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Southgate

Posted: Wed Jun 13, 2007 5:27 pm
by officer_dibble
Looks like the FA's favourite team are going to be allowed to break the rules again next season

http://www.football365.com/story/0,1703 ... 47,00.html

I know the qualification means nowt but is it bollocks that he is allowed to continue breaking the rules set by starting the season not being enrolled on the right course??

Posted: Wed Jun 13, 2007 5:38 pm
by boltonboris
Aye, Rules is rules after all, whats the point in having them if you can pick and choose who they apply too

Posted: Wed Jun 13, 2007 5:51 pm
by Dave Sutton's barnet
:wall: :wall: :wall:
This really f*cked me off when I wrote an article about it last summer, and it just keeps getting worse. Is he a fecking retard? This is the man who claimed he couldn't do his badges while a player because of "England duty". Yeah, busy in 2003 and 2005 weren't you Gaz? :roll: no really :roll: :roll:

Re: Southgate

Posted: Wed Jun 13, 2007 5:55 pm
by Dave Sutton's barnet
officer_dibble wrote:Looks like the FA's favourite team are going to be allowed to break the rules again next season

http://www.football365.com/story/0,1703 ... 47,00.html

I know the qualification means nowt but is it bollocks that he is allowed to continue breaking the rules set by starting the season not being enrolled on the right course??
Sorry Dibs, it doesn't mean nothing, it's vitally important. Unqualified coaches (generally ex-players who don't know shit from clay) means unqualified players means continuing head-banging at international level. Other European nations recognised the value of coaching the coaches decades ago. We still think it's OK to live on reputation - see Bryan Robson, et al. This is probably the only country in which the likes of Carlton Palmer would be employed, and ask Stockport fans about that one.

Sorry, steam valve untilised, DSB calmer, but this rule does matter. I'm sick of our developing players being held back by being taught by unqualified dunderheads.[/b]

Posted: Wed Jun 13, 2007 6:09 pm
by hisroyalgingerness
agree, it's a joke that they're on one hand happy to ask for rules to be bent on this and on another gibson is wishing sheff utd luck in their particular case.

i look forward to his new neighbour BSA giving him shit

Posted: Wed Jun 13, 2007 6:44 pm
by officer_dibble
but i thought a monkey with half a brain could get the badges? :conf:

Posted: Wed Jun 13, 2007 7:37 pm
by communistworkethic
DSB, but he's the manager, he's responsible for picking the team and tactics, what does it matter if the manager is qualified so long as the actual coaches are - managers manage and coaches coach. Allardyce was all about being a facilitator and employing people with the knowledge and skills.

I mean how many lessons does it take to teach someone how to put cones out?? ;)

Re: Southgate

Posted: Wed Jun 13, 2007 10:02 pm
by Crouch > Davies
Dave Sutton's barnet wrote:
Sorry Dibs, it doesn't mean nothing, it's vitally important. Unqualified coaches (generally ex-players who don't know shit from clay) means unqualified players means continuing head-banging at international level. Other European nations recognised the value of coaching the coaches decades ago. We still think it's OK to live on reputation - see Bryan Robson, et al. This is probably the only country in which the likes of Carlton Palmer would be employed, and ask Stockport fans about that one.

Sorry, steam valve untilised, DSB calmer, but this rule does matter. I'm sick of our developing players being held back by being taught by unqualified dunderheads.[/b]
Agreed - we got left behind on that front, a long time ago.

Posted: Thu Jun 14, 2007 7:30 am
by Batman
I can't think of a more suitable arrangement that him with Boro.

Dull, boring, pointless team managed by dull, boring manager, with a big nose.

Posted: Thu Jun 14, 2007 3:56 pm
by Dave Sutton's barnet
officer_dibble wrote:but i thought a monkey with half a brain could get the badges? :conf:
First level's got summat like a 90% pass rate. Dives sharply thereafter.
communistworkethic wrote:DSB, but he's the manager, he's responsible for picking the team and tactics, what does it matter if the manager is qualified so long as the actual coaches are - managers manage and coaches coach. Allardyce was all about being a facilitator and employing people with the knowledge and skills.

I mean how many lessons does it take to teach someone how to put cones out?? ;)
Know what you man Commie but precisely what does the manager base his decisions upon, if not footballing knowledge? Much of the coursework for the later badges is not so much shuttle-runs and bibs as youth development and alternative formations (BSA presumably not invited to lecture on that one).

You can argue that you need no coaching expertise at all to be a manager – if anyone can, you can - but you know it's not true.