Sunday 4 January 2015

Who's really out of Toon?

Newcastle fans seem to sum up a change in the mindset of football fans across the land in recent years. A noticeable shift from passion to outright bitterness. A move from support to hostile attack on their own clubs and representatives both on and off the field of play.

It could be that in a world that depends increasingly on electronic or virtual communication, people now see little difference in venting their frustration at the TV or via online outlets and spewing hatred in the faces other human beings.

The Geordies are a case in point as the club continues to underachieve. Some of them are even  cheering on Rangers as they try to get back into the Scottish Premier League - the sooner that happens, the sooner owner Mike Ashley is likely to sell up and ship out. 

But will that ultimately benefit the Magpies? And is their current plight all down to Ashley? Should those fans take a long look at their own behaviour and ask what sort of negative contribution they've made themselves?

Ashley (via a club statement) stated earlier this season that he has no intention of selling the Tyneside outfit for at least two years. The statement read:

“The truth is Mike Ashley remains committed to Newcastle United. For the avoidance of doubt, this means that for the remainder of this season and at least until the end of next season, Mike Ashley will not, under any circumstances, sell Newcastle United at any price. The club cannot be stronger in stating its position on this matter.”

Coincidentally The Gers should be back in the Scottish Premiership by then. They may have problems at the moment (and over-turning the thirteen point lead promotion favourites Hearts have over them is a massive one), but assuming they can keep their financial heads above water, there is no doubt they can again become the sort of cash cow Ashley loves.

Imagine it. One other major rival for the title and the two domestic cup competitions each year. Guaranteed Champions League pay-outs every season and a home support that are every bit as loyal and nutty as the mugs on Tyneside ... oh, and a chance to start again in an industry in which he has developed experience and understands a little better.

Newcastle is a cash cow itself of course. 

More than 50,000 turn up at St. James' Park and while they are in the Premier League the money will continue to roll in. All Ashley has to do is ensure the club's status in the top flight by buying players of sufficient quality to stay there.

There is also the odd possibility of improving the balance sheet by selling on staff who exceed expectations. 'Staff' because it's not just selling players like Andy Carroll or Yohan Cabaye that add to the coffers - the compensation paid for the services of long-suffering manager Alan Pardew won't have done any harm either.

Palace have reportedly shelled out in excess of two million quid for Pardew, although Ashley might well feel it's not enough - given that he now finds himself on the front line again as his former manager had been taking a lot of the vitriol that would have otherwise been directed at him.

And maybe it's the abuse he received from the Toon Army that is the root cause of the owner's seeming lack of desire to win things.

Ashley famously started his tenure standing in the Gallowgate and downed pints in local pubs with the fans, naively believing he could be one of the them. 

Owners and directors of professional football clubs can never take on that mantle. 

As soon as things go awry - as they inevitably will for every team at some stage - the punters look for someone to blame and the suits from the boardroom are usually next in line to be targeted after the manager.

Pardew himself cited unacceptable abuse aimed at his family during a lengthy losing streak this season and if anyone believes that sort of treatment can be easily shrugged off and forgotten, they are fooling only themselves. 

Who among us would shake the hand of someone who had spat venom at our loved ones? Family comes first for all of us surely?

The feelings of those particular Newcastle fans certainly won't have registered with Pardew when Palace came calling and they may also have soured his feelings towards the vast majority of the club's support.

Maybe it's a similar situation for Ashley. 

Having spent over one hundred million pounds bailing the club out and getting it onto a sound final footing, the fans turned on him because the team wasn't living up to expectations. 

Expectations of what? 

Newcastle have been one of - if not THE - biggest underachieving clubs in English football since the mid-1950s. One 'real' trophy in 1969 when they won the Inter City Fairs Cup - the weaker (if you can believe it) fore-runner to the UEFA Cup.

So again; expectations of what? 

Coming second in the Premier League as they did under Kevin Keegan and Kenny Dalglish in successive seasons in the nineties? Losing the four FA Cup finals or the one League Cup final they have appeared in since that 'heady' European win in 1969?

Don't misunderstand. If the Toon actually won something, there will be one hell of a wonderful party and they'll drink the city dry. It would be great to see that happen, but have they hindered their own success to a certain extent?

Ashley may well have been in it for the long term when he took over. He may have been thinking logically about building for the future. Unfortunately football fans are merely a microcosm of the rest of society - a society that expects instant gratification - and when you mix malice and vitriol to unrealistic, immediate expectation and serve it up to men like Ashley, don't expect sweetness and light in return.

The Sports Direct chief may not be able to walk away as easily as Pardew, but he has a history of serving up cold dishes to business rivals and this is what the Toon Army may have been feasting on and might continue to munch on for some time yet.

And will the players themselves fancy rising to the challenge of Premier League games after facing the hostility thrown their way following Saturday's FA Cup exit at Leicester? The club is still thirteen points from avoiding relegation if the forty point benchmark is to be used.

Mike Ashley knows how to make money, of that there is little doubt. He has a dazzling reputation in the City for turning tat into gold and knows his own worth, but he may well have lost any interest in turning football's pig's ear into a silk purse.

Mismanagement of Newcastle from the boardroom and selling supporters short is a tradition and has been since Wor Jackie Milburn hung up his boots. In fact even the great Milburn (a loyal Newcastle legend who has arguably done more for the Toon than any other man) advised his young nephew Bobby Charlton to give the club a body swerve! 

How things could have been so different if Milburn had persuaded the Charlton boys to pull on the black and white stripes. But Milburn was no mug and he too put his family first.

A long line of club custodians have been happy to pick the pockets of the faithful and misguided supporters while offering little in return. Only Sir John Hall (in tandem with Keegan) showed what the club is capable of achieving - his son was the polar opposite of his father and Ashley in a business sense. 

So why should Ashley be any different to those who preceded him? Especially if he feels his initial 'generosity' was thrown back in his face.

The Toon Army might be eagerly anticipating the day Ashley sells up and buys Rangers, but they should be careful what they wish for as he may not have their best interests at heart given the way he feels they have treated him and - more importantly - his family.

Who knows? If he sells the club to people with the financial acumen and ability of the characters who ran Portsmouth and Leeds into the ground, the Geordie faithful may just look enviously to regular Champions League football in Glasgow and wonder what could have been if they had been a little less hostile.

  

Walsall 0 Coventry City 2

Jim O'Brien was Captain Fantastic as he scored a belter before setting up another to seal a derby win.

Skipper O'Brien scored his fourth goal of the season with a screamer in the sixth minute when he  fired in from 25 yards shot to the right of the area past helpless keeper Richard O'Donnell and into the far top corner.

O'Donnell was a Saddlers hero for less than one minute before O'Brien's stunning opener.

Winger O'Brien was sent sprawling in the box by back-tracking striker Romaine Sawyers, but O'Donnell saved Marcus Tudgay's penalty with his feet.

But Tudgay made amends in the 87th minute when he sealed the win by heading O'Brien's corner past a static Walsall defence from ten yards for his first Sky Blue's goal since joining the club from Nottingham Forest in the summer.

Delighted Coventry boss Steven Pressley was delighted said:

"The mentality of the group was outstanding. It wasn't just a great performance, it was a wonderful result and both sides played with a real intensity."

Skipper O'Brien turned defender in the tenth minute to deflect a twenty yard shot from opposite number James Baxendale safely into the arms of stopper Ryan Allsop.

And within one minute Allsop did well to save a 22 yard free kick from winger Andy Forde at the base of his right post.

Allsop produced two great saves within seconds of each other in the 52nd minute when he beat away Baxendale's low shot from the edge of the box before getting up to block striker Tom Bradshaw's attempt to turn in the rebound.

Furious Walsall manager Dean Smith blasted:

"The way we started the game meant we ended up chasing it. It's disappointing, but it doesn't kill the season.

"We'll talk to the players on Monday, iron it out and start again."


Cheltenham Town 0 Newport County 1

Chris Zebroski returned to haunt his old club and keep County's promotion push on track.

Striker Zebroski had an unhappy six month spell at Whaddon Road two years ago, but was all smiles after netting his seventh goal of the season in the eleventh minute.

Midfielder Adam Chapman laid the ball off to the unmarked Zebroski in a central position just outside the box and he drilled a well placed low shot past helpless keeper Trevor Carson.

County have now won five from their last six games as they edge closer to the automatic promotion places, but manager Justin Edinburgh said:

"We had to put our bodies on the line today.

"I thought we rode our luck slightly in the first half, but we were resilient in the second half and once we get in front we're hard to beat."

Cheltenham should have taken the lead in the third minute.

Striker Terry Gornell hit the inside of the post from twelve yards and as winger Omari Sterling-James dithered with the ball stuck under his feet inches from the line, keeper Jamie Stephens fell on it to snuff out the danger.

County responded one minute later, but former Robins hitman Shaun Jeffers curled his fourteen yard strike over the bar from the left side of the box. 

Stephens pulled off two more great saves in the first half as Cheltenham pressed for an equaliser.

In the 20th minute Gornell shrugged off two defenders to dart into the area only to see the alert Stephens save his close range effort with his feet. 

And six minutes before the break the keeper needed to beat away a stinging twenty yard drive from the nippy Sterling-James.

Ten minutes after the restart the Robins were fortunate not to go further behind.

Chapman saw a goal bound 22 yard drive deflected inches wide and central defender Ismail Yakubu had a header cleared off the line by midfielder Matt Richards.

On the hour both teams came close to scoring.

Zebroski had a dipping shot saved by Carson and Sterling-James raced past three defenders, but saw his effort fly narrowly wide of the upright.

In the 91st minute central defender Darren Jones sealed a man of the match performance by timing a last ditch tackle perfectly as striker Harry Williams ran in on goal.

Cheltenham boss Paul Buckle is still waiting for his first win six games after taking over from Mark Yates, but said:

"I'm absolutely gutted because I thought we were very good today.

"I'm thrilled with the players and their work rate. There were pluses all over the field.

"They're fifth and we're nineteenth, but there wasn't a gulf between the sides."