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2014-15 Second Half & January Transfer Window
one of the other problems is players reluctance to go on loan, maybe then they'd become more physical/talented, playing with a better class of player to those in the u21's development league division 2 Doh
Removed until we're actually on our way back  Doh
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(14-03-2015, 14:27)Thurnscoe_OWL Wrote: think that's down to the chairmen wanting instant success as well, resulting in the academy being pretty much non-existent (along with scouting networks, coaching staff etc) and no long term plans being in place. Up until about 4 years ago we hardly funded the academy

also, we as a group of fans don't have the patience to wait for people to come through the system. When DJ and MM pushed the academy we were told it could be 5/6 years before we see any players come through, it's only been 3 and, regularly, I see people argue that the academy is a waste of time, we don't see any benefits and we should stop funding it

I wasn't referring to the Academy. I think that will do fine for us given time.

I was referring to young players after they hit the first team, they rarely improve. Look at Wood, Spurr, Beevers & McCallister. None of them continued to develop after they became first team regulars. All players should be given personal improvement targets and developed so they improve each season. For example, it was obvious that Spurr had no right foot when he hit the first team. Three years later, his right foot was no better. We need coaches that work on improving our first team players or else Palmer will fade away in a year or two.
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The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy.
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(14-03-2015, 23:42)madsteve Wrote:
(14-03-2015, 14:27)Thurnscoe_OWL Wrote: think that's down to the chairmen wanting instant success as well, resulting in the academy being pretty much non-existent (along with scouting networks, coaching staff etc) and no long term plans being in place. Up until about 4 years ago we hardly funded the academy

also, we as a group of fans don't have the patience to wait for people to come through the system. When DJ and MM pushed the academy we were told it could be 5/6 years before we see any players come through, it's only been 3 and, regularly, I see people argue that the academy is a waste of time, we don't see any benefits and we should stop funding it

I wasn't referring to the Academy. I think that will do fine for us given time.

I was referring to young players after they hit the first team, they rarely improve. Look at Wood, Spurr, Beevers & McCallister. None of them continued to develop after they became first team regulars. All players should be given personal improvement targets and developed so they improve each season. For example, it was obvious that Spurr had no right foot when he hit the first team. Three years later, his right foot was no better. We need coaches that work on improving our first team players or else Palmer will fade away in a year or two.

While I agree with what you say MS, not sure those examples really fit as none of those players really went on  to anything better after they left us!!  I think our main problem has been the  inability to attract enough quality players, particularly youngsters first because until MM bought us we had a bad academy and a non-existant scouting network.  Most young players were either local lads or fell into our lap from somewhere.  Now we have a much better set up I would hope we can cast our net wider and with new owners we should be a more attractive proposition for younger players.
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(15-03-2015, 05:46)St Charles Owl Wrote:
(14-03-2015, 23:42)madsteve Wrote:
(14-03-2015, 14:27)Thurnscoe_OWL Wrote: think that's down to the chairmen wanting instant success as well, resulting in the academy being pretty much non-existent (along with scouting networks, coaching staff etc) and no long term plans being in place. Up until about 4 years ago we hardly funded the academy

also, we as a group of fans don't have the patience to wait for people to come through the system. When DJ and MM pushed the academy we were told it could be 5/6 years before we see any players come through, it's only been 3 and, regularly, I see people argue that the academy is a waste of time, we don't see any benefits and we should stop funding it

I wasn't referring to the Academy. I think that will do fine for us given time.

I was referring to young players after they hit the first team, they rarely improve. Look at Wood, Spurr, Beevers & McCallister. None of them continued to develop after they became first team regulars. All players should be given personal improvement targets and developed so they improve each season. For example, it was obvious that Spurr had no right foot when he hit the first team. Three years later, his right foot was no better. We need coaches that work on improving our first team players or else Palmer will fade away in a year or two.

While I agree with what you say MS, not sure those examples really fit as none of those players really went on  to anything better after they left us!!  I think our main problem has been the  inability to attract enough quality players, particularly youngsters first because until MM bought us we had a bad academy and a non-existant scouting network.  Most young players were either local lads or fell into our lap from somewhere.  Now we have a much better set up I would hope we can cast our net wider and with new owners we should be a more attractive proposition for younger players.

We had Spurr (age 17 - 24), Wood (age 17 - 24) & Beevers (age 16 - 23). Those are the ages at which they should be improving yet I would suggest that none of them were any better on the day they left than they were when they were 18. There was talk of Beevers attracting a multi million pound fee & being a future international at 18 but he wasn't coached to improve as a player.

This doesn't reflect well on BL, AI, GM, DJ & SG but more importantly, it doesn't reflect well on the situation in which they have to perform. A Manager or Head Coach has several tasks to perform and one that we have failed at for many many years is the one of improving the ability of individual players. Can you name many players that we have had over the last decade that have continued to improve past the age of 19 or 20.

I think Palmer has improved but the improvement seemed to happen in the year he spent at Tranmere. Has Nuhui improved as a striker in his two seasons at S6?

In the debate about Antonio, some posters have said that he has improved since he went to Forest. I am struggling to think of any players that have improved while being at Wednesday.

All our Managers think about is winning the next match. They cannot think long term or even medium term because there will be no medium term if they lose the next five matches, This means they rely on players as they are or new signings to improve the team & ignore improving the players that they already have at the Club.

While the Manager will always concentrate on first team results, there has to be someone within the coaching team responsible for the personal development of the individual players. At Man Utd, the majority of players stay behind and do personal training in the afternoon, as happens at many clubs. At Wednesday the culture is to just do the basic training and not come back to do any extra.
The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy.
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guess who his dad is imre
Removed until we're actually on our way back  Doh
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Lavery is way off SBC standard at the moment & was picking up vital game time at Chesterfield. Now his development will be stunted further by sitting on the bench for us.

Would make far more sense to bring Madine back and find out if he could hack it at this level but SG wouldn't pick Madine if he was the only striker we had. Far more likely to throw Kirkland up front.
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The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy.
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I'm not getting into the current debate  Whistle but what a master stroke (or blind luck) it was when we shoved Warhurst up top  Thumb up He scored some absolute pearlers in just about every game  Thumb up and was so exciting to watch  Thumb up

Note :- exciting
Line breaks: ex|cit¦ing
Pronunciation: /ɪkˈsʌɪtɪŋ/  /ɛkˈsʌɪtɪŋ/
Definition of exciting in English:
adjective

Causing great enthusiasm and eagerness:
one of the most exciting matches I’ve ever seen
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and complicated
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(15-03-2015, 19:11)Maddix Wrote: I'm not getting into the current debate  Whistle but what a master stroke (or blind luck) it was when we shoved Warhurst up top  Thumb up He scored some absolute pearlers in just about every game  Thumb up and was so exciting to watch  Thumb up

Note :- exciting
Line breaks: ex|cit¦ing
Pronunciation: /ɪkˈsʌɪtɪŋ/  /ɛkˈsʌɪtɪŋ/
Definition of exciting in English:
adjective

Causing great enthusiasm and eagerness:
one of the most exciting matches I’ve ever seen

Exciting?

Can't find it in the Wednesday dictionary.

Should be between

 "Easy Meat" - what Wednesday are to most decent teams

and

 "Exiting" - what Wednesday fans start doing due to boredem at about 70 minutes into a match
The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy.
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(15-03-2015, 19:11)Maddix Wrote: I'm not getting into the current debate  Whistle but what a master stroke (or blind luck) it was when we shoved Warhurst up top  Thumb up He scored some absolute pearlers in just about every game  Thumb up and was so exciting to watch  Thumb up

Note :- exciting
Line breaks: ex|cit¦ing
Pronunciation: /ɪkˈsʌɪtɪŋ/  /ɛkˈsʌɪtɪŋ/
Definition of exciting in English:
adjective

Causing great enthusiasm and eagerness:
one of the most exciting matches I’ve ever seen

It was one of my happiest Wednesday memories as a youngster getting Warhursts autograph after a home game in '92
"The opinion of 10,000 men is of no value if none of them know anything about the subject." Marcus Aurelius
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Imre, in that clip, the lad who crossed for young Hirsty's header looks a good prospect!
JUST SAYING LIKE!
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