Spudulike Posted 21 May 2025 Posted 21 May 2025 3 minutes ago, niyaminski said: Cooper was too quick to properly gauge the fans’ reaction. Was never meant to be his. Was meant to be Potter’s job. But he was stalling for a good week if I remember correctly. Horror was loudly expressed on socials when Cooper was linked. He was bottom of all shortlists. Can't remember a post suggesting that it would be a good appointment. And it wasn't, obvs.
CrazyKopCorner Posted 21 May 2025 Posted 21 May 2025 The powers that be at this club are completely deaf of the fans requests. I've never none such a disconnect. I really feel that a collective Foxestalk Forum could run this club better than these complete and utter buffoons.
ClaphamFox Posted 21 May 2025 Posted 21 May 2025 I’m clinging onto the fact that the fat lady has not sung yet. Graham Potter, Scott Parker and Jesse Marsch have all previously been reported as being basically in the door and none materialised in the end. There is hope, people! 4
Kp1984 Posted 21 May 2025 Posted 21 May 2025 27 minutes ago, RedSoxUK said: He isn't that bad. I’m totally fine with this in the championship 1
stu Posted 21 May 2025 Posted 21 May 2025 Do I want him, no. However, I think he’s the best option we have if he genuinely wants the job knowing we are up a creek without a paddle He will be the best manager suited to the squad as it is over other free options like Dyche etc. 1
CrispinLA in Texas Posted 21 May 2025 Posted 21 May 2025 13 minutes ago, ClaphamFox said: I’m clinging onto the fact that the fat lady has not sung yet. Graham Potter, Scott Parker and Jesse Marsch have all previously been reported as being basically in the door and none materialised in the end. There is hope, people! Potter and Marsch were offered the job and turned it down
Lineker's Left Foot Posted 21 May 2025 Posted 21 May 2025 1 minute ago, CrispinLA in Texas said: Potter and Marsch were offered the job and turned it down Always thought Marsch was Jeremy Kyle’s twin brother! 1
Wink84 Posted 21 May 2025 Posted 21 May 2025 I don't know what people are complaining about. He has his own staff, he's a clear upgrade on Ruud.
CrispinLA in Texas Posted 21 May 2025 Posted 21 May 2025 Just now, Wink84 said: I don't know what people are complaining about. He has his own staff, he's a clear upgrade on Ruud. Probably one reason the board want him, they've been shown this season to be incompetent in trying to find any coaching staff themselves
Popular Post Saint Jim Posted 21 May 2025 Popular Post Posted 21 May 2025 Saints fan here in peace. Just thought I'd give you some thoughts on Martin (steer well clear if you can) 1. Martin’s philosophy isn’t “Brave Football”—it’s risk-deferral disguised as bravery The consensus says Martin’s teams play "brave," possession-heavy football. But real bravery in football means taking actions that carry visible, immediate risk in service of scoring or winning. Martin’s style delays risk—endless short passes in deep areas to “control” games—but avoids the direct danger of vertical play. It’s low-tempo safety dressed as courage 2. Martin's possession obsession is not about winning—it's about identity preservation Football is a game where the winner is the team that scores more goals. Martin’s model instead tries to “play the right way”—even when that way doesn’t win. His identity as a manager is tied to aesthetics, not outcomes. 3. He overrates system intelligence and underrates Human intelligence Martin’s system demands extreme positional discipline, pattern recognition, and ball circulation. But football is a high-noise, low sample decision environment where intuitive improvisation often beats system logic. Martin tries to systemise what should be instinctual. 4. The real value Martin brings Is psychological safety, not tactical innovation Martin’s real gift isn’t his tactics—it’s his ability to create an environment where players feel heard, respected, and emotionally safe. Consistency of emotion and trust accelerates player buy-in and cohesion. But it's also why his tactics go unchallenged—because players don’t push back. 5. Martin mirrors Guardiola without understanding the core mechanism Guardiola’s model is opponent-reactive — he manipulates shape in response to pressure patterns and vulnerabilities. Martin’s is internally consistent — a closed loop of pattern repetition regardless of opposition response. Pep is playing chess and Martin plays ballet I'd add to this, that Saints games under Martin have been on the whole the most boring and dull affairs I have ever seen. I remember a West Brom fan falling asleep at St Marys and I can't blame him 17 16 1
ClaphamFox Posted 21 May 2025 Posted 21 May 2025 7 minutes ago, CrispinLA in Texas said: Potter and Marsch were offered the job and turned it down Potter was reportedly dithering and Top got fed up. I’m also not remotely convinced Marsch was offered it. 1
Free Falling Foxes Posted 21 May 2025 Posted 21 May 2025 I'm reading that he's a Buddist. Perhaps he can get the monks in again? I mean, look what happened last time.
Ricey Posted 21 May 2025 Posted 21 May 2025 5 minutes ago, Saint Jim said: Saints fan here in peace. Just thought I'd give you some thoughts on Martin (steer well clear if you can) 1. Martin’s philosophy isn’t “Brave Football”—it’s risk-deferral disguised as bravery The consensus says Martin’s teams play "brave," possession-heavy football. But real bravery in football means taking actions that carry visible, immediate risk in service of scoring or winning. Martin’s style delays risk—endless short passes in deep areas to “control” games—but avoids the direct danger of vertical play. It’s low-tempo safety dressed as courage 2. Martin's possession obsession is not about winning—it's about identity preservation Football is a game where the winner is the team that scores more goals. Martin’s model instead tries to “play the right way”—even when that way doesn’t win. His identity as a manager is tied to aesthetics, not outcomes. 3. He overrates system intelligence and underrates Human intelligence Martin’s system demands extreme positional discipline, pattern recognition, and ball circulation. But football is a high-noise, low sample decision environment where intuitive improvisation often beats system logic. Martin tries to systemise what should be instinctual. 4. The real value Martin brings Is psychological safety, not tactical innovation Martin’s real gift isn’t his tactics—it’s his ability to create an environment where players feel heard, respected, and emotionally safe. Consistency of emotion and trust accelerates player buy-in and cohesion. But it's also why his tactics go unchallenged—because players don’t push back. 5. Martin mirrors Guardiola without understanding the core mechanism Guardiola’s model is opponent-reactive — he manipulates shape in response to pressure patterns and vulnerabilities. Martin’s is internally consistent — a closed loop of pattern repetition regardless of opposition response. Pep is playing chess and Martin plays ballet I'd add to this, that Saints games under Martin have been on the whole the most boring and dull affairs I have ever seen. I remember a West Brom fan falling asleep at St Marys and I can't blame him Still, good news about the chocolate oranges… 4
Dr The Singh Posted 21 May 2025 Posted 21 May 2025 10 minutes ago, Saint Jim said: Saints fan here in peace. Just thought I'd give you some thoughts on Martin (steer well clear if you can) 1. Martin’s philosophy isn’t “Brave Football”—it’s risk-deferral disguised as bravery The consensus says Martin’s teams play "brave," possession-heavy football. But real bravery in football means taking actions that carry visible, immediate risk in service of scoring or winning. Martin’s style delays risk—endless short passes in deep areas to “control” games—but avoids the direct danger of vertical play. It’s low-tempo safety dressed as courage 2. Martin's possession obsession is not about winning—it's about identity preservation Football is a game where the winner is the team that scores more goals. Martin’s model instead tries to “play the right way”—even when that way doesn’t win. His identity as a manager is tied to aesthetics, not outcomes. 3. He overrates system intelligence and underrates Human intelligence Martin’s system demands extreme positional discipline, pattern recognition, and ball circulation. But football is a high-noise, low sample decision environment where intuitive improvisation often beats system logic. Martin tries to systemise what should be instinctual. 4. The real value Martin brings Is psychological safety, not tactical innovation Martin’s real gift isn’t his tactics—it’s his ability to create an environment where players feel heard, respected, and emotionally safe. Consistency of emotion and trust accelerates player buy-in and cohesion. But it's also why his tactics go unchallenged—because players don’t push back. 5. Martin mirrors Guardiola without understanding the core mechanism Guardiola’s model is opponent-reactive — he manipulates shape in response to pressure patterns and vulnerabilities. Martin’s is internally consistent — a closed loop of pattern repetition regardless of opposition response. Pep is playing chess and Martin plays ballet I'd add to this, that Saints games under Martin have been on the whole the most boring and dull affairs I have ever seen. I remember a West Brom fan falling asleep at St Marys and I can't blame him Post of the year
Blue ROI Posted 21 May 2025 Posted 21 May 2025 1 hour ago, Nalis said: It's 17 pages of people saying they don't want him here and polite Southampton troll saying he isn't actually that bad. Phew!!
Vazman Posted 21 May 2025 Posted 21 May 2025 No foresite, a lazy boring appointment, if true, I'm falling asleep just reading this thread
Lambert09 Posted 21 May 2025 Posted 21 May 2025 9 minutes ago, Saint Jim said: Saints fan here in peace. Just thought I'd give you some thoughts on Martin (steer well clear if you can) 1. Martin’s philosophy isn’t “Brave Football”—it’s risk-deferral disguised as bravery The consensus says Martin’s teams play "brave," possession-heavy football. But real bravery in football means taking actions that carry visible, immediate risk in service of scoring or winning. Martin’s style delays risk—endless short passes in deep areas to “control” games—but avoids the direct danger of vertical play. It’s low-tempo safety dressed as courage 2. Martin's possession obsession is not about winning—it's about identity preservation Football is a game where the winner is the team that scores more goals. Martin’s model instead tries to “play the right way”—even when that way doesn’t win. His identity as a manager is tied to aesthetics, not outcomes. 3. He overrates system intelligence and underrates Human intelligence Martin’s system demands extreme positional discipline, pattern recognition, and ball circulation. But football is a high-noise, low sample decision environment where intuitive improvisation often beats system logic. Martin tries to systemise what should be instinctual. 4. The real value Martin brings Is psychological safety, not tactical innovation Martin’s real gift isn’t his tactics—it’s his ability to create an environment where players feel heard, respected, and emotionally safe. Consistency of emotion and trust accelerates player buy-in and cohesion. But it's also why his tactics go unchallenged—because players don’t push back. 5. Martin mirrors Guardiola without understanding the core mechanism Guardiola’s model is opponent-reactive — he manipulates shape in response to pressure patterns and vulnerabilities. Martin’s is internally consistent — a closed loop of pattern repetition regardless of opposition response. Pep is playing chess and Martin plays ballet I'd add to this, that Saints games under Martin have been on the whole the most boring and dull affairs I have ever seen. I remember a West Brom fan falling asleep at St Marys and I can't blame him A lot of our fans struggled with Enzo but enzos system is actually quite attractive with the right players. Martin will be one of the least popular managers we’ve ever had as our fans are already at their limits with the club and nobody wants to pay to be sat through sideways football. Not having a striker and Martin ball is a terrifying thought
HankMarvin Posted 21 May 2025 Posted 21 May 2025 Hopefully a Percy story tonight, that it’s not the case
honeybradger Posted 21 May 2025 Posted 21 May 2025 19 minutes ago, stu said: Do I want him, no. However, I think he’s the best option we have if he genuinely wants the job knowing we are up a creek without a paddle He will be the best manager suited to the squad as it is over other free options like Dyche etc. He's the worst option we have. Keep Ruud, crawl back on our hand's and knees for Cooper, do anything but bring in the BTEC Brendan Rodgers. We saw how much destruction the actual one dealt to the club and Martin is a worse version of that.
Saint1983 Posted 21 May 2025 Posted 21 May 2025 13 minutes ago, Saint Jim said: Saints fan here in peace. Just thought I'd give you some thoughts on Martin (steer well clear if you can) 1. Martin’s philosophy isn’t “Brave Football”—it’s risk-deferral disguised as bravery The consensus says Martin’s teams play "brave," possession-heavy football. But real bravery in football means taking actions that carry visible, immediate risk in service of scoring or winning. Martin’s style delays risk—endless short passes in deep areas to “control” games—but avoids the direct danger of vertical play. It’s low-tempo safety dressed as courage 2. Martin's possession obsession is not about winning—it's about identity preservation Football is a game where the winner is the team that scores more goals. Martin’s model instead tries to “play the right way”—even when that way doesn’t win. His identity as a manager is tied to aesthetics, not outcomes. 3. He overrates system intelligence and underrates Human intelligence Martin’s system demands extreme positional discipline, pattern recognition, and ball circulation. But football is a high-noise, low sample decision environment where intuitive improvisation often beats system logic. Martin tries to systemise what should be instinctual. 4. The real value Martin brings Is psychological safety, not tactical innovation Martin’s real gift isn’t his tactics—it’s his ability to create an environment where players feel heard, respected, and emotionally safe. Consistency of emotion and trust accelerates player buy-in and cohesion. But it's also why his tactics go unchallenged—because players don’t push back. 5. Martin mirrors Guardiola without understanding the core mechanism Guardiola’s model is opponent-reactive — he manipulates shape in response to pressure patterns and vulnerabilities. Martin’s is internally consistent — a closed loop of pattern repetition regardless of opposition response. Pep is playing chess and Martin plays ballet I'd add to this, that Saints games under Martin have been on the whole the most boring and dull affairs I have ever seen. I remember a West Brom fan falling asleep at St Marys and I can't blame him Good post that. 1
LestaLad Posted 21 May 2025 Posted 21 May 2025 Wouldn’t be surprised if Rudkin had leaked this so we’re all relieved when we announce we’re sticking with Ruud.
Scotch Posted 21 May 2025 Posted 21 May 2025 I was brought up a rangers fan but in my late teens realised that I didn't want to be associated with a club and fanbase that glorified and revelled in politics, hatred and religious bigotry. Having said that, the prospect of a King Power owned Leicester team, put together and run by Jon Rudkin and managed by Russell Martin has had me listening to the Sash whilst browsing second hand Ulster scarfs all afternoon 2
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