Mavies
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Re: Mavies
The difference when he came on against Fulham was enormous. He looks like the only one we have who wants to be on the ball and whose first instinct is to be positive.Andy Waller wrote:Pratley played as well as Mavies on Saturday.
Wht is everyone so besotted with Mavies anyway??
Whether you've historically rated him or not, it seems to me that him being fit and finding some form is one of the few hopes that we have.
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Re: Mavies
Uhm, probably because he's the only one with some imagination left. Without him, we're pretty much completely plain and functional. Which is boring.
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Re: Mavies
By that do you mean he just wants to dribble the ball? He'll do that regularly but at the end find neither the goal nor a man, which makes it all a bit pointless..Jugs wrote:Uhm, probably because he's the only one with some imagination left. Without him, we're pretty much completely plain and functional. Which is boring.
What a hero, What a man...... Ooooh, what a bad foul...
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Re: Mavies
I'm not usually keen on him (or anyone else) dribbling, either: it's often vanity and frequently vainglorious. Passing the ball is almost always the best option. At Fulham he seemed the only midfielder capable of doing that (the defenders took it in turns to clonk it vaguely forward). Get men moving off the ball and he will try to find them; the dribbling tends to happen when they stand there gormlessly waiting for him to do something.Andy Waller wrote:By that do you mean he just wants to dribble the ball? He'll do that regularly but at the end find neither the goal nor a man, which makes it all a bit pointless..Jugs wrote:Uhm, probably because he's the only one with some imagination left. Without him, we're pretty much completely plain and functional. Which is boring.
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Re: Mavies
Yes, he should give it to Spearing, Pratley, Medo or Trotter so as to utilise their fantastic passing abilities instead!Andy Waller wrote:By that do you mean he just wants to dribble the ball? He'll do that regularly but at the end find neither the goal nor a man, which makes it all a bit pointless..Jugs wrote:Uhm, probably because he's the only one with some imagination left. Without him, we're pretty much completely plain and functional. Which is boring.

BTW, DSB - can you do me a favour and dig out Marc Pugh's passing stats for Bournemouth (Personal request - nowt to do with the aforementioned).
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Re: Mavies
Half agree on this, DSB.Dave Sutton's barnet wrote:I'm not usually keen on him (or anyone else) dribbling, either: it's often vanity and frequently vainglorious. Passing the ball is almost always the best option. At Fulham he seemed the only midfielder capable of doing that (the defenders took it in turns to clonk it vaguely forward). Get men moving off the ball and he will try to find them; the dribbling tends to happen when they stand there gormlessly waiting for him to do something.Andy Waller wrote:By that do you mean he just wants to dribble the ball? He'll do that regularly but at the end find neither the goal nor a man, which makes it all a bit pointless..Jugs wrote:Uhm, probably because he's the only one with some imagination left. Without him, we're pretty much completely plain and functional. Which is boring.
Mavies (and others who aren't quite at the Messi level) are always useful with tightly packed or well-martialled defences. The knack is (1) having them dribble in the opponents' final third and (2) having support on hand to give them options (or to pick up the loose ball if they are tackled). As things stand, Mavies doesn't do enough of (1) and his team mates don't do enough of (2).
Re: Mavies
Okay, you win. Let's stick to a midfield of Garvan, Pratley and Spearing. No thrust, attacking nous, adventure, confidence, definitely no dribbling, just lots of misplaced passes, hesitation and stuttering.Andy Waller wrote:By that do you mean he just wants to dribble the ball? He'll do that regularly but at the end find neither the goal nor a man, which makes it all a bit pointless..Jugs wrote:Uhm, probably because he's the only one with some imagination left. Without him, we're pretty much completely plain and functional. Which is boring.
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Re: Mavies
Jugs wrote:Okay, you win. Let's stick to a midfield of Garvan, Pratley and Spearing. No thrust, attacking nous, adventure, confidence, definitely no dribbling, just lots of misplaced passes, hesitation and stuttering.Andy Waller wrote:By that do you mean he just wants to dribble the ball? He'll do that regularly but at the end find neither the goal nor a man, which makes it all a bit pointless..Jugs wrote:Uhm, probably because he's the only one with some imagination left. Without him, we're pretty much completely plain and functional. Which is boring.
Fantastic! Are you available for interview this weekend?

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Re: Mavies
... & even then Medo can't get a look in.Jugs wrote:Okay, you win. Let's stick to a midfield of Garvan, Pratley and Spearing. No thrust, attacking nous, adventure, confidence, definitely no dribbling, just lots of misplaced passes, hesitation and stuttering.Andy Waller wrote:By that do you mean he just wants to dribble the ball? He'll do that regularly but at the end find neither the goal nor a man, which makes it all a bit pointless..Jugs wrote:Uhm, probably because he's the only one with some imagination left. Without him, we're pretty much completely plain and functional. Which is boring.
And you forgot Trotter. You bloody well forgot our main man. The man who makes us tick. Dougie very own Holden. The man who's injury had us bereft. If only ..... if only ....
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Re: Mavies
Mavies is ok for the odd few games he's fit to play every season, long term answer? No.
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Re: Mavies
I'd have Danns in a more forward role in midfield myself. I can't for the life of me see why Medo isn't getting a game.bobo the clown wrote:... & even then Medo can't get a look in.Jugs wrote:Okay, you win. Let's stick to a midfield of Garvan, Pratley and Spearing. No thrust, attacking nous, adventure, confidence, definitely no dribbling, just lots of misplaced passes, hesitation and stuttering.Andy Waller wrote:By that do you mean he just wants to dribble the ball? He'll do that regularly but at the end find neither the goal nor a man, which makes it all a bit pointless..Jugs wrote:Uhm, probably because he's the only one with some imagination left. Without him, we're pretty much completely plain and functional. Which is boring.
And you forgot Trotter. You bloody well forgot our main man. The man who makes us tick. Dougie very own Holden. The man who's injury had us bereft. If only ..... if only ....
What a hero, What a man...... Ooooh, what a bad foul...
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Re: Mavies
Worthy in Hoboh agreement shocker!Hoboh wrote:Mavies is ok for the odd few games he's fit to play every season, long term answer? No.
Is Mavies our best dribbler in MF? - almost certainly (albeit CYL at the top of his game isn't bad - just haven't seen that forever)
Does he play enough games - almost certainly not
Does he play to his potential in all the games he plays - almost certainly not
Is he a complete passenger when he goes missing - certainly
It's three times a season where it all comes together and he looks the part.
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Re: Mavies
Exactly. Yet people rave on about him like he's going to save the day for us.Worthy4England wrote:Worthy in Hoboh agreement shocker!Hoboh wrote:Mavies is ok for the odd few games he's fit to play every season, long term answer? No.
Is Mavies our best dribbler in MF? - almost certainly (albeit CYL at the top of his game isn't bad - just haven't seen that forever)
Does he play enough games - almost certainly not
Does he play to his potential in all the games he plays - almost certainly not
Is he a complete passenger when he goes missing - certainly
It's three times a season where it all comes together and he looks the part.
What a hero, What a man...... Ooooh, what a bad foul...
Re: Mavies
This mostly sounds like you're describing all our players, with the exception of the dribbling and and the amount of games it all comes together - 3 games is a lot for a Bolton player, particularly one who doesn't play all that many games.Worthy4England wrote:Worthy in Hoboh agreement shocker!Hoboh wrote:Mavies is ok for the odd few games he's fit to play every season, long term answer? No.
Is Mavies our best dribbler in MF? - almost certainly (albeit CYL at the top of his game isn't bad - just haven't seen that forever)
Does he play to his potential in all the games he plays - almost certainly not
Is he a complete passenger when he goes missing - certainly
It's three times a season where it all comes together and he looks the part.
Maybe it's asking a lot for it to 'all come together' in a single game. A lot of fans directed criticism at Eagles during our first season in this division, despite him being top scorer. Did it all come together for him in every game he scored in? No, but his moments were crucial. He'd often go missing, but there's little doubting that his goals got us points. Same with Klasnic. Analysing a game as a whole is sure to bring up moments when a Championship player goes missing. But, for me, Mavies is one of our more astute players, one of the very few who can get the crowd a bit excited. One of the very few with a genuine desire to get the ball down and attack. And, you know, maybe he's often let down by the poor talent he has around him at the moment. It doesn't help that he's been managed by a very negative manager for the last 2 years.
My hope is that the new manager can get the best out of him. Because, for me, there is a very fine player in there.
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Re: Mavies
Yep.Jugs wrote:This mostly sounds like you're describing all our players, with the exception of the dribbling and and the amount of games it all comes together - 3 games is a lot for a Bolton player, particularly one who doesn't play all that many games.Worthy4England wrote:Worthy in Hoboh agreement shocker!Hoboh wrote:Mavies is ok for the odd few games he's fit to play every season, long term answer? No.
Is Mavies our best dribbler in MF? - almost certainly (albeit CYL at the top of his game isn't bad - just haven't seen that forever)
Does he play to his potential in all the games he plays - almost certainly not
Is he a complete passenger when he goes missing - certainly
It's three times a season where it all comes together and he looks the part.
Maybe it's asking a lot for it to 'all come together' in a single game. A lot of fans directed criticism at Eagles during our first season in this division, despite him being top scorer. Did it all come together for him in every game he scored in? No, but his moments were crucial. He'd often go missing, but there's little doubting that his goals got us points. Same with Klasnic. Analysing a game as a whole is sure to bring up moments when a Championship player goes missing. But, for me, Mavies is one of our more astute players, one of the very few who can get the crowd a bit excited. One of the very few with a genuine desire to get the ball down and attack. And, you know, maybe he's often let down by the poor talent he has around him at the moment. It doesn't help that he's been managed by a very negative manager for the last 2 years.
My hope is that the new manager can get the best out of him. Because, for me, there is a very fine player in there.
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Re: Mavies
Take Mavies out of the team and you take away the hope that something might happen. I also think we're more likely to see more from Chungy by having the likes of Mavies and other more technical players. We need to see a lot more from Mavies, but I'd rather have him than not at the moment.
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Re: Mavies
Pugh made 46 passes, 78.3% accurate, 5 long balls (3 accurate), 2 crosses, 1 through-ball. His midfield mate Surman made 66 passes with 93.9% accuracy (6 long, of which 3 were accurate, plus 2 key passes). Harry Arter was also tidy in midfield, with 85.9% accuracy from 64 passes - although in all these cases you have to note there'll have been quite a lot of keep-ball.Bruce Rioja wrote:DSB - can you do me a favour and dig out Marc Pugh's passing stats for Bournemouth (Personal request - nowt to do with the aforementioned).
Numbers are all here, crunch away: http://www.whoscored.com/Matches/830163 ... ournemouth" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Re: Mavies
Cheers Buddy.Dave Sutton's barnet wrote:Pugh made 46 passes, 78.3% accurate, 5 long balls (3 accurate), 2 crosses, 1 through-ball. His midfield mate Surman made 66 passes with 93.9% accuracy (6 long, of which 3 were accurate, plus 2 key passes). Harry Arter was also tidy in midfield, with 85.9% accuracy from 64 passes - although in all these cases you have to note there'll have been quite a lot of keep-ball.Bruce Rioja wrote:DSB - can you do me a favour and dig out Marc Pugh's passing stats for Bournemouth (Personal request - nowt to do with the aforementioned).
Numbers are all here, crunch away: http://www.whoscored.com/Matches/830163 ... ournemouth" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Re: Mavies
You heard something or just won a fiver?Bruce Rioja wrote:Cheers Buddy.Dave Sutton's barnet wrote:Pugh made 46 passes, 78.3% accurate, 5 long balls (3 accurate), 2 crosses, 1 through-ball. His midfield mate Surman made 66 passes with 93.9% accuracy (6 long, of which 3 were accurate, plus 2 key passes). Harry Arter was also tidy in midfield, with 85.9% accuracy from 64 passes - although in all these cases you have to note there'll have been quite a lot of keep-ball.Bruce Rioja wrote:DSB - can you do me a favour and dig out Marc Pugh's passing stats for Bournemouth (Personal request - nowt to do with the aforementioned).
Numbers are all here, crunch away: http://www.whoscored.com/Matches/830163 ... ournemouth" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Re: Mavies
No, no. Nowt like that. Pugh's dad (an absolutely lovely fella) drives a stacker at our place and is as proud as punch of their Marc's achievements. I told him that I thought he'd played well on Saturday, had worked hard and played some intelligent passes, a view that he shared, but, alas, a view that wasn't shared by the match reporter in the Football League paper? who said that he'd had a poor game, that his passing was wayward, and had awarded him a dismal 4/10.Hoboh wrote:You heard something or just won a fiver?Bruce Rioja wrote:Cheers Buddy.Dave Sutton's barnet wrote:Pugh made 46 passes, 78.3% accurate, 5 long balls (3 accurate), 2 crosses, 1 through-ball. His midfield mate Surman made 66 passes with 93.9% accuracy (6 long, of which 3 were accurate, plus 2 key passes). Harry Arter was also tidy in midfield, with 85.9% accuracy from 64 passes - although in all these cases you have to note there'll have been quite a lot of keep-ball.Bruce Rioja wrote:DSB - can you do me a favour and dig out Marc Pugh's passing stats for Bournemouth (Personal request - nowt to do with the aforementioned).
Numbers are all here, crunch away: http://www.whoscored.com/Matches/830163 ... ournemouth" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
So, armed with DSB's stats I've just been down to show him that their kid did indeed have a very decent game indeed and that whoever the journo was that had given him such a poor review was clearly talking shite.
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