Tuesday 26 October 2010

Avram Grant's Decisions Are Flawed



The jury is certainly out on Avram. I have been a backer thus far, but I must admit that some of his decisions have left me scratching my head in bemusement.

Let's start with the Newcastle game. Now I can't criticise him for going with three up top because I was suggesting something similar before kick off. We desperately needed to win the game and, as I also said,, one goal was never going to be enough to buy three points. Of course, we are back to the old problem of Parker and Noble together in centre midfield, with neither contributing goals. Obinna has loads of promise but panics when he has sight of goal and Dyer, Boa and Barerra would not qualify for the adjective prolific would they? He hasn't played yet, but we are missing Hitzlespurger! So it was perfectly logical to bring in extra fire power, and with Cole netting from a Piquionne cross, it is hard to say Grant was wrong. The decision to go with Behrami seemed odd but, with Dyer unavailable what options were available? Could you pick Barerra in a three man midfield? That would be suicide! So it came down to Boa then. Boa or Behrami? Hobson's choice!

The mistakes came in game play, however. Once ahead, we surrendered the initiative and 4-3-3 became 4-5-1. Where was Grant at this point? Moving to 4-4-2 was simple enough, with Obinna told to play as a conventional left sided midfielder and Behrami told to stay wide. With Piquionne and Cole up top, we would have had much more chance of testing Newcastle at the back - and had they been tested, they would have wilted. But we dropped deeper and deeper and as good as invited them to first equalise and then score a second. Whatever was said at half time had no effect, unless we count making things worse!

But the strangest decision came with the "injury" to Upson, or should we say sit down strike? We were already struggling in the air so, with the loss of Upson, the logical replacement was Ben Haim. The Israeli had played well at Wolves at left back and is an experienced centre back. But Grant went with Ilunga instead. Why? He preferred Ben Haim the week before so what changed his mind? Inevitably, the winning goal came from a cross from our left, with Ilunga in no man's land, and a header. Surely leaving Gabbidon at left back and playing the taller Ben Haim in the middle would have made this less likely? So why did Grant make this perverse call? I would love to hear his explanation.

That was the latest in a string of odd calls. Why bring on Cole in the last 15 minutes when you need a goal? Why bring on Stanislas in the last minute at Old Trafford when you are three goals behind? Why start that game with Spector? Why pick Reid at right back at Villa?

To be fair, Grant doesn't make the same mistake twice in a row, let alone twenty times in a row like Zola. But twenty different mistakes are as bad as the same mistake made twenty times if it costs us points. I know it is easy to be critical when you don't have the responsibility but in each of the decisions identified above, both myself and my son were asking, "Why?" when the judgement calls were made by Grant.

Flawed judgement is disastrous in football management because the players start to lose faith in the man making the wrong calls. Soon, Grant is going to test Sullivan's patience and I don't fancy his chances of talking his way out of a corner once he has backed himself into it!

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Great stuff HF, Question..How long do you think Grant has before we see a change in manager? What's not funny is I bet ya we will beat stoke in the cup and he will be around a lot longer than he should!!

apache said...

Maybe it was just one of those games where some of the key players just didn't gel.

It happens sometimes and unfortunately it's happened at home to one of our relegation rivals.

Grant isn't to blame for Da Costa running away from the ball for the Carroll goal.

I think people are forgetting the previous 5 games or so too quickly.

Consistently consistent players cost more than we can afford. Unfortunately we are going to have the occasional dip in performance.

There is a different mentality about this season's West Ham team. They don't cave in and generally they play with a belief that they can score (even if they usually don't).

As you said, Grant doesn't repeat the same mistakes as frequently as Zola, I'll take that over Zola's foolish stubborness any day.

I'm confident that we will get higher up the table and soon. Maybe even the dizzy heights of 15th...

Anonymous said...

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Luke Eliot said...

Have to say the main decisions Grant's made I'm unhappy about are the bliddy transfers he made in the summer.
Exhibit A: Reid. Why spend 4m on a sixth choice centre back ffs? Do we have money to burn??
Exhibits B & C: why oh why sell two of my favourite players - Diamanti and Daprela - for peanuts??
D, E, etc: why keep Kovac & LBM?
On the plus side, Piq & Vic look good and Lars too. Having 17 million centre backs does not help the situation in the middle though. Sadly we can't play them all at the same time!!
Midfield is okish but rather short of imagination.
The squad still looks thin and unbalanced to me

Hammersfan said...

Good points Luke but he has been unlucky with Hitzlespurger and was all set to move out Kovac until injuries persuaded him otherwise. The absurd number of average centre backs is very odd. As for Diamanti and Daprela, I am persuaded that stage payments were due that we couldn't afford to pay - and Nani knew about them so exploited the situation to get the pair on the cheap.

H4MM3R said...

Jep, I'm pretty sure there was something in the bush. You wouldn't give away Diamanti & Daprela so damn cheap.

I am still thinking that we will climb up the table under Avram in the next time. Ilunga was excellent when he came to us in the 08/09 Season but there were several injuries that kept him out nearly the whole last season. You need confidence and matchday experience to reach the old level. Sure, afterwards it would have been a better choice to bring on Ben Haim who was excellent the league game before but Avram chose Ilunga that showed he trusts in him. We don't really know how good the players performed in the trainings sessions over the week nor what's going on behind the scenes.
The only thing I'd blame Avram for is the change of the tactics when we scored the first goal against Newcastle. Last season we made the same mistake over and over again...

John J said...

Not so sure that Saturday's result was down to Grant's decisions - I think it was more down to the performance. We started well and could have been 2 up by the time we scored if we'd taken our chances.

I thought we gave far too much room to Newcastle and sat too deep. Whenever Green had the ball he seemed to prefer a long panicky hoof upfield rather than a shorter pass to keep possession. As a result the ball flew over Parker and Noble's heads and more often than not set up the next Newcastle attack.

I thought Jacobsen was run ragged and to be fair to them, Newcastle always looked more likey to score.

A very disappointing result and performance. It may be one we'll live to regret.

Anonymous said...

I agree and disagree HF. Yes he has made some odd decisions that i agree with you about but for me the key is he is not making the same mistake twice, unlike zola.

He didnt come on match of the day after and do a zola "Praise the players, say how unlucky they were and that they were outstanding the first 15 minutes"

No avram came out with a face like thunder (when doesnt he in fairness) and said it how it was, " that isnt how we practiced it in training and that performance was awful"

Avram does make mistakes but as you say he isnt making too many of the same mistakes and with a little more time will get it right im sure of it. We are playing some half decent football when we get it right and as long as he learns from those mistakes im confident west ham will be ok this year.

It was always going to be tough with the first few fixtures so lets hope the panic button isnt pressed just yet.

Also dont forget to some extent this is not Avrams team, this is zolas and curbs, so he is trying to get another managers team to play his way and trying to find out what makes each player tick.

AppyAmmer

p.s. keep up the good work HF