The panic that seems to be building
up over Loftus Road may ensure that yet more faces arrive in West London before
the end of the transfer window. The desperate European wide phonecall has been
answered this time by Ricardo Carvalho. He'll probably do a job for a season,
and if Rangers stay up at the end of the season Mark Hughes will say it was a
decision well made. Personally, I'm not sure that bringing in journeymen old
pros is the answer. I wonder if Yakubu will turn up at Loftus Road in January?
There is another way. I have long
since held the belief that the difference between a low end Premier League
player and a League 1 / 2 player is very very small. In fact, the only real
difference between someone playing for Wigan or QPR and someone playing for
Northampton is luck. We all wanted to be footballers, and lets face it,
the reason why we write blogs is because we weren't good enough. Players
playing in the Football League have an extraordinary amount of ability. They
have to to be where they are. The only real difference between an ineffective
Premier League player (lets say, for example, the recently sold Wigan man
Connor Sammon) and a League 2 player (eg. Shaun Harrad) is their bank balance.
This weekend, various Premiership
squads will contain players who have turned out for Rotherham United, Rochdale,
Barnet, Bristol Rovers, Lincoln City, Bromley, Southend United and Queen
of the South. Grant Holt scored goals in League 2, League 1 and the
Championship. Guess what - he scored in the Premier League too, and I would
imagine that Roy Hodgson gave him quite a bit of thought too. I fully expect
Adam Le Fondre and Rickie Lambert to score in the Premier League. Their track
record says they have scored wherever they have been.
Lower end Premier League clubs need
to look at the lower divisions. Not all of the answers are there, but there are
a lot of good players who could thrive in the Premier League environment.
What's more, players who have worked their way up through the leagues will
never lack effort. Does Djibril Cisse really care about QPR? Maybe he does, but
probably not as much as Shaun Derry or Jamie Mackie, who have finally made it
to the top.
Cisse - 'The Money's Good!' |
The clubs have got lazy. It is too
easy to bring an established player in on a free. They don't require coaching.
They might not have elements of their technique that need a little bit of work.
But they won't be hungry. Supporters will soon moan that so and so doesn't work
hard enough, and the players know, that if the team is relegated they can move
on a free to someone else. Lower division players might take a few months of
coaching, but if you put the effort in they will give everything for their
club. You just need to invest time. Time in your scouting to find the right
player and time in your coaching of the player.
Swansea and Norwich were great to
watch last season, Blackpool the season before that. Southampton and Reading
will play good stuff this season. Squads made of players who have served their
time in the lower leagues, will entertain crowds and get results. I bet you
don't hear their fans moaning either. They might get relegated, but from each
squad 4 or 5 players will prove themselves to be more than capable of playing
in the Premier League.
If it comes down to it, I would fancy
Reading or Southampton to beat QPR in a relegation run in. Squads with
togetherness, with players who have worked for their entire careers to get
where they are are going to find the extra grit required. Will QPR's squad
really be able to grind out results?
Put it this way:
Rickie Lambert or Djibril Cisse to score more goals this season? I know who my money would be on.
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