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The compendium - Now in Blog Format


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Joe is still in the background. We are happy with that situation, and that will take us through until the end of the season.

 

I got a call on Saturday morning [Feb 28] from Derek

 

 

Was it not March? :lol:

 

Whatever! :razz:

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Not sure if this was Llambias or the infamous "club insider":

 

"Mike Ashley is definitely not interested in employing a Red Adair-type figure. He is 100 per cent confident in the ability of his managerial team to get the club out of trouble."

 

“There have been no conversations with Terry Venables and there won’t be any with him or anyone else. That’s guaranteed. No chance."

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Not sure if this was Llambias or the infamous "club insider":

 

"Mike Ashley is definitely not interested in employing a Red Adair-type figure. He is 100 per cent confident in the ability of his managerial team to get the club out of trouble."

 

“There have been no conversations with Terry Venables and there won’t be any with him or anyone else. That’s guaranteed. No chance."

 

Strangely enough though that was before the stories last Sunday on Administration, the very same day he calls Shearer and asks for his help. [/cynical]

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Ryder on the Payroll?

 

I've highlighted Lee Ryder's bias in previous posts, but his coverage of Shearer's arrival this week has been so pro-Ashley as to be comedic.

 

To be clear, I think the appointment of Shearer is an excellent move. Late in the day though it's come, at least it's a positive change that can only improve our chances in the remaining seven games. For this reason I've avoided pointing out the disparity between Kinnear's thoughts...

 

“Whatever happens, I will have an input. If I can't do certain things, I will be speaking to players and working at the training ground.”

 

which we heard even as Sky Sports News had already removed the "unconfirmed" bit of their story about the new manager, and days after Shearer had spent the weekend talking with the owner and Managing Director about taking over. Whether it was just the left hand not talking to the right, or a brag made while fully aware he was being marginalised wasn't important because Kinnear is yesterday's man (hopefully), and dwelling on his utterances no longer tells us anything about the improvements happening at the club.

 

But, the response to our potential relegation we've seen (and encourage) in no way excuses the shambolic efforts that have gone on behind the scenes this season, which left us on the brink in the first place. Lee Ryder of The Chronicle likes to think it does though, his reporting this week has been nothing but a glowing testimony for the people who got us here. One blog marks Ashley as a shrewd man with a long line of clever decisions behind him...

 

"Another Wise move from Mike Ashley?"

 

Sorry , who got Wise the sack? Mike Ashley has stood steadfastly alongside the poison dwarf for over a year as everyone inside and outside the club told him it wasn’t a workable “system”, and even if it was, an odious individual like Wise wasn’t the man for the role.

 

Even in the article that follows that ridiculous title, Ryder states that Wise going was part of the deal that saw Al arrive. Isn't it Shearer then, that deserves the credit for such a wise move? After all, we can only assume Wise would still be in a job if Shearer had turned down Ashley’s offer unconditionally.

 

Personally, I’ve read more into the circumstances of Wise’s departure. It tells me that although Shearer will work for them, he doesn’t trust those in charge as far as he could throw them.

 

In his press conference Shearer told us he accepted the job on Monday. Sky Sports ran it as a confirmed story on Tuesday, but it wasn’t until Wednesday night that the club confirmed it. Why?

 

I think it’s clear that Shearer would not take their word for it that Wise would be sacked. He wanted a press release that stated Wise was out and that there would no longer be such a role at the club BEFORE he would allow them to confirm his appointment publicly. He eventually got that announcement, and his arrival was then confirmed within an hour. Shearer knows how these people work and isn’t going to fall into the same trap that Keegan did.

 

Ryder didn’t stop there though...

 

"Shearer's return will keep Michael Owen on board."

 

How can anyone know that? Is Owen going to stay with us if we’re in the Championship? I’d have thought Keegan being in charge of a team that was now safe would be more attractive? Llambias insists Kinnear will be manager next year, so logically nothing’s changed in terms of Owen's contract decision.

 

"How many Ashley crictics will change their tune now Shearer has agreed to join up? His arrival should save Newcastle and while Ashley and Derek Llambias have been battered from pillar to post - where does it leave your feelings on the controverisal duo now?

 

I think it’ll just be the people you can convince Lee. Ignoring the fact that you don't spell check your work, there’s only so much Shearer can do with the poor squad he has, built by the system Ashley sanctioned.

 

To claim we’re now saved, and can look forward to Premier league football is the kind of sales pitch that Ashley himself would make. They’re the kind of statements intended to sell season tickets rather than being the informed opinion of a sports reporter worth his salt.

 

http://nufc-ashlies.blogspot.com/

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.....

 

Despite acknowledging, that Shearer was the man who ended Wise's time at the club, he's now started printing retrospective articles claiming it's all been part of the plan

 

"The Chronicle understands Wise had barely spoken with Ashley and managing-director Derek Llambias since before January, with Joe Kinnear assuming a recruitment role during the transfer window."

 

Lee didn't seem to think it was the case in January though when he wrote a story about Wise negotiating contracts with Butt and Ameobi. And Joe Kinnear thought Wise was running the show during the window when he said

 

“As far as I am concerned I am going to keep every single player we have got that I think can contribute to keeping us up in the Premiership. I'm not going to weaken my chances. The fact is I'm looking to add to the squad. It's as simple as that. I have explained seriousness of situation to Mike Ashley. That’s in Dennis Wise's quarters. He is the one wheeling and dealing, He is the one selling them. We’re trying to get funds back in and he is aware of the players I want. We are talking to a lot of clubs.”

 

This confuses me on so many levels. He's now suggesting Wise has had no involvement for three months, and had no involvement throughout the entire transfer window. If we ignore what's been said before and take the retrospective story as the truth (Ray Ryan at the Express did run the story at the time) then our top local journalist either didn't know, or didn't see fit to tell us? But that's neither here nor there, because if it's true, then whoever messed up the January transfer window so fantastically is still at the club. Which suggests the celebratory tone Ryder adopts in reporting Wise's departure after a "disastrous" time would seem excessive for a man who wielded little power within the club. Most shockingly when he relates an event that occured many moons ago, that he chose not to at the time.

 

"I stood outside St James’s Park some months after Keegan’s departure and watched as a fan told Wise what he thought of the situation. Wise’s laughing-cavalier response to the young Geordie, just yards away from where KK explained to fans why he had sold Andy Cole in 1995, summed up why the ex-Chelsea man was never the right fit for a people’s club like Newcastle United."

 

Lee wants to lay the blame for all the clubs ills squarely at the feet of Dennis Wise, but whichever way you slice it, Wise was only part of the problem.

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  • 4 months later...
From .com

 

"A compendium of disaster"

 

George Caulkin, in TheGame supplement of The Times, provides as good a summary of our plight as we've seen:

 

Ashley has been incapable of stringing two good decisions together and the outcome has been utterly destructive.

 

He arrived preaching the long-term and then sacked Sam Allardyce.

 

He tapped into Newcastle’s emotions by appointing Kevin Keegan and then tied his hands together.

 

He recognised the need to have a football department, but chose Dennis Wise to lead it.

 

He accepted reality last autumn and decided to sell the club. But Joe Kinnear as an interim manager?

 

He took the club off the market, promised to communicate more with supporters and then did nothing of the sort.

 

He vowed to run a dangerously spendthrift club on a sound financial footing, but made a profit in the transfer market when the team was in dire need of strengthening.

 

Finally, he brought in Shearer, who could do little to prevent Newcastle’s slide into the Coca Cola Championship, but restored discipline to the training-ground, provided a link with fans and reviewed of all playing matters at the club.

 

Ashley admitted his mistakes and said that hiring Shearer was his “best decision”.

 

He then ignored him, putting out the for sale signs, not wishing to leave new owners in the same position he inherited. It has been a compendium of disaster.

 

Entire article

 

:mellow:

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