Football is a food chain. If we take off our rose-tinted spectacles and look back through the history books, you soon realise that it always has been, ever since the dawn of the professional game. It is the law of the jungle. Take the legendary Paul Mariner as an example. Chorley fans must have been gutted when they lost their young star striker to Plymouth Argyle in 1973. When I lived in Devon in the 1990s, older fans at Home Park were still bemoaning the day Ipswich came calling in 1976 and they lost one of their cult figures. Despite the argument that when Town sold him to Arsenal in 1984 he had reached the veteran stage of his career, he was still representing England and it was a big loss, by no means the final one, as Bobby Robson’s star-studded side was slowly dismantled. Chorley-Plymouth-Ipswich-Arsenal…a footballing food chain.
We need to remind ourselves that each time we lose a top player, we will be hunting down a replacement equally loved by his current club. As Paul Hurst assembled an initial squad in which seven of the new signings had been bought from lower league clubs, I do not suppose that any Town fan spared a thought for the Peterborough fans who will no longer get to see Gwion Edwards weaving his magic on the wing, or Shrewsbury supporters, stripped of two of their prize assets. All we care about is whether these incoming players will be able to step up to the next level. It is dog-eat-dog out there and we tend to have tunnel vision.
Already there are rumblings about unknown players being signed up. In terms of quantity, I can understand the concern. But in terms of quality? Maybe we have short memories. In recent years, some of the best Town players have been plucked from further down the football pyramid. Give me a Bialkowski, Cresswell, or Mings, over a higher-profile Tamás Priskin or Lee Martin any day. Delve further back and who knew what to expect from the likes of Holland and Walters? There is always a gamble, of course. However, you are more likely to be getting someone hungry to prove himself, rather than an established player in their comfort zone. Hurst’s track record of reigniting playing careers is mightily impressive. He seems to thrive on taking players who started life at big clubs but were discarded and subsequently had to make their way back up the football ladder. The reality with ITFC, as with most EFL clubs is that, as Hurst has wryly observed, ‘We have to shop in a certain market.’ Drawing on his metaphor, Town are shopping in Tesco rather than Waitrose. It could be worse.
The financial food chain is a completely logical reality in the money-mad professional football world. Where I have a problem is the stockpiling of talented young players by clubs like Manchester City and Chelsea. As Martin Calladine – author of The Ugly Game – has pointed out, FFP rules ironically encourage the big clubs to ‘farm’ young talent in vast academies. The full cost of youth development does not count against them in terms of FFP limits, and yet the income from any sales of these development players helps their FFP. This paradox has Calladine wondering whether the PL academies are genuinely there to develop future first team players, or whether they have simply become ‘profit centres’.
What the stockpiling does do is upset the food chain. Recently, the Elite Player Performance Plan system allowed Man City to buy Ipswich’s highly-rated England Youth International Ben Knight. By all accounts, he is one of the most talented teenagers the club has ever produced, yet we will probably never get the chance to see him at Portman Road. Will he make it at City? I hope so, yet there is a fair chance that he will not. After all, their side is not exactly brimming with ex-academy players.
Town’s former Head of Academy Recruitment, Steve McGavin, talked a couple of years ago about ‘mind-blowing’ financial packages being offered by top clubs, even to Under 9 players. Under nines! He went on to state:
‘Unfortunately, with the Premier League, we have created a monster. It’s like a runaway train that no-one knows how to stop. The money at the top end, as we all know, is huge and it’s filtered down into the Premier League academies.’ (EADT, 02/07/2018)
Personally, I do not blame talented kids and their parents for making these moves: the money, the prestige and the facilities on offer… However, we all know what happens in the natural world when the food chain is upset. This ugly, parasitical side to youth football cannot end happily. In addition, there is a more sinister side to it. A recent article in a national newspaper tells the disturbing story of a promising young Sheffield Wednesday teenager who Leicester City tried to sign, unsuccessfully. He has now joined a lower division Belgian club instead. One which happens to be run by the owners of… Leicester City. The Belgian club only had to pay a fraction of the compensation which an English club would have. The journalist inferred that it would not be a surprise if the youngster ends up at Leicester one day. A perfectly legal loophole. No wonder Calladine refers to football as the Ugly Game.
I asked Accrington Stanley’s wonderfully frank owner Andy Holt what he made of the current situation, with top clubs creaming off young talent and then stockpiling these kids. (Calladine notes that, in 2016, Chelsea had a whopping seventy-two ‘development’ players outside their first team squad.) Holt suggested that clubs like Chelsea should be forced to free players they do not use themselves: ‘They’d go for free. Clubs taking them would guarantee playing time. Use them, or let them go to clubs that will. Really simple, player career counts more than club success. Otherwise, there’s a lost generation of players looming.’ (Twitter, 12/08/2018)
I love Holt’s ‘use them or lose them’ idea, however unworkable it might be in reality. Perhaps I am simply yearning for a return to a simpler age, the latter part of the Robson era when the owner and manager were able to nurture and then unleash young talent. Unhindered by the lurking shadow of EPPP and Category 1 status academies. Of course, back then ITFC were a top side, if not a big club. We were high up the order of command. However, the football food chain itself has changed. Today, it is a distinct possibility that the likes of George Burley, John Wark, Alan Brazil and Eric Gates would never have had the opportunity to impress Portman Road crowds as raw teenagers. (Burley marked George Best on his Town debut at Old Trafford as a seventeen-year-old.) Maybe, like Ben Knight, they would have been poached long before then and subsequently sealed away in monster-sized academies in London or the North West. Maybe their careers would never have developed. I find myself returning to Holt’s haunting warning about a Lost Generation. No wonder that Martin Calladine titled his article, ‘Save the Children’. Maybe those young players in academies such as Town’s should be warned to be wary of monsters bearing gifts.
© Rodney Marshall | Follow on twitter - @RodneyMarshall1
Right, forgive the tone of this, but seriously, how can anyone with half a brain say we have problems after two games… yes, you read that right, TWO GAMES!
I’ve been to enough games home and away over the 35 years I have been supporting Town to know that not all of our fans are the sharpest tools, or have the greatest attention to detail (I had to talk a chap through who was who all Blackburn) but one thing that is (or was) in the DNA of all Town fans was ‘patience’.
The Cobbold’s had bags of it, Sheepy had more than enough, Mr. Evans certainly does and more importantly, the fans have it, case in point we pretty much 'tolerated’ Mick McCarthy’s brand to football for 2 years before gently voting with our feet until something was done…Mr. Evans, well actually Mick obliged.
So how is it, when we’ve got what the majority, if not all of us we wanted (I mean did we really want Schteve McClaren or the Cowley brothers here?) I am forced to read Tweets that to the layperson are suggesting the club is playing worse football than in the latter stages of the Mick era, the squad is chock full of the likes of Coke, Douglas and Best to name 3 (there are plenty more) and the squad is too inexperienced etc.
We are 2 games in, one was a draw with 4 new faces, the other a defeat, with effectively 8 new faces where we bossed most of the game, with stats of 63% possession, 15 shots and 12 corners, you tell me when we last did that away from home….I’ll wait!
My favourite Tweet on Saturday evening was 'is Paul Hurst the right man?’ Seriously, talk about lack of patience, in fact, that is just pure stupidity!!
I am not naive that come October if we are losing games, then we maybe need to worry, ever so slightly but are you guys (negative Tweeters/Posters) so clueless that you cannot see the many positives in the recent displays?
To put this simply, in a matter of weeks, actually, scrap that days, Paul Hurst has got a brand new group of hungry, young athletic players, to play a brand of football we saw 3-4 times under Mick in his 5 years, which all of us, including the 'negatives’, were lauding at the time?
The ball is on the floor, we take care of the ball better, we are far more aggressive from the off, home and away, we have actual wingers, certainly one in Edwards and to be fair, we look pretty solid at the back considering that 3 of those lads have never played as a back 4 together and to add to that we have players, some just coming back that we were clamouring for last season in Huws and Bishop, not to mention Dozzell and then we have Downs and Morris, the latter looking particularly useful in his 7 or so minutes v Blackburn.
You have to remember we are notoriously slow starters, under both Burley and Royle we regularly only got going in October, sometimes later…does anyone remember the 2-0 reverse versus Stockport at home in 1997?
I guess, all I am saying is let’s be proper Town fans, show some patience, back the boys and the manager as I predict good things, it might that we this in October, if that is the case, so be it.
COYB.
Follow on twitter - @waynejoshua1976
By a quirk of fate, as I sat down to write this article my attention was drawn to a piece published on line by lifelong Norwich City fan Gary Gowers: Too much time spent dwelling on events south of the border? Or a natural by-product of a local rivalry? The title might be a tortuous one, but the article is excellent, honest and well-balanced. It highlights the obsession which some of us have for our East Anglian ‘neighbours’, while also acknowledging the futility of all the bragging rights, such as the ‘we have history’ versus ‘we have crowds’ arguments. He makes the valid point that unlike inner-city rivalries – Liverpool, Manchester, Sheffield, Nottingham, Bristol etcetera – the Norwich/Ipswich one is not played out between people likely to mingle in an office or playground, unless you happen to live in the ‘fuzzy area where the borders collide’. Perhaps this actually adds to the sense of rivalry and prejudices, coupled with the vast distances which both clubs’ fans face on the road to almost every other Championship fixture.
I found myself smiling at the fact that Gowers finds ‘the blow of a defeat softened’ by a Town loss, and even the discovery of an Ipswich win taking ‘the edge off the joy of victory’. Yes, reader, I suffer from a similar obsession. I will even watch and savour Norwich journalist Michael Bailey’s post-match summaries online, so long as they have not won. Coming out of Portman Road on the opening day of the season, relieved and buoyed by a last-gasp equaliser, the news that City had equalised even later into stoppage time at Birmingham genuinely annoyed me. Ridiculous, but true, I am embarrassed to admit.
Our own Benjamin Bloom did a well-balanced piece last season about the validity of the rivals’ bragging rights. We know that ITFC’s achievements under Ramsay and Robson surpass any achievements made on the pitch throughout Norwich’s history. Equally, we have to acknowledge that City’s home support is currently far greater than our own. Is this a logical result of a city which has a far larger population? Or is it due to the presence of Norwich in four of the eight most recent Premier League campaigns, coupled with Town’s painfully extended stay in the second tier? Or a combination of both factors?
I am objective enough to take off my blue-tinted glasses and accept that Carrow Road is now a smarter stadium than our own. And that Norwich’s city centre is a more attractive place in which to shop or stroll. I will even confess to feeling jealous when Norwich threatened to establish themselves in the top flight with two mid-table finishes under Lambert and Hughton. As we begin yet another marathon season in the Championship, I would admit that the ‘we have history’ claim is becoming harder to cling to, despite my pride in past successes.
What I find more interesting than the past is the present and immediate future of our club. In some respects, by appointing Paul Hurst, ITFC have taken a similar left-field approach as Norwich took a year earlier when bringing in Daniel Farke as Head Coach. Both clubs have decided – for a mixture of sporting and financial reasons – to look for a different approach. Both installed bosses with no experience of Championship football. Both have recruited players who have never played at this level before. And yet, of course, the two appointments are, equally, polar opposites. A German manager who had previously been in charge of a reserve team at Dortmund, as opposed to an English manager who has worked his way up from part-time non-league clubs to a modest-sized EFL1 one. German-based players signed up, as opposed to players from the likes of Accrington and Shrewsbury. Both clubs have taken risks in terms of players and management. Both have entered into the unknown in search of an alternative (aka lower-cost) route to the Promised Land. If it all goes Pete Tong this season in Norfolk and/or Suffolk, then you wonder what each will do next. Carrow Road season ticket sales have dropped slightly and the jury is out among their supporter base as to the style and effectiveness of Farke’s football vision. Meanwhile, any feel-good factor created by Hurst’s appointment will be short-lived if the spectacle does not match fans’ hopes. The honeymoon period for a new manager and/or approach does not last long. Obviously a derby success in a few weeks’ time would help Hurst establish himself after almost a decade of Norwich dominance. Ultimately, though, bragging rights will count for little if – come May 2019 – neither set of fans feel that their club is making progress in its football revolution. What would constitute success at ITFC in the 2018-19 season? Possibly a campaign in which high-octane football allowed us to stop casting an eye at our touchscreens to see how Norwich City are getting on. To rework Gary Gowers’ title, too much time spent dwelling on events north of the border is possibly a natural by-product of hard times closer to home.
© Rodney Marshall | Follow on twitter - @RodneyMarshall1
I used to attend as many pre-season friendly matches as I could. It was an opportunity to get a football fix after the frustration of the close season; a first glimpse of any new players; the chance to exchange a few words with a favourite player; an early look at a new manager’s tactics, style of play, etcetera. Perhaps, like arriving at the stadium on match day ninety minutes before kick-off, it is simply one of those habits I have grown out of. While others would no doubt disagree, pre-season matches now feel like treading water or time wasted. The results are meaningless and often misleading. You cannot celebrate any of the goals in any real sense and so many players nowadays come into the building in the final days – or even hours – of the transfer window that you do not even come away with an idea of what to expect once the season gets underway.
One thing which has not changed, though, is the nervous excitement which greets me on the opening day of the new season. Despite my advancing years, it still feels special. Even if – deep down – you know that you would accept mid-table and a decent cup run – there is something unique about travelling to that first match top equal in the table. OK, thanks to Sky bringing forward Reading versus Derby to the Friday evening, that was not the case. However, it remains a day when every fan can dream of a magical season, if only for a few hours. In an age where social media is king, it was time to put that #ANewEra hashtag to a first test.
Greater Anglia had not, unfortunately, entered the spirit of the occasion. The 13:47 from Stowmarket was running half an hour late and when it finally rocked up it consisted of just one carriage. With a healthy smattering of Town fans getting on it was uncomfortably squashed, made worse once more supporters pushed on at Needham Market. What with the heat, the delay and the lack of breathing space it was a far from ideal prelude to the opening day fixture.
Two hours later I am not sure that we were any wiser about what it will be like supporting ITFC under Paul Hurst. The match had the perfect start: high energy pressing and a great team goal. Portman Road exploded with joy. Town then began to look inexperienced and vulnerable against a Blackburn side which has been playing together for a year. The final ten minutes of the match saw Town begin to finally apply pressure, even if the equaliser was a fortunate one. While it had been great to see a genuine winger taking opponents on and showing some artistry, it would clearly take time for Hurst to finish assembling his squad, never mind it gelling. The New Era might equally be called the Left-field Gamble. Most of us had wanted the club to head in a new direction. It had done. However, with so many of the new players being unfamiliar with life in the second tier, no one left a relieved Portman Road with any firm idea where this ‘work in progress’ was heading.
Were the bookies and national football reporters right to make ITFC one of the favourites for relegation? Having finished comfortably mid-table in 2017-18, were they basing this bleak prediction solely on the loss of MM’s savvy experience? If so, this plays straight into the ‘be careful what you wish for’ mantra of a minority of Town fans. Would Paul Hurst continue to prove a miracle worker on a tight budget? Or would he now be punching above his weight? Who would plug the gap created by the sale of Martyn Waghorn? Can 27 Championship goals and assists grow on lower league trees? There were so many questions running through my head on the way home. Predictably, despite the late, late equaliser, Twitter was populated with Suffolk doom merchants after this opening match. ‘Relegation fodder’, ‘no better than it was under MM’… Unfortunately, one of the down sides of social media is the knee-jerk reactions, the unthinking ease with which people – often not even at the game – ping a negative or corrosive remark into the virtual ether.
If forty odd opening days have taught me one thing, it is that they tend to teach us nothing. This is even more the case when a club is attempting a mini-revolution. A year ago who thought that Sunderland – freshly armed with a £40 million parachute payment – would suffer a second successive relegation? Or that Warnock’s unfancied Cardiff would go up automatically? First day nerves are proof of at least two things: that we still passionately care; and that we have no idea where the new 46 game marathon journey is taking us. The torment of relegation? The euphoria of promotion? The calm of mid-table? Who knows? As a number of famous writers have suggested, maybe life (as a football fan) is a journey, not a destination. Let us try to enjoy the ride.
© Rodney Marshall | Follow on twitter - @RodneyMarshall1
Paul Hurst will take his place in the home dugout at Portman Road in front of a crowd full of excitement, passion and togetherness when Ipswich host Blackburn on Saturday.
Although the first game of the season usually portrays these emotions from the fans of any team, I think the fact that Ipswich fans, myself included, are showing them with such abundance is a big shock.
The fans have spent the best part of 18 months bickering between each other about the situation regarding the previous manager Mick McCarthy for numerous reasons, mainly the style of play. When it was announced McCarthy would leave his post at the end of March, the divide looked like it would be around for a while.
However, with the new season about to begin, it seems that divide has been fixed and Town fans are as one again and ready for the new era to begin.
But how has this happened and what does it mean for Ipswich in the coming season?
Marcus Evans has to take a fair amount of credit for fixing the tattered relationship. Not always in Town fans good books, and fairly so at times, this summer he set about repairing the relationship with the club and the fans and has done a superb job.
It started with his first on-screen interview that finally meant that after 10 years, we knew what the owner sounded like! Although the interview was conducted by the club, he made sure that the questions he answered were ones that the fans wanted to hear and that was the first step.
He then appointed Paul Hurst after a long and thorough recruiting process that lasted over 2 months. Something of an unknown before last year, Paul Hurst had just had a hugely successful season at Shrewsbury, guiding them to the play-off final when they were one of the favourites for relegation.
It was clear that this man was top of Evans list. He waited until Shrewsbury’s campaign had come to a close before approaching them regarding Hurst, despite this meaning he missed out on another top target, Jack Ross, to Sunderland.
Since Hurst’s appointment on the 30th May, it’s been clear that this is a man most Town fans wanted to see. A young, hungry manager who has a style of play that is exciting and fun to watch. Someone with a good knowledge of the lower leagues that can utilise that area of the transfer market. Ipswich aren’t going to be spending £8 million on a new striker or £5 million on a new defender, it’s just not going to happen, so a manager who has come up through the pyramid and has a wider knowledge of players from those leagues is always going to please the fans.
Friendlies against Braintree, Crawley, Barnet and MK Dons were all used as games to become more accustomed to this different way of playing and the home friendly against West Ham was a chance for Hurst to showcase this and to show fans what they can expect from this team he is building. And I think it’s safe to say they were impressed. Despite losing 2-1, new signings Ellis Harrison, from Bristol Rovers, and Gwion Edwards, from Peterborough, were impressive. The former getting Ipswich’s goal.
More pleasing was the performance of the three academy graduates in the centre of midfield. Flynn Downes, Andre Dozzell and Tristan Nydam, all 19 years old, showed maturity beyond their years against a powerful West Ham midfield containing former England international Jack Wilshere. Any football fan loves to see an academy graduate come through the ranks and make it to the first team and these three certainly look like doing that this season.
All of this means Ipswich are very much starting fresh in the coming season. The club is full of new faces (and hopefully a few more by the time the transfer window closes!), the fans are singing as one and most importantly, everyone is excited to get to Portman Road again.
We’ve signed players from lower leagues that all have something to prove and will want to show they are capable of performing in the Championship, a league that it is getting increasingly difficult to get out of each season. It’s a recruitment policy that has worked in the past for other teams including an example Ipswich fans know all too well with Norwich doing it to go from League 1 to the Premier League in the blink of an eye. That’s not to say it will be the same for us but it’s proof that it can be done.
I personally have no idea how this season is going to go. It could go horribly wrong and we end up relegated. Similarly, it could all click together and we make a real push for the play-offs.
I just don’t know. And that what is exciting me most this season, the unknown. The unknown players and the unknown manager in a league we, by now, know very well indeed.
Follow on twitter - @CraigBolger
The EFL Championship has been talked up in recent years as the biggest and best non-top-flight league in world football. This is based partly on finances, but also on its aggregate attendances which place it third in European football, behind the Premier League and the Bundesliga, but ahead of Serie A (Italy), La Liga (Spain) and Ligue 1 (France). Statistics can, of course, be twisted to argue all manner of things, as every politician knows only too well. In recent years, the German 2 Bundesliga has seen higher average gates than the Championship. [1] However, given the 18 club format of German’s second division, it means that 306 league matches are played each season, compared to the EFL figure of 552. This vast difference ensures that the EFL can make claims which are, arguably, misleading.
Nevertheless, it is easy to argue justifiably that the Championship is the hardest second division in major footballing countries. The sheer size of our second tier ensures that its clubs endure an unforgiving marathon season, with plenty of Saturday-Tuesday-Saturday encounters in the congested calendar. Add in the rigid transfer windows and you can sympathise with Mick McCarthy for the major injury crisis which hit Portman Road last season. To further complicate matters, the play-off system then adds a sprint at the end of this marathon. I am not a fan of it, although many would argue that it has now been in operation for a generation and that every club knows the rules before a ball is kicked back in August. [2] For the finalists, this adds another three matches to the gruelling schedule, making it only one short of fifty, even before you add in at least two cup competitions.
Putting attendances, schedules and finances to one side, there is a far better way to justify the unique status of the EFL Championship. Let us take the make-up for the 2018-19 season as an example. Of the twenty-four clubs taking part, all but one have competed in the top flight of English football. OK, this is not exactly an earth-shattering statistic. However, ten of these clubs have been crowned as English champions, two as kings of Europe. Between them, the current Championship boasts twenty-five top-flight titles, thirty-seven FA Cups, twenty-two League Cups and four major European titles. That constitutes an impressive array of honours.
While a club such as Rotherham would probably view a place in Championship football as success in itself, the vast majority of fans view the league as a waiting room to the Promised Land, something which Paul Hurst hinted at on his appointment at Portman Road. [3] On one level, this is understandable. The Championship boasts eleven grounds with 30,000 + capacities and nine venues saw healthy average gates of 25,000 + in the 2017-18 campaign. It is not just fans in Birmingham, Sheffield and Leeds who feel that their club ‘deserves’ to be in the Premier League. How many Ipswich Town supporters are content to be simply proud of the fact that the Blues have remained in the top two divisions for the past sixty years? We should be. Instead, fans bemoan the club’s record – aka sterile – stay in the second tier since 2002. History suggests that clubs like Wigan, Hull and Reading are punching above their weight in the second tier, but try telling that to their supporters who have all tasted the Premier League.
Did the creation of the Premier League in 1992 change fans’ perception of the second tier? Certainly the vast wealth which awaits clubs in the top tier has affected the way players, managers and club owners view the divide. This has been exasperated by the controversial (and colossal) parachute payments which reward failure in the Premier League. Has the rebranding of the second tier as the Championship, in 2004, helped add a sense of competing in the top flight of the EFL? Not really. Most supporters would prefer a season of struggle in the top tier to relative success in the second division.
Top flight history, it would appear, brings with it a burden. At Portman Road, the statues and stands of Alf Ramsey and Bobby Robson look on, reminding us all of golden ages in which ITFC not only competed with the big clubs, but frequently bettered them. In Suffolk, as elsewhere, supporters and club owner await the manager who will take them back to the land of milk and honey. Perhaps we should be proud that at Portman Road the patience – as well as the wait – lasts a little longer. [4]
© Rodney Marshall
1. In 2016-17 Championship crowds averaged 20,130 compared to 2 Bundesliga’s 21,717. 2 Bundesliga attendances had been higher in the previous campaign as well.
2. I would argue that it artificially keeps alive the campaign for mid-table clubs and is particularly cruel when a club finishes the League campaign well ahead of the three clubs below it.
3. ‘I’ve got to… look to move us forward and help get us to where we all want to be – the Promised Land, as they say.’ (Paul Hurst, 30/05/2018)
4. No doubt Mick McCarthy would question this suggestion.
#ANewEra – The term couldn’t be better suited to what lies ahead for the next 12 months as a town fan. As a 21 year old, ready to hit 22, I cannot really claim about any glory days as a fan. The near misses in the play-offs against the Hammers in 2004 and 2005 were arguably the better times over the last 16 years I’ve followed town, with the play-offs in May 2015 being sandwiched between the stagnation that myself and many of our fans have had to endure in this forever increasingly difficult league.
I don’t want to touch too much on Paul Hurst’s predecessor, but this summer transfer window and the shake-up are just what the club needed. The signings of Edwards and Harrison for a combined fee of £1.45m is a breath of fresh air. Hungry lower league players ready to make a step up, and both of whom have already caught the eye, rather than the expected loans and freebies that we were so used to just filling a round hole as a square peg.
I read Hurst’s interview with Stuart Watson earlier and (yes I’m going to say it again) it was another breath of fresh air. No nonsense, says it exactly how it is, but all within the best interest of fans, players and his staff. He talked about his family and his upbringing and how its all implemented his career and how he does what he does now. Did we get that with the previous man in charge? Maybe a little bit to being with.
Expectations are still yet to be set by town fans, however once again everyone and their dog has written us off to go down. The same being said for Hurst’s previous side Shrewsbury last season, and look what happened? Do I expect an immediate transition? No, but I do expect to see things fit into place over the course of the season. Realistically, I can’t see us advancing any further than last seasons dead centre finish of 12th, but I am renowned for being a pessimist. My heart will go with a top 10 finish, but my head is saying around the 15th mark. This season will be the foundation for the next couple of years I hope and give or take in 12 months time I may have the confidence to throw ourselves in the mix for a top 6 finish.
Hurst has everyone behind him, and after venting my frustration at Mr Evans last August for raising the Season Ticket Prices, I put my money where my mouth was a purchased my first Season Ticket in 8 years for this upcoming season, although the departure of McCarthy was a huge pull factor. Like I astarted this piece, #ANewEra is here at Portman Road, and although it may not be an immediate transformation, I for one am looking forward to it.
Follow on twitter - @_Kieranbleaz
Always brings a smile.
40th anniversary of winning the #FACup and the club just didn’t even bother.
Thank you Evans,
Thank you Milne,
Thank you McCarthy.#ITFC— IPSWICH TOWN Bible (@ITFC_bible)
January 6, 2018
The results are in for this months points prediction poll with @ITFC_bible, take a look and see how confident you guys were about these #ITFC games -
Fulham (A)
Leeds (H)
Bolton (A)
Wolves (H) pic.twitter.com/c5iDk6zND3— Blue Monday Podcast (@BlueMondayITFC)
January 2, 2018
The Premier League website is a bit of challenge to navigate around, so here are some links to the fixtures and tables that the U23s are involved with. Will add some perms-links to the site when I get a chance.
Towns last loss to #BristolCity at Portman Road was in September 1978, losing 1-0.
Since then it’s been 8 wins to #ITFC and 4 draws.— IPSWICH TOWN Bible (@ITFC_bible)
September 30, 2017
For those who don’t know me, I’m Stephen Brandt. I host Yellowcard Podcast on Tuesday’s in the States at 7pm EST. I’ve written on the history of the sport, all over the world. One of the major themes in my writing has always been the old North American Soccer League. I could do another article on the league, but there’s enough great pieces out there for you. This will be about some of the players who played for Town and in the NASL.
There’s a theme with the Town players coming over, they seemed to congregate on the Vancouver Whitecaps. No fewer than three players turned out for the Whitecaps: Frans Thijssen, Bruce Twamley, and Trevor Whymark. Vancouver was a very good club, but the connection seemed to allude me, until reading on the Whitecaps page, when they honored Thijssen a few years ago. In the article, Sir Bobby Robson, recommended the city to Frans, since Robson had coached a previous club in the city called the Vancouver Royals in 1968.
So how did these players do with the Whitecaps, well Thijssen’s career in Vancouver, he spent two seasons: 1983 and 1984, he played 45 matches from the midfield wearing the number 9 jersey, and scored nine goals. He left Vancouver, returning to Holland to see out his career. In 2013 Frans returned to Vancouver for an alumni event, and spent some time with the youth players in the city coaching.
Trevor Whymark played two seasons also in Vancouver, in 1979, and 1980, where he played 57 matches, and scored an amazing 25 goals. He would go back over to the UK, and finish out his career first with Grimsby, then Petersborough, Colchester, and then Diss Town.
Bruce Twamley was a Canadian playing in the UK, when he wanted to return to his homeland. He returned in 1975 to British Columbia, where he played one year playing 18 times, and scoring two goals. He’d stay in the league to finish his career, bouncing from team to team, first to the Cosmos, then to the Minnesota Kicks, then to Oakland Stompers and finally with the Edmonton Drillers. He’s been a coach in Canada since his retirement.
To keep up with my podcast or writings, follow me @yellowcardscb
Another season is fast approaching and we are looking to get more content in the ITFC Bible website. The aim is for this to become a hub of user submitted articles.
If you have an article you want to send through, please email itfcbible@gmail.com or go via submission page.
This weeks Blue Monday podcast is now online. Check it out Town fans!
Another deadline day is here and as we nearer the end (it’s nearing 3pm as I write this), there is little evidence the biggest gap in the team is going to be filled. A proven striker/goalscorer who will take the place of Daryl Murphy who departed Town for Newcastle 6 months ago. Of course this window hasn’t been without signings, and we did get a striker - Kieffer Moore. Now no disrespect to the guy, he is hopefully one who in time become a great player for us, but he doesn’t bring experience at this level which we desperately need in a league that is getting tougher and tougher to compete in.
Other signings include Steven Taylor on a short term deal until summer, same goes for Jordan Spence and the most exciting signing - Danny Rowe. He is on a long term deal and should provide some much needed flair when Tom Lawrence goes back to Leicester at the end of the season. We also have the loan signing of Toumani Diagouraga from Leeds until the end of the season. I think this alone sees the end of the Skuglas partnership, and Douglas looking likely to actually leave the club.
But still we wait for a striker replacement. And whilst we wait patiently for that, we hear the rumblings that captain Luke Chambers is currently in talks with his former club Nottingham Forest. As most Town fans know, he has the option of a further year on his current contract but that is up to the man at the top to trigger.. and he has not. We may well have seen Chambers for the last time, but there’s nothing concrete as yet.
For now we all wait, hold our breathes for some kind of official information from the club on what to expect for the rest of the day. Oh, and we play Derby tonight which I’m pretty sure more people have forgotten about. The atmosphere may well be toxic if things go badly over the next few hours.
Interesting insight to behind the scenes at ITFC.
It ends in a draw after going behind twice and being completely outplayed by the National League side. Tom Lawrence has yet again saved Mick McCarthy from what should have been a guaranteed sacking (we know he won’t resign, that’s just not in his nature). The team now have to deal with a replay on a weeknight, something that this struggling bunch of players really don’t need. I have to say, it is becoming more and more obvious these players seem like they don’t want to play this way - or even more so - for this manager.
Next up, Blackburn Rovers at Portman Road a week today. I can’t see anything good coming from that.
Well this is not going too well at all. Lincoln go 1 up early in the first half, Town get a leveller through a superb individual run and goal from the ever excellent Tom Lawrence but then the team do nothing to capitalise on the momentum of getting a quick equaliser. Lincoln are the better team as it stands, it really does seem likely that a replay is on the cards.
Huge credit to the Lincoln fans today, 5000 of them filling the Cobbold stand.
Look at the Lincoln fans mick & realise what a dynamic manager can give a club #imps #itfc pic.twitter.com/6TkvjAKLUa
— paul seear (@tractorboy60)
January 7, 2017
It’s an exciting time for most clubs when those trying to push for promotion or survival flex their business muscles by bringing in recruits to bolster their squad. That’s what most clubs do, but as ever with Ipswich the feeling is it will be another window that passes the club by and any player that comes in will be broken down to the Mick McCarthy style of play pretty quickly. As ever I hope this isn’t going to be the case, but for almost every season MM has been in charge, not one player has maintained any kind of season after season quality.
So far, 5 days into the window the only business that has been completed by the Tractor Boys is Luke Varney (who was only on a deal until January I believe) has left the club and penned an 18th contract with Burton Albion. For Burton and for Varney I think this is a great deal. Varney who is at the latter stages of his career (not many can keep up the Ibrahimović, Defoe or Totti levels of play as a striker into their later 30s) will be chuffed to have gained another year and a half of wages, and for Burton, he will definitely provided them with goals and a great target man upfront. For a player who had such nasty leg injuries, he has one hell of a leap on him still.
But other than that, no signings are looking to land just yet. Rumours of Danny Ward from Rotherham and Cauley Woodrow from Fulham have been bouncing about, but nothing seemingly solid as yet. In fact, only this morning Town apparently had a bid for Wigan’s Max Power rejected, something that no one saw coming. The biggest problem here being the ‘rejected’ part. So many times over summer and previous windows have Town had bids rejected, it’s becoming the norm for the club. The biggest problem being the amounts of money clubs are asking for players have quadrupled over the last few years, especially since the club last invested ‘big sums of money’ for players. People talk to me about the large sums invested by Keane, but those numbers are fractions compared to players of probably worse standard today! Marcus Evans seems to think he can invest in younger players to develop, but they are going to cost just as much if not more than the experienced players brought in during the Keane years.
So let’s see what happens this January, but I’m not holding out for anything more than the usual loans and maybe, just maybe, the signing on someone like Danny Ward. The biggest worry is if the club DO signed decent players, will Mick be able to get the best out of them? I, along with many others, fear the worst.
Sadly today’s ‘from the owner’ column (definitely not an interview as touted by the club) doesn’t bring much more confidence to how things can improve from where the club is at. I won’t be the only one who hoped there would actually be some suitable January signings made, most notably the purchase (not loan!) of a proven goal scorer, but as point 5 of ME’s ‘5 point plan’ says, he will continue* to invest in young players to develop. That to me reads as if there will be more loans of younger Premier League players and then the very rare bit of good business from the lower leagues, to improve and then sell on again. Our own home grown players don’t get the time, so I don’t see how this plan is any better.
We are just under 3 hours away from tonights match against Bristol City who are on a run of 4 games and 4 losses, but I dread that tonight will be a game they are going into knowing they can get something from it based on the way Town set up at home. Scared to attack, lacking in creativity and playing some players who really shouldn’t be anywhere near the team. For me there needs to be a clear out, there needs to be a new system and there needs to be a couple of strikers who actually score goal rather than spending most of their time defending! Earlier this season I posted on twitter a 5-3-2/ 3-5-2 (depending on how you look at it) set up that meant we would be more attacking from the wings, but have the solid defence of 3 CBs, whether that’s Berra/Webster/Chambers or any other combination based on the possibility that Webster may be sold or Berra doesn’t take a new contract at Town. We have the players to make that formation work, so why doesn’t Mick try it out? I think he’s done it once but then freaked out that we let a goal in early.
I want to come back home later of the back of a convincing win, but more importantly, having watch the team play with some style and passion. Right now the team just seem to be going through the motions and not really putting their all into the matches. The fans want to see them try, take players on, play the ball forward and not rely on the goal keeper from being the star man match after match. Getting Sears upfront to me is still a priority, have someone like Didz or Varney to play the Murphy role of holding it up or knocking it down to him. He has the pace that we desperately need to get round defenders. I am dreaming with this of course, Mick has broken Sears now and won’t try to fix him.
Let’s see what 9.45pm brings, but I fear at best a draw, and further calls for McCarthy’s head. A loss today ahead of a tough trip to QPR on Monday where a draw is the most we can expect out of that, then I really think Marcus Evans needs to stop ‘standing by his man’ and start looking to make changes now so the future of this club can start to become clearer. Right now, it’s as foggy as it is outside at the moment. At least that will cover some of the poor football we will most likely see tonight at Portman Road.
*come on Marcus, there’s been hardly any of this recently!
Nothing much to say other than this. If Town play like that week in, week out for the rest of the season they are in with a shot of making the playoffs at the end of the season. They made Norwich look poor (and to be honest, they couldn’t get going at all today). If we can just get Murphy and Sears scoring again, things will be even rosier. Really chuffed that Knudsen got his goal, he took that great. Gutted for Douglas that his goal was called offside when it clearly wasn’t. (See below Sky tweet for the freeze frame of his ‘offside’ goal).
Finally, Grant Ward deservedly got man of the match today. He had quite a game. Look at these stats…
Man of the match, @Official_ITFC Grant Ward
58 touches
8 crosses
23 passes in opp. half
2 chances created pic.twitter.com/XKCYMKNMBL— Sky Sports Statto (@SkySportsStatto)
August 21, 2016
Our contribution to betway’s pre-season thoughts blog.
Great collection of responses to yesterdays conversation about what points people are expecting from August results. All the replies can be seen by following through the link above.
Comes across as a down to earth young lad, bags of potential from the videos I’ve seen of him scoring for Rotherham and Chicago Fire. Hoping that he will get plenty of first team experience and bag some goals as well.
New #itfc man @GrantWard_ has been explaining the reasons why he chose Town over a number of other interested clubs.https://t.co/i2lQSKY9Mn
— Ipswich Town FC (@Official_ITFC)
August 2, 2016
Welcome to the club!
To think we were playing football like this back in August. Such a good team goal & great finish @RyanFraser94 #ITFC pic.twitter.com/8C1Rt4AHLV
— IPSWICH TOWN Bible (@ITFC_bible)
April 26, 2016
Those who think that Mick McCarthy wouldn’t want to leave Ipswich to join a club like Aston Villa because they are in “free fall” are missing one key point. If he were to join them at the end of the season he would be getting a better salary, and even more importantly, be given a huge (by Championship standards) transfer budget to spend over the summer to build a squad capable of an instant return to the Premier League. This alone would be enough to sway him in my opinion.
And do you know what, I wouldn’t blame him if he was offered the job and took it. Imagine how he must be feeling having seen millions come in from selling players over the last couple of seasons and only being able to spend pennies. At the age of 57, he’s probably at the point where he’s only got one more promotion to the Premier League in him if he’s given the right resources, and Villa could well do it next year. Yes they look like a team that will drop even lower down the divisions, but Mick would get that team into shape even as it stands in no time at all.
So in short, if Mick goes anytime soon as far as I’m concerned it’s not because Town need a change, it’s because somewhere else he will be supported the way a manager should be.
(Almost every week I wonder whether Marcus Evans really wants to see this club ever return to the Premiership…)
The fans say: Ticket Prices at #ITFC
A couple of weeks back, we sent out a tweet asking for Town fans to share their opinions on the price of tickets at Portman Road. This was off the back of the Liverpool £77 ticket fiasco, and also some European action with Dortmund. With ticket prices always on the rise, the stadium very rarely getting more than 18000 in regularly, it seemed like a good time to get some real opinions together and post it to the club.
To make it clear, these responses not only cover thoughts of Town fans, but those of away clubs who often pay huge sums of money to travel long distances even for midweek matches.
This was our question:
Football ticket price talk this week: ↗️
Discuss: What do #ITFC fans feel about the current costs?@twentys_plenty pic.twitter.com/6i3T4tI47B— IPSWICH TOWN Bible (@ITFC_bible)
February 11, 2016
@ITFC_bible @twentys_plenty anything over £20 - £25 for championship football is ridiculous
— Richard Proctor (@RichardProctor3)
February 12, 2016
@RichardProctor3 @twentys_plenty @ITFC_bible Agreed. #ITFC one of the worst culprits. #NFFC charged £37.50 to sit in a ‘central position’
— Baz Cooper (@bazdjcooper)
February 12, 2016
@bazdjcooper @twentys_plenty @ITFC_bible our ticket prices are something most fans are ashamed of. They are outrageous for away fans
— Richard Proctor (@RichardProctor3)
February 12, 2016
@bazdjcooper @twentys_plenty @ITFC_bible very rare to see the away end full these days which is a shame. Same goes for home section too
— Richard Proctor (@RichardProctor3)
February 12, 2016
@RichardProctor3 @twentys_plenty @ITFC_bible Yep, used to love coming to PR. Good club. Not paying those prices given the extra distance.
— Baz Cooper (@bazdjcooper)
February 12, 2016
@bazdjcooper @RichardProctor3 @twentys_plenty @ITFC_bible We have the 3rd most expensive season ticket too. it’s ridiculous.
— Stewart’s Gloves (@StewartsGloves)
February 12, 2016
@ITFC_bible @StewartsGloves @RichardProctor3 @twentys_plenty Me neither. #nffc to their credit, announced price reductions yesterday.
— Baz Cooper (@bazdjcooper)
February 12, 2016
@ITFC_bible @twentys_plenty from what I’ve been watching at home this season, they should be paying ME.
— Noel Baker (@Wulfnoth)
February 11, 2016
@ITFC_bible @twentys_plenty Often when the club make deals on tickets we get more through the gates. £32 for a champ game is too much
— Kurt Bevan (@Kurtis999Bevan)
February 11, 2016
@ITFC_bible @twentys_plenty lowest category isn’t 2 bad but the price increases for other games is a joke! Especially when we never sellout
— Matthew Steele (@mattst2711)
February 11, 2016
@ITFC_bible @twentys_plenty I think is too expensive, you can watch some Leicester games for less than a ITFC ticket!
— Patricia G. Muñiz (@patrigonmuniz)
February 12, 2016
@ITFC_bible @twentys_plenty £40-£55 a ticket to sit in the decent Cobbold seats, no wonder the ground is only 60% full most of the time!
— Mazza Slatz (@slatz73)
February 11, 2016
@ITFC_bible @twentys_plenty Current prices are ridiculous. Categorisation of games is ridiculous. I agree wholeheartedly that twentys plenty
— James Warner (@Jamizzle93)
February 12, 2016
@ITFC_bible @twentys_plenty think we should drop the Grade A system and keep B and C
— David Dalton (@DaveD92)
February 11, 2016
@ITFC_bible @twentys_plenty I think if you were to price tickets at £20-£25 per game you would encourage more supporters = more revenue
— Nigel Pearson (@NigelPearson2)
February 11, 2016
@ITFC_bible @twentys_plenty surely reduced price, full stadium = better return in long run?
— Leeksy (@freshleeks)
February 11, 2016
@ITFC_bible you tagged what I think in the tweet…. @twentys_plenty
— jack (@jackburrows5)
February 11, 2016
@ITFC_bible @twentys_plenty £32 to watch that standard of football is a joke!
— David Jaye (@DJITFC)
February 11, 2016
@ITFC_bible @twentys_plenty season tkts are reasonable but match day prices are way too high. No long term strategy to gain new fans at all.
— Nathan White (@nathanwhite78)
February 11, 2016
Ipswich charging £32.50 for a Tuesday night trip, think I’ll give that one a miss. #hcafc #itfc
— Scott Wood (@SWood18)
February 14, 2016
TWTD users that post near suicidal comments on the forum and news stories can do one.
They don’t even go to the games! Just listen to it on mixlr.
I would love to see Freddie Sears continue his rich goal-scoring form that he had in the half a season he was involved with Ipswich. Over the 16 games (7 as sub) that he played for Ipswich, he was averaging 0.56 goals per match. Now using that ratio as a starting point, if he was to play over the whole of the new season (counting league only), you would expect him to end the season with about 25 goals. Obviously this is a very optimistic prediction, and should be adapted to account for a potential 5/6 game goal drought, which would then take the number down to 22. Now this is a target that I think is very realistic.
Playing him alongside any combination of Murphy, McGoldrick or Pitman, there will be so much supply, I think this is a realistic target for him to achieve. The competition for places in the forward positions is only a good thing too. I can see Mick using 3 of the 4 strikers in most matches, with Sears likely to sit deeper of the 3. However his pace will be utilised on counter attacks where hopefully he will score most of his goals.
Freddie, make it so.
We’ve really not been utilising this site as well as we could have, but this is purely down to how well everything works using the ITFC Bible twitter page. It’s great for getting content our quickly, engaging with fellow fans and sharing their content as well.
However with the new season just round the corner we thought that it would be good to add a couple of new pages to the site. They are…
- Squad numbers
- Fixtures
- League table
Handy, right?
And that is about it. We will try and get a season preview up before next weekend, however that may not happen! But be sure to keep following on Twitter for the most frequent updates. We are nearly at 3,000 followers now, it’s hard to believe how quickly things have grown. Thank you for getting involved!
If you want to add any content to our website, you can do. It’s really easy, just submit your musings here (it can be anonymous too!) and we’ll publish it on the site within a couple of days and promote it via our social channels.
Roll on the new season!
The realistic though of promotion this season has been rather up and down in recent months, with our form taking us out of the playoff positions. But we need to completely ignore this, for the simple fact that, promotion or not, next season will be our time to shine.
I give a huge amount of praise to Mick McCarthy and Terry Connor, who have transformed our club from the threat of relegation to the promotion mix. If we miss promotion this season, next season will be our moment to build on our strengths and to iron out our weaknesses.
Another season in the championship will be challenging, with the Premier League clubs coming down from relegation who will be seeking immediate promotion, as well as the newly promoted League 1 clubs seeking to build a performance as Brentford have this season.
To maintain our squad stability and skill, we must hold on to premier league transfer targets Tyrone Mings and Teddy Bishop, as they have put in a great shift this season, being the creative-minded players that we need to set up and score goals. A bit of investment is needed though, with
Our campaign for promotion has taken a lot of hard work from the players, manager, coaching staff and physios, and it is our duty as fans of the club to praise the hard work they have put in to put us in the position we are in today.
My favourite transfer of the season has to be Kévin Bru, as he’s such a hardworking player and is very talented on the ball - has a lot of talent that we must reward him for! Bru is followed shortly by Bartosz Bialkowski, who has been solid in goal and deserves a lot of praise for quickly fitting in with the team and showing us what a great goalkeeper he is.
Thank you Ipswich Town Football Club for a great 2014-2015 season in the championship, let’s look to the future and see what it holds. I can only be optimistic!
Today we reached 2,000 followers. Huge thanks to everyone of you for being part of the conversation! #ITFC #COYB pic.twitter.com/pzHHUqJQeu
— ITFC Bible (@ITFC_bible)
April 15, 2015