Blue Vain wrote:
You're missing the point. What he's saying is our focus is on building a team to compete for a premiership. That includes giving players experience and formulating a game style that is sustainable and conducive to success.
Would you rather they play more experienced players who won't be there next year with the sole focus of avoiding the wooden spoon? What a short sighted approach that would be.
We're better off playing the kids who will be a part of our future, surrounded by senior players who can set the standards for them to learn off. If that means we finish lower now but it fastbacks our improvement, its a perfect approach. If that means we finish 18th instead of 17th, I couldn't give a @#$%&! .
And these kids we fast track for the future get up and leave for another club.
How do you feel about that.
Player retention for bottom sides is a big issue.
Clubs put 6 to 7 years of development and sometimes even less and they walk out the door.
Your club will never improve at that rate.
Losing games continually is a bigger detriment to the club than so called fast tracking of players for the future.
Developing kids need players around them of quality and the team needs to show signs of heading upward not backwards like we have gone this year.
Football is about wins and losses and anything outside of that like development, progression etc is just fluff and bluster.
Teaching 3 or 4 kicks how to win is far better for development that having 7 or 8 getting beaten each week.
Look how quickly the Swans youth develops
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