Michael Doyle was squeezed out slowly – like a
victim of bullying in the workplace – when you turn up and find yourself
marginalised and given less favourable jobs and no-one remembers to invite you
to the pub. The arm-band went to Brayford, and he was benched in favour of the
less-than-impressive Coutts. Then in the play-offs, when he could have
contributed, he was left out. Even when Brayford went off at half-time in the
first leg and Basham dropped back to centre-back, the natural replacement in
midfield was Doyle to stabilise, contain and organise the midfield.
But no, Clough brought on the lightweight Scougall instead. It was a mistake,
Basham was sorely missed in midfield in the second half and the replacement was
inadequate.
With Brayford sidelined bringing on a leader for the
second leg was surely the wise move – but Doyle stayed on the bench.
At 3.10 a.m. I
then moved on to the “why?” Clough clearly tried to sideline Doyle (along with
Collins) at the start of the season – no appearance in the first two league games
for either. It was baffling and, as an experiment, failed – they were the
experienced spine of the team. You felt he only brought them back reluctantly.
Collins he got rid of at the first opportunity. With Doyle he waited a bit
longer.
It is bewildering for
us fans to work out what goes on behind the scenes – what the mood in the
dressing room is like. We can only speculate
based on what we see on the field and read between the lines of
set-piece interviews. Clough criticises fans who have a go – “that’s why we’re
here and they’re in the stand,” he said, or words to that effect. But we’re not
stupid. We know Collins was not dropped because an analysis of the game showed
he was defending too deep or whatever it was. The solution to that is to
practice defending less deep in training surely, not to play a small right back
in the middle. Most of us fans couldn’t see what he was on about. Of course
Collins, like Doyle was not perfect, but over the seasons we’d seen him progress
and come to appreciate his commitment and the way he helped bring on Maguire.
Nothing had changed out on the pitch. Then it was a “calf-strain” keeping him
out. Then he was loaned out at a time when we had no recognised centre-back –
when we really needed him, it seemed – when we were vulnerable to corners and
set-pieces and his height and experience would have counted. Instead Clough
preferred to play at centre back a 5’8” right-back whose strength was in
forward runs. (And God only knows what happened with Butler – we only saw him
once to my recollection.)
Clough said in an
interview that players who weren’t prepared to give their all weren’t part of
his plans – this seemed a reference to Collins and Campbell-Rice, and possibly
others. But you couldn’t say that of Michael Doyle. He was not the most
talented of midfielders to pull on a Blades shirt – but his effect on a game
was often lost on many fans I believe, because he got on with things quietly –
breaking down play, motivating and making room for others to do their thing –
like Kevin MacDonald. Doyle clearly loved the club and always gave his all and
for me that goes a long way.
The way he has
been treated really disturbs me. What does it say about Clough’s
man-management? In management you don’t let differences of personality get in the
way of greater team goals.
You have got to fear that what has happened suggests something is wrong with team coherence. At the very least Clough does not seem skilled at taking pressure off players to allow them to play without fear.
You have got to fear that what has happened suggests something is wrong with team coherence. At the very least Clough does not seem skilled at taking pressure off players to allow them to play without fear.
Why does he slag
off McNulty when strikers surely feed off confidence? Some may respond to
criticism, but why do it in public – what does that achieve? And, even if you
are of the school that a boot up the backside is needed sometimes instead of
wise words and an arm round the shoulder, why publicly criticise him at the end
of the season when he cannot go out on the training ground and put it right,
and then prove himself in a game?
I wanted Brian
Robson out from the moment he started criticising Chris Morgan – saying
he wasn’t good enough on the radio. Morgan was more a Blade than Robson could
ever have been – for so many years the heart and soul of the team. You attack
him, you attack everyone – that’s how it seemed to the man on the terrace.
I don’t know what the conclusion is. Do I trust Clough?
Not yet. I really want to believe in him. He usually comes across well in interviews and in his programme notes. Some
may see his interviews as excuses, but often he reads what happened well: perhaps he’s better at hindsight than foresight. The style of play? For me
winning is more important than the style – at least for now – just get us out
of this hell that is League 1! I confess to having liked Kevin Blackwell – I
liked a team that was tough to break down and he had to manage, and did it
well, with dramatically declining resources: our demotion coming at the time of
the property crash didn’t help. Clough’s team has been too easy to beat – close
them down, rough them up a bit, use
quick breaks, corners and set-pieces. That must stop.
I am putting my trust in the McCabes and Jim Phipps to do the right thing – whatever
that is and I will support them in their decision. Kevin McCabe rescued this
club, and the McCabes are true Blades and can be relied on to put the long-term
interests of the club first, of that I have no doubt. Fans have always been too
quick to criticise others for not spending money they haven’t got. Jim Phipps I
have been impressed by (as with Selahattin Baki) – the evidence is that they
“get it.”
We are the most under-performing club in the country – if
you compare gates to trophies. There is no one alive who remembers the last
time we won anything (unless you count the Division 4 title). That must change
one day – we have had more than our share of disappointment.
So, good luck Michael
Doyle – we appreciate what you have done – even if the official channels won’t
say it – and your Cockney walk will stay in our hearts forever. A true Blade.
You are guaranteed an ovation if you come back to the Lane. And at least we can
be fairly comfortable in knowing you won’t score against us – though knowing
our luck…
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