier Mascherano and the subsequent decision to plead guilty to the charges of breaches of rules, on legal advice, have had extremely damaging financial repercussions for West Ham United.”

Not half. A cost of £31.8m according to these reports, though some of that is creative accounting as that headline figure is to be spread over a number of years. But what’s interesting is that the club are now admitting that a key mistake was pleading guilty to the original FA charge. I always thought that this was the single biggest error – it was read by everybody as an admission of guilt whereas the club admit here that it was taken under legal advice.

Without going over the minutai of the Tevez affair, I have always felt that the club were guilty of little more than a minor technical offence, and that had they fought the charge in the first place the long-term ramifications would never have occured. Easy with hindsight I know, but the acceptance of guilt was essentially a plea-bargain with the FA that has spectacularly backfired, not just financially but in terms of the standing of West Ham in the footballing world. Whoever provided the ‘legal advice’ on that occasion did us no favours.

The next bombshell – our wages in 2007-2008 were £63.3m, having more than doubled in just two years. Estimated to be the 6th highest in the country! This is the true legacy of Eggert Magnusson that I believe I was the first person to write about – satisfying to see it officially documented now in print, because I took some fearsome stick at the time for suggesting that ‘Eggy’ might not be the messiah others believed him to be. The key factor – the crippling purchase of key players on wages that the club were never likely to be able to sustain.

“Poor investment decisions will impact adversely on a club‟s league performance and ultimately its financial results. By way of example, West Ham United purchased three high profile players in 2007/08 at a combined cost of £20m with total annual wages in excess of £12m. Those players made 36 starting appearances between them in the season.”

Take your pick of any three of Bellamy, Ljungberg, Dyer and Parker. There’s an element of hindsight here again – had Dyer and Bellamy stayed fit and shot us into Europe that season nobody would be complaining too much. And there’s no doubt that we paid top dollar for the top prospects available in this country – that is the sort of investment that many fans spent decades begging for. Nobody in their right mind could say hand-on-heart that they’d prefer it if we’d bought Marlon King rather than Craig Bellamy. In short, these were great signings, but unfortunately ones that we could never hope to sustain.

There’s a teaser for the next set of reports to try and allay the worst fears that is interesting…

“Since the year end the club has generated £30.1m in sale proceeds (net of significant realisation costs) and invested a further £18.4m in new players, net proceeds of £11.7m. This programme of player trading has achieved two objectives. Firstly, the size of the paying squad has been reduced from in excess of 30 at the end of the 2007/08 season and secondly a number of high earning but underperforming players have been replaced by players on lower wages but with greater potential.”

There’s the project in a nutshell. Profits in the transfer market, generating a smaller squad, with younger players with more potential. It’s a strategy that I fully support, as you’ll know if you’ve read anything I’ve written over the past two years or more.

Nobody expected this statement to be pretty reading, and it isn’t. It’s basically an attempt to produce a set of reports with all the worst financial news in one punch. The next set of reports will show the club trying to fight its way out of the corner. Critics will use it as a stick to beat the club with, and who can blame them – it makes pretty hideous reading. But the alternative view is that it just shows what a tremendous job the club is doing to keep its nose above water in the circumstances. And debatably even swim against the tide.

Whenever I look at these documents I always have the same emotional response. They remind me that supporting a club doesn’t depend on the financial results. That they would have to board up the stadium to keep us from supporting the club that we, for some strange reason, adore. The finances are, in the end, a sideshow.

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