Thursday, 24 February 2011

MOTHERWELL FC: THE MORE THINGS CHANGE, THE MORE THEY STAY THE SAME

MOTHERWELL FC: THE MORE THINGS CHANGE, THE MORE THY STAY THE SAME...

I don't know how many times I've said it before here, or how many more I will, but hardly a week goes by without MFC putting it's fans through the ringer.

First and foremost I'm going to take this opportunity to reflect and thank Mr John Boyle for his services to Motherwell over the last 13 years. For over a decade he has had Motherwell at heart and while some things he did put the club at risk, his time as Chairman, in my view, was mostly a success.

When he took over in 1998, Boyle's vision of making us the "Third Force" in Scottish football was scoffed at by many, even the Claret and Amber faithful. At a time when money in the Scottish Premier was being thrown about willy nilly, his cash injection put us relatively on par with all outside the Old Firm.

"Marquee Signings" like Spencer, Goram and Goodman, as well as Ged Brannan and Pat Nevi formed the crux of our big spending, eventually helping us to a few successful seasons. Incentives like Kids for £1 and Adults for a fiver, were put on to increase crowds.

However, these small successes couldn't guarantee long term gain, and in 2001, Boyle saw his idyll crash and burn as the threat of Administration loomed large. The sacking of 21 members of staff meant that Boyle's reputation, as well as his pocket took a big hit.

The club had to rely now on it's youth set up, which gave Boyle a chance to help Motherwell FC and himself recoup the losses. The breeding of players like McFadden, Pearson etc was essential, but their efforts couldn't stop us from facing relegation. That was left to Falkirk's lack of seating.

After the enforced rebuilding job, which Boyle entrusted in Terry Butcher, things began to look up. A Scottish Cup semi final and a League Cup final brought in some cash before El Tel left. Boyle's decision to put Malpas in charge saw us plummet down the table, in one of the worst seasons since JB came to power.

The McGhee era brought with it triumph and tragedy. While the team played some of it's best football in over a decade, Boyle bankrolled the signings that made it so from his own pocket. Porter, Hughes and Malcolm (?) earned their wage not from the club but from Boyle and paid him back with a 3rd place finish and European football.

Our best season of the decade was also one of the worst as we lost Phil O'Donnell. For any club to have a player die is a tragedy, Boyle's reign saw 2, with youngster Andy Thompson passing away at the start of Boyle's time in charge. JB and McGhee were excellent in their handling of such a harrowing time.

In recent years, his lack of ability to tie management to contracts has been highlighted. Whether it was a thrifty move on his part or not, by not securing Gannon, Brown and Knox to permanent roles, no matter the reasoning, it made us look like a joke to a press who already see us as the league's clowns.

His time at Well is coming to an end at the same time that a 4th season in Europe slides out of view as well. There's no questioning that JB has lost far more than he put in to the Club, bit it's a measure of his respect for MFC that he has not asked for anything in return upon his resignation. Instead he goes, knowing that for all the ups and downs of his tenure, he tried to do the best he could for Scotland's best diddy team.

A ditty team that could have had an unlikely 9 points from 9 in the wake of the Ibrox debacle. The sweet victory over Aberdeen was followed by the worst match I'd seen all season til that point. Sutton's spot kick dispatched a dire Accies team, who on the day, didn't look much worse than us.

Wednesday night saw what is definitely the worst game of the season. Even Stu Mc says so. After a frustrating week at work, I looked forward to venting at the St Mirren players as we would joyfully pump them. In my head I knew we wouldn't pump them, but I was thinking positive. The old chestnut that someone was due a pumping off us was running around my head.

As soon as the game kicked off I knew the pumping wasn't coming.

There's an argument that "Anti-Football" is ruining the game. Rangers ride it's wave on most European occasions by defending and breaking. St Mirren do it without actually playing football which deserves the "anti" prefix more. At this point I'd say watch the game in full and you would see the lack of talent being subbed for dirty dirty late challenges and rugby tackles, but the game was awful enough once through.

That's not to say that is why we lost. We lost because we weren't fighting enough. Lasley, Jennings and Gunning all took some hefty challenges but we all know they can give as good as they get. We were bullied by a hungrier team and it showed. The fact that the only shot on target I. The whole game went in shows how dire that game was.

If you told any Well fan after Ibrox that we'd get 6 from 9 in the next 3 games they'd have been happy with that. As the players were booed off the park last night, I remembered just how fickle a bunch we are. Sure McCall's tactical nous was all over the shop last night, but it worked against Aberdeen and to an extent against Accies. He got it wrong last night, but so did the boys on the park. I wonder how he'll set out his stall for the visit of Celtic

So, as the dust settles on a busy week at Fir Park, our inconsistency has kept us consistent once more. The prospect of new owners fills me with fear and excitement. Will we get a local investor or an Ibramovich/Romanov type mentalist ploughing us in to debt while spending millions on average players? Who knows...

Up The Well !!!

Friday, 18 February 2011

MOTHERWELL FC: FOOD FOR THOUGHT

Tasty: Could Masterchef pair Torode and Wallace stomach the football Motherwell have served up?

Tasty: Could Masterchef pair Torode and Wallace stomach the football Motherwell have served up? Pic: © Brian Minkoff-London Pixels

Stick with me on this one, but I'm comparing MFC to cooking and baking this week...

While Rangers had a cake walk against Motherwell last week, I was baking bread. There was no return to Ibrox for me after the 4-1 defeat back in October, so instead I took it upon myself to add to my culinary repetoir.

By the time I'd taken the ingredients out the bag, Naismith had put us a goal behind. About 20 minutes in to the radio coverage, I decided I'd make a start on my first attempt at breadmaking. Along with blogging, being a football fanatic and new hockey enthusiast, cooking has become one of my other new found passions.

So a Saturday spent in my kitchen, listening to my team get horsed was on the cards. By the time Jones and Sutton had squandered our best chances of the game, I had made one failed attempt at my bread mix due to the dodgy recipe on the back of the yeast box.

By 2-0 and then 3-0, I'd reached the correct consistency, after taking out my rage at the team's capitulation on kneading my dough. During half time, I had another bash at a second loaf, which came together with some ease, having perfected it on the second attempt.

By the time they went in the oven, it was 4-0 and by the time they came out, all golden and smelling class, it had become 6-0. If you add my two perfect loaves to that, then technically it was only a 6-2 weekend in my eyes and once I added the steak and onions and the garlic and chilli wedges to the loaves for myself and the missus, I consoled myself at it technically being 6-4...

The next morning, I awoke and decided I would make some baps. After all, I was now a master baker (leave it) and the kitchen was my culinary oyster. Another perfect dough, shaped in to five bread balls and fired in the oven for 25 minutes.

Skulked back in to the bedroom to watch a bit of Tim Lovejoy and his baldy cooking pal disregard their scripts to talk about Liverpool and Chelsea as usual.

Twenty-five minutes later I returned to the kitchen and had to hurl myself through the thick cloud of smoke and scent of burning yeast that had permeated from the oven. My total disregard of increased surface area and smaller sizes of dough had meant that I'd cremated what I'd hoped would be the perfect soaker upper of my gran's soup.

As five charred, hard boulders of bread lay on my baking board, I couldn't help but feel that I'd let myself down, like Motherwell had done the day before. I'd become complacent and cocky after performing so well before hand, that I hadn't prepared for the difference a change in tactics would make. Had I stuck to a specific recipe, I'd have had some lovely baps. Instead, I tampered with it and made a big smoky mess.

With the way that my mind works, I couldn't help but compare it to the recent state of affairs at Fir Park. While far from being the perfect recipe, Brown and Knox had been capable of running the proverbial kitchen fairly smoothly, serving up satisfying fare that sometimes lacked in presentation.

After they left, Stuart McCall came in and had to impose his own techniques and recipes to meet and exceed the standards of his predecessors. In the 10 games he'd had in charge, the ingredients had not been working well together and his experiments had not always tasted as good as they could have.

His best dish had been served at Hampden two weeks previous and a second helping at Ibrox would have been delightful. Instead, we served up an unappetising buffet, which Rangers rightly chewed up and spat out (I am getting in so many food puns and cliches here).

Come Tuesday evening though, the Ibrox shocker failed to repeat on the team. Instead, McCall served up fare of the highest calibre. Despite the early dirty fork of Aluko's goal, the Well managed to cut through Aberdeen like a hot knife through butter on many occasions, despite only managing to get level through Franny Jeffers headed goal.

In what was always going to be a match simmering with bite, it threatened to boil over when Hartley was red carded after Keith Lasley almost broke the Aberdeen skippers face with a hefty leading arm. Las was lucky, but that fight and determination is what we needed. When Murphy ran on to the headed through ball, outmuscled the ridiculous ponytail of his marker and dispatched the ball under Langfield, I thought "There's Your Dinner!"

They say that revenge is a dish best served cold, and at a freezing Pittodrie it defnitely was. While Brown and Knox munched on their sour grapes, Stu Mac and the lads can safely dine out on getting one over on the old regime and relish the most important result of the season so far.

I apologise profusely for all the food-isms in there, but what I'm getting at is that, while Motherwell FC will never be in contention for a Michelin Star, we need to be serving up platters like Wednesday night on a more regular basis. While we can forgive an occasional poor service, something sumptuous and exciting and hunger sating is much more appreciated.

We know we can do it, we just need to offer it more often.

Up The Well!


Thursday, 10 February 2011

MOTHERWELL FC: FRANCIS JEFFERS, MARQUEE SIGNING?

MOTHERWELL FC: FRANCIS JEFFERS, MARQUEE SIGNING?
Can he really be called that

At Motherwell FC, we are used to signing youngsters, untried English team periphery players and the odd journeyman here and there. Gone are the days of spending proper transfer fees for squad augmentation.

In the past few seasons, the Loanee route has been our path to unearthing fleeting gems. Instant classics without long term gain.

Ruddy and Jutkiewicz are perhaps the most notable of these, with the Bosman ruling bringing in others like Porter. Coke, Humphrey, Randolph, players who have all given something to the squad, with the latter 2 being amongst the few to fully commit to the club.

Steve Jones has had a cracking start since signing on and was rewarded with the scrappiest of scrappy goals to put us on our way to a cup win on Saturday. Gunning also seems to look the part in Stevie Hammell's absence.

While their signings have pretty much gone under the radar, the signing this week of free agent Francis Jeffers, has had much more publicity.

Bursting into the Premiership aged 16, he made his debut for Everton at Old Trafford. Plaudits were lauded upon him from an early age. Comparisons to Gary Lineker were not in short supply based on his Everton run and his Emgland U21 scoring record. If he was 16 today, ironically he would be the new Wayne Rooney.

However, the early promise failed to sustain and after amassing just over £10 million in transfer fees and failed attempts to get back in to the Premiership with Blackpool and Everton, by way of Sheffield Wednesday and Australia, he has arrived at Fir Park.

The press have declared his decision to join us as a Marquee Signing. But is he really?

To me, the definition of a Marquee Signing would be that of a player who has consistently played well at say a higher or equal level, or someone whose mere name would add 1000 odd bums to seats at Fir Park.

In my time as a Well fan, I would say as far as Marquee Signngs go, Davie Cooper, Tommy Coyne, and John Spencer would be truly in that bracket. Maybe even Andy Goram.

The signings of these players brought about great publicity for the Club, generated excitement amongst the fans and media and had an air of positive expectancy about them.

With Coop, although getting on in footballing years, we paid very little for one of the all time Scottish greats, and I return we got some immense performances from him. And a Cup. TC signed from Celtic and was an instant hit, with his knack for banging in the goals continuing at Fir Park.

Spenny was signed in a time of turmoil and was essentially still a Premirship striker when we got him on loan. Scoring the winner on your debut v Rangers doesn't get more Marquee than that! His actual signing wasn't so impacting but as one of the highest paid players we've had and for what he was capable of in the first 6 months, the Well faithful took to him.

Likewise with Goram, arguably Scotland's best ever keeper, The Goalie was signed during Boyle's free spending days. After having watched the likes of Woods, Howie, Scott Thompson, Garry Gow and Mikko Kaven regularly play hot and mainly cold for us, having a premier keeper between the sticks was a godsend.

While never reaching the heights of his stint at Rangers, the calibre and character of the Flying Pig again hyped up the Fir Park masses.

What all these players have in common is that when we signed them, we knew what they were capable of and that's why we were excited to see them in the paper with their Well shirts back to front.

Jeffers is a different kettle of fish altogether.

While, like those above, he has had a lengthy footballing career, it's not as fulfilled as theirs. A goals scored record of 17 in ten years for a striker is not that great. In his time at Arsenal, he scored half as many goals as defender Giles Grimandi.

His most successful spell of the last decade was at Sheffield Wednesday, where for every 2 goals he got, he got himself sent off. (5 goals, 2 sendings off). He also aged some good through balls in Australia, according to a Newcastle Jets fan online.

He has also previously failed to score in the SPL with Rangers.
Not the traits associated with a Marquee Signing for me. If he had proved himself worthy of the £10million that has been spent on him and he was recovering from a really bad injury and looking to get fitness back at Motherwell, then aye, I'd call that Marquee.

As it stands, I would say his signing is just as noteworthy as that of Jones and Gunning. That's not to say that I'm not happy with bringing Jeffers aboard.

Despite all the negatives I've picked up on, I think he could be a good signing. Ever the optimist. I believe his influence and experience, as stop start as his career has been, could go along way to improving the game of Murphy, McHugh, Smith , even Casagolda.

He has played at the highest level, he's been unlucky with injuries, and he's been around a bit. He's stated that the chance to work with one of his Evertonian heroes,Stuart McCall, is something he is looking forward.

This could be his Indian Summer, a last chance to prove himself in the British game. It's certainly a gamble for both Franny and the club. For Jeffers, if he can't cut it at Motherwell in a poor SPL, then where can he? Is he capable of doing enough to get back to the upper Championship level that most SPL players seek?

For us, it's more of the same really. If he comes in ahead of the younger forwards, then their development is scuppered in giving Jeffers a chance. If he does well, then he will likely be gone in the summer, if be does poorly... he'll most likely go in the summer.

It would be too much to think that 4 months at Motherwell banging in the goals would lead to him staying for another season. As I've stated before, there is no loyalty in football these days and for that reason, regardless of what "The Fox In The Box" does, I'd be mightily surprised if he is wearing Claret and Amber next season.

As long as when he dons our colours and performs to his best this season though, he will have my full backing. A Spencer-esque debut on Saturday would be a good start.

Going back to the Marquee thing, unless we get taken over by some foreign conglomerate, the only real Marquee, bums on seats, hysteria inducing signing we will likely see in the future will be James McFadden's mooted return.

If and when Faddy comes back, as long as he is fit and capable of the impact he had before, I will happily build that Marquee myself!

Up The Well!!!

Thursday, 3 February 2011

MOTHERWELL FC: SUBLIME TO THE RIDICULOUS.

MOTHERWELL FC: NOT THE BEST WEEK TO BE A WELL FAN EH?

One of the things that I love about being a Motherwell fan is how quickly the Club can revert between sublime and ridiculous. Whether it's during the course of a season, a week, a day or even a game, the occasional brilliance can be bested by our self made downfall.

For all intents and purposes, Sunday's semi final at Hampden was a great game, bar the result. By taking the game to Rangers, as it was vital to do, we showed them up in terms of effort and spirit, yet sadly not in front of goal.

Jennings and Lasley were immense in the middle of the park, stifling Davis and the ever unlikeable McCulloch for most of the match. The fact that Jenno was man of the match, despite The housewive's favourite Keef bagging a priceless goal at the national stadium, shows how stern the pair were on the middle.

Sutton led the line greatly, Hammell put in one of his best ever shifts, while Murphy and Humph on the wings looked to get forward as much as possible. Despite the best efforts of Weir and Papac, Humphrey got to the by line on a number of occasions.

Naturally it was our defence that was our undoing. After bumming him up on here last week, Craigan had a torrid game, mishitting clearance after clearance, playing the ball right to Rangers attackers and in general had a poor game.

For both Rangers goals, the defence are culpable. A poor clearance and "too much respect" to Edu led to a great strike from the American. Likewise, the defence switched off to first allow Jelavic in behind and secondly to give Naismith a free header.

The air of opportunity was kicked out of us and no matter how much we huffed and puffed, we couldn't find another goal. As gutted as the 6000 odd Well fans were, we clapped our players off as if we'd won.

The reaction of the Rangers players and fans was that of any other game. No fanfare that they had made yet another final. Treated like it was business as usual. The happiness that success brings eh?

Depending on what you read, getting beat off Rangers swung it enough for 1 of 5 potential signings to decide against us. Rumours abound that the striker in question was David Healy spread and were distinguished when he later signed for Rangers.

The return of both Clarkson and Porter were mooted but bore no fruit, while the 24 hour shambles that was Mike Grella's signing, had not been put to bed.

Alas, come 11pm on Monday, no striker had been signed. Jones had looked impressive in the 3 games he'd played and young Gunning from Blackburn was brought in as left back cover, but a team whose strikers haven't scored in an eon, needs new frontmen.

Perhaps the clubs riches couldn't stretch to bring one in. Perhaps there is truth in what Stuart McCall said about "personal crisis" scuppering one deal. Perhaps McCall's targets just didn't want to come to us.

However it is viewed, it leaves us with 4 tested strikers in Sutton, Murphy, McHugh and the enigma that is Esteban Casagolda.

With ten minutes left on Sunday, we needed an imposing presence in the box and the big Spaniard wasn't given his chance. On Monday night, I chatted to him on Facebook, as remarkably he accepted my friend request.

The informal interview went something like this:

K: Hola Este, how are you enjoying life at Motherwell?

E: I like Motherwell. Now I want to play more.

K: Do you think the gaffer will start you against Stranraer in the cup?

E: excuse, you repete, I translate espanol google.
(after translating) ah up to manager.

K: you are a cult hero amongst some fans.

E: =)

K: what do you think of your countryman Torres going to Chelsea?

E: can't believe 35million Andy Carroll.

K: me either.

The rest was general chit chat, but come Wednesday he wasn't chatting to randoms on the Internet. Instead he led the line against Kilmarnock. Listening on the radio, Derek ferguson slated him as much as he praised Eremenko.

From the highlights, the sitter Casa missed was a very good tackle by the Killie man, and had Cammy Bell not played out of his skin, Gloria may have contributes to a fine win.

Instead, we got beat. Again.

Another game dominated, another game down the pan. We are crying out for a deadly striker. I'll forgive Casagolda for being off the pace in his first start, but the ball would just not go in.

Bell proved why he's been called up for Scotland, saving from Murphy, Jennings and Saunders I think, but had we been more savvy in front of goal, we could and should have won it.

Talk on the web today suggests the "fox in the box" Francis Jeffers could be the solution. A free agent, a spell in Australia could end with him donning claret and Amber for the rest of the season.

When was the last time an £8 million player played for us? Granted he's not worth that now having score 13 goals I'm a decade, but could he do a job?

Steve Jones was slated for being too old before he'd kicked a ball but has been very effective, so why not take a punt on Jeffers? He's played at the top level, has 100% scoring record for England (1 game 1 goal) and has could be rejuvenated by a run in the SPL..

So, with a that in mind, playing out our skin on 2 occasions and losing both sums up where we are at. We'll break this slump yet.

6 points will be tricky in next 2 games at Ibrox and Pittodrie, 4 would be magic, even 3 against Aberdeen would suffice. I'll take the Rangers game as it comes but a win in Aberdeen is a must.

Not just for the points but to stick it right up Brown and his "integrity".

Up The Well!!!

Monday, 24 January 2011

MOTHERWELL FC: A CORNER TURNED?

Looking back at McCall's settling period and forward to hampden on Sunday...

So, since my last Blog, my predictions haven't completely fallen apart. Reynolds left us for the heady heights of League One, Sheffield Wednesday forking out an "undisclosed fee" for him. A Scotland Cap is surely an inevitability now.

We also ground out a bore draw with Inverness in quite possibly one of the worst games I've ever witnessed at Fir Park. The only thing of note that I can recall is Foran missing a sitter when the returnign Shaun "The Bus" Hutchinson made his only mistake of the match.

Alas there was no Casagolda last minute equaliser, but his time will come...

Saturday's win over Hibs, a phrase which I love reading, writing and saying, was prefixed by one of the more embaraasing/ridiculous moments in the club's hsitory. The loan capture of Mike Grella from Leeds looked like it could have been a fruitful signing.

Having been on loan at Carlisle for the first half of the season, he seemed pleased to be in the SPL fighting for regular action, (According to Twitter anyway.) Holding a shirt was as close as he came to pulling one on though, as due to a FIFA loophole, his signing was to be short lived. As he had played for both Leeds and Carlisle this season, the rules dictate he could not play for a 3rd team in one season.

Cue the message boards and forums bashing everyone from McCall to Boyle to Dempster, claiming what an embarassment of a club we are. In my opinion, when whoever inquired about Grella was on the phone to Elland Road, someone should have said no from the get go. The player, the manager, and Leeds United must have known when and where ha had played and therefore should have kiboshed any move involving Grella.

Instead, Motherwell are made to look like plums in the media again and adds another chapter to one of the most disrupted seasons we have had in a while.

The win over Hibs, while not a surprise, was certainly one to savour. For a team with such "skilled" players as Riordan, Nish, Zemamma, Thompson et al, I don't know how they are so poor. If we had upped our game a bit, we could have taken more than 2 off them on Saturday. I'm still convinced that Graeme Smith still has a fondness for us, as thats twice he has chucked a goal in for us since he left.

From where I sit in the East, it looked like Hammell's free kick had gone straight in. My query was quashed on Twitter though when Murphy tweeted he wouldn't have claimed it had he not touched it. There was no doubt Saunders connected with Hammell's corner for the second goal.

Young Steve had a blinder on Saturday, his goal, getting forward and stopping anything down the left all contributed to a sterling performance. Along with Hutchinson, Page and Meechan, our youngsters all had solid games, hopefully showing that we can rely on them if the transfer window closes without more additons.

Steve Jones debut was competent. he reminded me of Jim O'Brien in that he wasn't scared to take players on, but maybe tried a bit too hard to start with. It remains to be seen how important a role he will play, but he made a decent start to his claret and amber career.

Zemamma's penalty miss was horrific. No doubt, Riordan would have buried it, but that was one of the worst penalties to ever end up in the away stand for quite some time.

The main plus point from Saturday was that we were back amongst the goals. Although they came from set pieces, they all count, and with results going our way for Kilmarnock, ICT and Dundee United, this may be the turning point we have needed. 1 Defeat from McCall's first games in charge doesn't look too bad now there's a win in there.

A midweek jaunt to Perth could be a tricky one. Do we go for the points against McInnes mob, or do we rest players ahead of the Semi on Sunday?

The CIS Cup Semi v Rangers is going to be a tough watch I feel. In both games agaisnt them so far this season, we have been in positions where they were there for the taking, only for us to capitulate. Sunday is no time to fall apart.

If Rangers win, then fair enough, that's a final for them, if they lose, it's only a Diddy Cup anyway. For us though, it's our first chance at Silverware for 6 years if we progress, and it's against the team that thwarted and humiliated us on that day.

A humping in a Cup Final is never nice, a humping in a Semi is worse. It shows that you have bottled the big challenge and shows you up for punching above your weight. For perennial underdogs like ourselves, we know we have a decent squad, but can we outpunch our heavyweight rivals.

In a one off game, I say yes. A (kinda) neutral venue, a wide park for Humphrey to wreak havoc on and an eligible Steve Jennings battling in the midfield, would hopefully quell any pumpings from Rangers. Do what they want to us in the league, but not in the Cup.

This Semi is the chance for players like Murphy, Humphrey, Jenno, and Hutchinson all to shine. It could be Craigan's last attempt at winning anything with us, and I believe his contrbution on Sunday will be pivotal. Whether it be in his own game or helping Hutch through it, he is the Captain, the one who loves the club. The man who punches a hole in his chest every game, indenting that Well badge firmly upon himself. He knows the importance of this semi. For the Club and for himself.

By no means will Sunday be a classic. If we are to get anything from it, I feel it will be a steal. a 1-0 or even a penalty shoot out win. Rangers struggled without Miller on Saturday, and with Naismith possibly an injury doubt, Weiss and Lafferty will probably be their danger men. Weiss ran us ragged at Ibrox, so he needs to be stopped if we are to have any chance.

I've predicted a Well win, as I believe we are due it, but it will be hard fought. Regardless of the outcome, I'll keep my head high come Monday morning, knowing that a trip to Hampden is not a regular occurence and that a win is even rarer.

The team know what they need to do, let's hope they do it.

Up The Well!

Saturday, 15 January 2011

motherwell FC: the Season To Come...


MOTHERWELL FC: THE SEASON TO COME...

I’m going to be Nostradamus today and predict what the first half of 2011 will bring for Motherwell Football Club. I’ll try to be realistic and not too over the top with my optimism. We all have our hopes and wishes, but being a Well fan, you get used to inconsistency messing those up.

This was originally going to be last week’s blog, alas the League Reconstruction thing took precedence. It has however, given me an extra week to mull over and reconsider some of my visions for the future.

As a preface, I’m going to address the events which have lead to my views on what is to happen in the 5 months, moreso the next month or so.

Stuart McCall’s reign so far has been a mixed bag. A draw and a loss in the league and a win in the cup isn’t as bad as 2 league losses and being knocked out of the cup by lower league opposition could have been. The win on Sunday versus Dundee brought smiles back to the faces of many Well fans, particularly the return to form of Jamie Murphy.

Scoring one and setting up Sutton for his brace showed the quality the boy has. Indeed, the whole team acquitted themselves well in what the media were viewing as the most likely cup upset, due to our form against lesser teams than ourselves.

The midweek loss to Dundee United, to be honest came as no surprise. Despite being reasonably successful at Tannadice in recent seasons, it’s not normally a happy hunting ground. United have gained a bit of form and from the reports I’ve read, were victorious over a Motherwell team who didn’t turn up, again with Murphy looking most likely and Randolph having a decent game.

The game was accompanied by the news that Marc Fitzpatrick was left out due to him signing for Ross County. Apparently the money they had offered was the same as what Mr Boyle had, but the contract term was better at Dingwall. A Marmite player if ever there was one, Fitzy will go down in our Club’s history for THAT goal against Hearst in 2005. I wish him luck and good fortune at Ross County, where hopefully he’ll discover his potential.

This news came on the same day that we had lost out on a player to English Non League team Fleetwood Town. On paper that looks really bad on the club, but considering they have just had a massive amount of money invested in them ala Gretna, and the locality of the team to the player, then it is perhaps not that bad.

The release of Alan Gow was probably the right decision too. Like Fitzpatrick, he split opinion, but it just didn’t work out for him at us. The occasional fancy flick and beating of players with no end result, in my opinion, does not merit the sizeable wage he commanded. Thanks for the goal in the CIS Cup though.

Blackman signing for Aberdeen was a bit disappointing when I read it yesterday. It was always unlikely that he would come back to us, but for him to go further North, sticks in my craw a bit. No doubt he will do well up there and probably do a Delomeaux and score against us every time he plays us. On the plus side, he should be Cup Tied for the CIS Semi and Final...

This picks up on one of the things form my last blog. Loan players are not the property of the club they are loaned to, therefore, they only act as short term gain. In Blackman’s case, the gain he gave us stopped at the same time Brown and Knox left for up north.

This, in my opinion, is the event that will shape the rest of our season under McCall. Under Brown, things were stable, not without drama, but stable enough that we were challenging for the top 6. In the space of a month, we have come off the rails TO AN EXTENT. It is now up to McCall to play with the hand he’s been dealt.

So, with all that in mind, here’s how 2011 will pan out for Motherwell FC.

JANUARY.

The loss of Gow, Blackman and Fitzpatrick frees up wages. Rumours that Casagolda wants away are quelled when he scores a last minute equaliser versus Inverness. Suddenly, the predicted Messiah shows his resurrective powers. The squad is bolstered by some loanees, probably one from Rangers, due to the Ibrox connection. Reynolds will leave for the Championship for around £100,000 to fund this.

We get retribution on Hibs for their narrow win on the opening day before drawing with St Johnstone away. Humphrey stars in both games

The CIS Semi v Rangers will see us hold out on a 1-0 win thanks to Craigan playing a blinder at the back,(He’s due it against them...) and Sutton popping up with the important winner. Aberdeen will also controversially edge out Celtic, getting revenge for their 9-0 gubbing.

FEBRUARY.

With a Cup Final to look forward to, we start to pick up league points against the teams below us, Casagolda and the loanees bolstering the squad. Rangers get us back for the putting them out the Cup by putting 4 past Randolph for the 3rd time this season. Hutchison comes in to replace Reynolds and shows the promise he did under Gannon. He stays fit as well.

The reaaranged game v Aberdeen will be a heated affair after all that’s gone on. Another score draw will see the obligatory Blackman goal cancelled out by Murphy. Jennings and Hartley will have a bit of handbags and most will say we were lucky to get the draw.

The next round of the Scottish Cup gives us a scare when Threave or Stenhousmuir take an early lead, but a Murphy hat-trick puts us in to the next round. Murphy’s form sees the press link him with the Old Firm and a couple of premiership struggler type teams. Wigan probably.

By this time, 3rd place is well and truly Hearts, but results start to favour us and we end the month in 5th after drawing with Celtic at home. McCall is named Manager of the Month.

MARCH.

As the race for a Top 6 finish heats up, we slightly lose our way again, with the Manager of the Month award bringing its curse with it. 2 draws v Killie and Inverness in the league see the focus shifted to the CIS Final.

The media begin to unsettle the squad again as they start bringing up Jenno-Gate again as the investigation finally comes to light. Murphy, Hateley and Hutchison are all being linked with moves away on regular basis.

Motherwell Football Club lift their first silverware for 20 years as they defeat Aberdeen 3-2 in Extra Time to lift the CIS Cup. Stephen Craigan scores a bullet header and after lifting the Cup announces he is retiring to become McCall’s number 2 for next season.

APRIL.

The Cup win spurs us on to an unbeaten April. In the league at least. We beat Aberdeen once again, draw away to Hearts and beat Dundee United at home.

We fall at the next hurdle in the Scottish Cup, putting the double out of contention. The points amassed since Christmas see us 1 position above where we started the year, finishing 5th before the split. Inverness go off the boil when Rooney leaves in January, meaning we finish above them , after knocked out the Top 6 by Dundee United.

MAY.

The post-split fixtures work out OK for us, playing Rangers at home on the second last day, and Kilmarnock away on the last. The battle for 4th is between ourselves and Kilmarnock as they have a sticky patch in February. On the final day, we get a 2-0 win in Ayrshire, giving us 4th place.

Thanks to one of the Old Firm winning the Scottish Cup, we just manage a Europa place for a 4th year straight.

Jamie Murphy scores his last goal for us before being bought by one of the teams promoted to the English Premiership. Humphrey, Hateley and Jennings also move to Championship teams, along with Craigan’s retirement, leaving Stuart McCall with a massive rebuild on his hands for the 2011/2012 season.

I know I said at the top of the page that I was going to be realistic and not too happy clappy, but having watched Motherwell for 16 seasons, we always have a rough Christmas period. 3rd place is really unachievable, but 4th isn’t. The wheels will come off the teams around us and once McCall gets comfortable and adds his own touch to the team, things will fall in to place.

We are not the worst team in this league by a mile (even though we sometimes play like it), but Brown’s departure has knocked any momentum out of the team that it had. McCall has a task to rally the players from the funk they are in, but I believe he can do it.

Budgets may be tight, contracts may be running out, but the core of the team is still there. Impact wise, it’s only really Blackman that is a loss to us. Perhaps we will bring in another loan striker or maybe McCall will put faith in McHugh or Gary Smith. I think the players who began to shine under Gannon will start to see some first team action, as it is about time.

They have impressed in the past and an extended run in the team would do them good. Hutchison, Pollock, even Saunders being played in centre defence may prove fruitful.

I believe we have had our bad patch. We have 2 Cups to compete for and our league assault begins again against Inverness on Saturday. Undoubtedly a tough game, but a winnable one, nonetheless.

Come 4:45pm tomorrow, all of this blog could be irrelevant. Fingers crossed, it’s not.

Up The Well!!!

Friday, 7 January 2011

MOTHERWELL FC: BUILD THE GAME OR KNCOK IT FLAT? LEAGUE RECONSTRUCTION DO YOUR WORST.

Football has once again become boring in the eyes of those who run it. Wholesale changes are abound. Will they make a difference? Maybe...

The adage of "If it ain't broke, don't fix it", is one which is used a lot at times like these. Of course everyone has an opinion on the merits and pitfalls of Scottish Football and many believe that in it's current state it is broke. But would the solutions being discussed to actually fix the problem within our game, or would they just be a stop gap, til it happens again?

The SPL has been in effect since 1998, with the instigation of the League Split coming in 2001. The SPL was to be the ultimate overhaul of Scottish Football, changing the 10 team league to a 12 team league to give more games, increase revenue and make the League more exciting.

3 years in, it was boring again, so the April Split was introduced to make the league more competitive and exciting and lucrative than the initial rebranding was supposed to. Winter breaks were phased in and out, TV deals were struck with SKY, SETANTA and ESPN to give the clubs more exposure and more money.

It's 2011 now and the SPL is just as exciting and interesting and great to watch as it was 13 years ago. Not at all. And that is why these shake ups are coming in to place.

The prospect of a 2 Tier SPL comprising of 2 10 team leagues is being mooted as the answer to the issues with Scottish football. The pros of this, according to those involved in implementing it, sees that there are more big games to attract people to, generating more money.

Derek Weir, The Well's vice chairman made a statement yesterday saying that as yet no decisions gad been mad eon the outlay of the new propsed set up, but that with a potential 10 team set up,

"we have to bear in mind the importance of the funds we receive from TV deals, other media and sponsors. We are unfortunately already in a position where our best players can move to lower leagues in other countries for significantly increased wages and any further reduction in income from those sources will only make this problem worse. This will lead to a decline in the quality on the pitch."

This statement resonates with me on 2 levels. From the point of view of a provincial club such as ourselves, we need money. Bottom line. Despite the European runs, the high league finishes and the lack of depth in our squad, we are a financially poor team. We've been in administration, we've had to breed the youngsters where experience would have been preferred and we need to depend on loan signings to see us through a season.

Mass panic erupts whenever these loan deals end and the first thought is the worst. How can we afford to replace them. this means there is very little longevity in our squad, more so our front players. We always will be a selling club but gone are the days of having Coyne and Arnott and Coyle as our recognised attacking line up over a number of seasons.

As good as loan players are, we cannot afford to keep them for any length of time and therefore lose continuity. That is the rub.

The second point that Weir makes about the lack of quality on the pitch due to low funds ties in with this. The fast money made from the TV deals allows clubs like ourselves, Kilmarnock, Inverness etc to make impact signings for an average of a season. Eremenko for example, probably won't be at killie much longer and besides Conor Sammon, has been there most important man this season.

The TV money can help to pay a loan wage, but offers no long term return. We saw this with Jutkiewicz last season. We got a season out of The Juke and Europe, but come this season we lost him to Coventry. The money that is split between the clubs in the league is not being wasted as such, but not being invested in where the real problems with the SPL lie.

Talent.

To coin another cliche, "Grass Roots" football in Scotland is non existent. We have very little talent being produced at club level. Sure, Motherwell and Hibs ahve done ok with youth for the last decade, but for every James McFadden or Derek Riordan, theres a whole host of others who don't make it or just aren't good enough for our leagues.

If the bigwigs want to redesign our game, nurture the youth. This is where the appeal of the 16 team format lies with me. From what I have read and listened to, a 16 team league, as mundane as it would be at first by stripping the SPl of 1 or 2 Old Firm, New Firm, Edinburgh derbys a year, would have its merits if the plans to copy European leagues come true.

Having the 2nd tier consisting of lower league teams and secondary teams form the Top Tier clubs would be a master stroke. This would allow clubs to build up strong youth team players in a competitive league, without having to farm them out to part time teams or have them gro stagnant in the U19s.

Once they have served in the lower tier, they can graduate to the big league, having a wealth of experience behind them. Like in Spain, these teams would be exempt from promotion, but would have the opportunity to taste competition and the chance at winning a trophy early in their careers.

I believe that if money is invested in teams and squads rather than individuals for short term gain, then we can build Scottish football again. It will take time, but with anything long term, it can't be quick fixed.

With all this in mind, here is my idea for how to revolutionise the SPL...

16 Team Top League, 12-14 Team Lower League

Top League: Each team plays one another twice= 30 game regular season

1st placed team at the end of the season are League Champions with automatic Champions league place.

Second Champions League position determined by 2nd to 4th place play off games. Play each other once, team with most points and goals from games gets Champions League, other 2 get Europa Places.

Last placed team goes down, 2nd and 3rd bottom teams have a play off with highest finishing eligible teams in 2nd League. Guarantees 1 up 1 down plus potentially 3 up 3 down, keeping the relegation fight interesting.

The middle 8 teams are then put in to a new league cup format, whereby they compete with the 2nd tier teams not promoted, allowing them to stay competitive and allowing the smaller teams and the second strings a shot at glory.

At the start of each season, there would be a second tier player draft. Players from the top league are able to pick the stand out players form the 2nd league, with the lowest finishing top league team getting first draft pick as it potentially bolsters their squad, giving them a better chance of success in the coming season.

These draft players would be rated on their season statistics. Not just goals matter in the 2nd league. Assists, clean sheets, team created goals, saves, discipline all count in the statistical ratings. This means that the youngsters getting in to the game, the children and teenagers learn how to play total football, by having the unheralded parts relevant in the game today being praised.

I hated playing football with Ross Mcnally at school. He was a decent player, but tried to do everything himself, as the players that did that kind of thing were the ones he admired. If emphasis is put on the creation of goals or the work rate of having a shut out by individuals and teams, then that should encourage young players to develop a non selfish game, thus giving them more confidence in their abilities, MAKING THEM MORE TALENTED PLAYERS.

Right, my lunch break is over, need to get back to selling phones. Pick apart my plans if you wish, but my proposal would generate excitement, competition, suspense and success for the teams involved.

whatever the outocme of the rebuild, Scottish football will suffer if we do not invest in youth.

Up the Well!!!