Like when Zaha joined Man Utd, when a player wants to move on you have to let
him go, says Ollie
You never make a club stronger when you sell your best player, but if anybody
can survive losing somebody of the quality of Gareth
Bale, it will be Andre Villas-Boas.
Ever since I took the job at Selhurst Park, I’ve learned more and more about how brilliant
Palace’s fans are – and they amazed me again.
I didn’t see it at the time because I was too locked into getting ready for the game, but a whole group of them organised a big flag with the jigsaw dummy emblem from the Saw horror films (below) and hung a giant banner saying: “Palace are here, let the games begin.”
I know there were a few that questioned whether it was in good taste – but I thought it summed up the excitement about being back in the Premier League and wanting to make our ground a tough place to come for visiting teams.
It’s ironic we were at Stoke yesterday because that’s one club who, after they came up, set an example of how loud fans can help your performances at home.
Our supporters didn’t stop singing and dancing right through 90 minutes – and I’m so thankful they are on our side.
http://www.mirror.co.uk/sport/football/news/ian-holloway-andre-villas-boas-he-2217558
I’ve got to be honest, I thought the former Chelsea manager was
the luckiest bloke alive when he got the job at Tottenham.
In fact, I said so in this column.
But he’s done such a good job since then that I’ve completely
revised my opinion and, after facing his Spurs side last week – and then watching
them demolish Dinamo Tbilisi in the Europa League – I admire him even
more.
Now, he’s getting ready to face the challenge of being without
the player who was his team’s talisman last season. AVB, though, is handling it
superbly.
For a start, it was a brilliant bit of strategy for Tottenham
to go out and spend the money they will be collecting from Real Madrid BEFORE
the world-record sale was concluded.
If everybody knows you have buckets of money swilling around,
then the asking prices go through the roof.
And have you looked at the quality Spurs have been bringing
in?
Roberto Soldado, Etienne Capoue, Paulinho – these are top
players who can have an impact in Premier League games, and that’s prior to
tying up some others before the deadline.
Will any of them be another Gareth Bale? No.
I don’t think there is another Gareth Bale in the world, with
his pace, his ability to run at people, the goals he scores, the dazzling
swerving free kicks, the way he strikes the ball – and even the times he gets
back and heads corners and free-kicks away to help out his defenders.
But, sometimes, when a player wants to move on – and I don’t
know for sure, but
it seems pretty clear that was the case with Bale – you have to let him do
so and then use the money to develop your team in a different way.
That’s something I’ve had to do all through my career. From
selling Barry Hayles and Jason Roberts when I was first at Bristol Rovers, then
Danny Shittu at QPR, and Charlie Adam at Blackpool, it’s a fact of life for most
managers. It’s happened again to me with Wilfried Zaha moving on.
I suppose, if you are in charge of a really big club like
Tottenham, you hope it’s a problem you won’t get, but it still happens. It seems
to me that AVB has handled it with great calm and common sense. I
thought Tottenham were class last week. They moved the ball around so well
and the movement of their players was just as bewitching.
I like their ethos. And I’ve got to say I like AVB too. I met
him properly for the first time a couple of weeks ago and he’s an articulate,
intelligent man, who thinks deeply about the game and understands it.
That was probably why I got so upset with some of the
refereeing decisions. My team were so close to containing them and showing we
belong on the same pitch.
If we gain the confidence to relax and trust ourselves in
possession, then we don’t need to be frightened of even the best teams in this
league.
And, believe me, Spurs will be one of the best – despite
losing their brightest star.
I wouldn’t be at all surprised to see them back among the
Champions League places by the end of the campaign.
Ever since I took the job at Selhurst Park, I’ve learned more and more about how brilliant
Palace’s fans are – and they amazed me again.
I didn’t see it at the time because I was too locked into getting ready for the game, but a whole group of them organised a big flag with the jigsaw dummy emblem from the Saw horror films (below) and hung a giant banner saying: “Palace are here, let the games begin.”
I know there were a few that questioned whether it was in good taste – but I thought it summed up the excitement about being back in the Premier League and wanting to make our ground a tough place to come for visiting teams.
It’s ironic we were at Stoke yesterday because that’s one club who, after they came up, set an example of how loud fans can help your performances at home.
Our supporters didn’t stop singing and dancing right through 90 minutes – and I’m so thankful they are on our side.
http://www.mirror.co.uk/sport/football/news/ian-holloway-andre-villas-boas-he-2217558
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