Friday, 9 April 2010

Step outside, Posh Boy


The 'era of Johnson' begins tomorrow afternoon as Peterborough face Leicester City at London Road with former Bristol City manager Gary Johnson at the helm for the very first time.

Following a very successful five year spell at Ashton Gate, where he won promotion from league One and almost to the Premier League, he left the Championship club on mutual terms three weeks ago amid rumours of player unrest and a locker room bust up in his final game in charge.

With Peterborough already relegated to League One after a dismal season, Johnson has four games to reside over his playing squad and decide who will be staying with the squad, and which areas need improvement.

Improvement on this season will not prove too difficult, as Posh sit in last place with 31 points having won just 7 matches all season. The 'holy trinity' of George Boyd, Craig McKail-Smith and Aaron McLean, whose goals were a large reason for Peterborough's back to back promotions to the Championship, have struggled to hit the same heights this season.

Boyd has top scored this season with 12 goals, but is currently on loan at playoff bound Nottingham Forest with a view to a permanent move in the summer. McLean has struggled with injury and himself handed in a transfer request whilst McKail-Smith, for all his magnificent commitment has not scored as freely as he did in the lower leagues.

Another undoubted reason for Posh's poor showing this season is the instability at the club. Johnson will be the fourth man in charge this season after Darren Ferguson, Mark Cooper and Jim Gannon. Bringing in a manager such as Johnson on a two year contract, who lasted five years in his previous job, is a sign of intent from chairman Darragh MacAnthony.

The 34 year old property entrepreneur who promised Championship football upon his arrival and duly delivered it, is not lacking in confidence. Such was his conviction, that once the initial challenge was complete he predicted a swift promotion to the Premiership. When little over a quarter way through the season it was apparent that would probably not be the case Ferguson was his first casualty and they parted ways.

Mark Cooper's 12 game stint did little to improve MacAnthony's mood and with just one win under his belt he was dethroned of his position nearly as soon as it was placed upon him. Jim Gannon was brought in next, as he had a track record of surviving relegation dogfights. Despite an initial improvement of results, the wins dried up and Peterborough looked all but doomed as disquiet emerged between manager Jim Gannon and Director of Football, Barry Fry.

When questioned, Jim Gannon described problems with Fry arised from the "defining of roles" between the two. According to Gannon, Barry Fry was too hands on and his role as Director of Football was treading on his role as manager. Whilst Fry's presence at the club will have undoubtedly made some potential managers weary of the job, Johnson actually sees it as a positive.

"The biggest stress as a manager is dealing with agents and players regarding contracts and signings. Barry will handle that for me, and he is one of the best in the world at it." The sight of the two red faced men in sharp suits and cheeky grins greeted the media at the press conference to announce Johnson's arrival and it was there that Johnson made clear of his objectives.

"There is a great chance this club will be back in the Championship. The first aim is to get back to the Championship, the second is to compete at that level." The ambitious MacAnthony will expect nothing less and Johnson, on a two year contract, not the luxurious five year one handed to him by Bristol City Chairman Steve Landsdown is under no illusions.

"The chairman is saying when we get promoted, where as I am saying if. He is very adamant, ambitious and drive. That is what sold this club to me." The job is a big one for Johnson to restore confidence in a squad of players who have tasted little success this season, but with 12 players still in the squad who gained promotion at League One level last year, he has a squad clearly capable of appeasing the chairman's hunger for success.

Johnson and Fry will have to work as a team and co-exist in their roles and not step on each other's toes in a season destined for sound-bytes and high jinks for Posh Fans and press teams. Fry spelt out the way it will work as "Gary is the manager, he identifies the players he wants and I try to go out and get them. He identifies who he doesn't want and I try to get rid of them."

For a manager who infamously went into Bristol City five years ago and instantly signalled senior professionals Marcus Stewart and Steve Phillips as two players he did not want in his attempt to stamp his authority on the club, no player is safe from potentially being sent packing in the summer, and that includes 'The Holy Trinity'.

Then, once he has got rid of the players he does not trust and signed the players that he does, Peterborough truly will have entered 'the era of Johnson'.

Thursday, 8 April 2010

England Loosens It's Stranglehold On European Glory


Is the Premier League the greatest in the world? The Champions League is the place to prove it, and unfortunately this season all four English sides have fallen to their European counterparts. In the past 3 Champions League seasons the Premier League has had 3 of the 4 semi finalists, proof indeed of the dominance it held over UEFA's premium competition. This season they have all fallen short, with none of the top four being able to reach the semi finals.


It is the first time that has happened in seven years. You have to go back to the 2002-03 season when Italy dominated with eventual winners AC Milan along with Juventus and Internazionale and Real Madrid all made the semis, that was the last time England failed to have a representative at the semi-final stage. Could the Premier League, much like Serie A has done since that season, be falling from grace in the Champions League?


Manchester United's first ever success over Bayern Munich on their home turf last night should have been the catalyst for rapturous victory scenes as they finally slayed their Bavarian foes but instead a muted Old Trafford was left with the sight of a bouncing Bayern squad celebrating a 3-2 defeat, as it put the Bundesliga side through to the final four on away goals.


It started so brightly for United, as Darron Gibson and a double from the impressive Nani put them 3-0 in front on the night and 4-2 up on aggregate. Old Trafford was awash with noise, almost unrecognisable from the dour sight of the 2-1 loss to Chelsea the previous weekend. Even with a seemingly incapacitated Wayne Rooney on the pitch, Manchester United were so incessant it seemed a similar night to the 7-1 thrashing of Roma was on the cards.


Bayern Munich, who started the match with a positive 4-4-2 formation seemed to have no answer as their full backs Lahm and Badstuber were terrorised by the wing play of both Valencia and Nani, the latter whose expulsion to the subs bench against Chelsea seems inexplicable when you realise the lack of movement from Berbatov, but that is for another day.


Just as the half time whistle was looming and the United fans were ready to applaud their team for an extraordinary effort and brilliant attacking display, Olic out muscled Carrick in an aerial battle and from an improbable angle fired across Van Der Sar and in to the net. With that goal, Bayern only needed another to go through and Old Trafford knew it. Where it seconds earlier was abuzz with excitement and pride it soon became awash with silence and nervous energy.


The game was on a knife edge and Bayern who had kick off, seemed a different side as they immediately began the second half showing the sort of movement and ball retention which just wasn't there in the first half. It seemed they were first to every ball and going for the jugular. Manchester United on the other hand, having just played such an intense 45 minutes seemed sluggish and unable to step up a gear as they had already been in 5th from the very 1st minute and only now was there signs that maybe they were running out of gas.


Ribery was becoming more of a threat as Bayern were controlling the game passing from left to right and right to left with Robben and Ribery the beneficiaries. It was the French winger who was at the heart of the turning point in the game, as his darting run forward was stopped by Rafael with not one but two tugs on his shirt. After the now ubiquitous surrounding of the referee Rafael was booked for the second time in the game and sent off with 35 minutes still remaining.


The 'winning' away goal came in sublime fashion as a Ribery corner was volleyed home by Robben for what German tabloid Bild described as "A beautiful loss." Robben was a menace to Patrice Evra all second half and in what was already Evra's 43rd game of the season he epitomised the performance of United in the second half. They looked drained. For a full back of his ilk, where his game is essentially a 90 minute bleep test up and down the left flank, it is easy to see how Robben, who has played little over half the games Evra has this season was able to make Evra look ordinary, because ordinary he certainly isn't. Even the winning goal at the Allianz Arena in the dying moments of the first leg showed a mental fatigue as Evra couldn't sort his feet out in what should have been routine.


Sir Alex Ferguson made substitutions in an attempt to score the goal which would tip the tie in their direction, but what became all to obvious was that the pace and fitness needed to regain control of the game was not going to come from the players left on the pitch. The sight of Mike Phelan and Sir Alex in the technical area gesturing and expressing disdain for what they were seeing was telling. By the end though Sir Alex was resigned to his usual seat in the stands, showing even his successful blend of inspiration and intimidation was unable to resurrect a performance from his players.


The infamous Manchester United injury time deluge never transpired, even against the team who suffered so historically from it back in 1999. Munich kept the ball away from their own goal through passages of play that were designed more to see out time than to add to their goal tally.


So, have the English sides been found out in European competition?


Chelsea were outfoxed by their former manager Jose Mourinho, who claimed he didn't need to do any homework on the Blues as they have not changed their squad or style since he left them 3 years ago. A look at their squad shows that the 'Special One' may have a case. Some 12 first team players who Jose managed at Chelsea are still at the club. It seems only the person who builds an empire, truly knows how to destroy it. Chelsea need an overhaul of their squad, as an ageing squad and a lack of youth development shows.


Liverpool truly under performed this season for the players they had at their disposal, and Lyon profited from their eagerness to self destruct with a win and a draw against Rafa Benitez's side. Last season, Liverpool were duly noted for their fitness and late goals in European competition but this season they seem to have suffered from an inferiority complex by consistently conceding late goals, as they did to the French side both at Anfield and the Stade de Gerland.


Arsenal this season were knocked out by the side that on footballing terms have set the benchmark for what football truly can be, Barcelona. Admittedly, a huge injury list hindered their attempt to knock out the current champions but what cannot be argued is that they were 'out-Arsenaled' by the Catalan giants. What surprised me most was the refusal to play a long ball to Bendtner and pack the box. Wenger would have to have swallowed some pride in using this tactic, by disregarding his pure football mantra, but after watching Arsenal trying to play the ball out of defence and lose the ball in midfield over and over and over again I found myself shouting at the television to use the unpredictable Dane with a bit of hustle and bustle. Then they could see what comes of the knock downs, and possibly profit from the second ball.


An argument could be made that all four sides were worse off at the start of this season than they were a year previous, Manchester United lost goals and work rate in Tevez and Ronaldo, Chelsea lost the much loved Hiddink, Liverpool lost the playmaker Alonso and Arsenal lost Adebayor and Toure. Surprisingly, not one of the clubs responded with a spending spree to rival a WAG on a footballers payday in Harrods.


The stranglehold has become more of a sleeper-hold from the English clubs on the Champions League, their opponents have figured a way to battle and mount offence of their own leaving them without their gold. However, like Triple H has reverted back to type with the use of his sledgehammer in a quest for what he once had, I fully expect this coming season to see a return of the tactic that got the English sides their dominance over Europe in the first place...


Dirty cash, and lots of it.