
Originally Posted by
DerekMiller
I'm pretty happy overall with my football club. Is it perfect? No. Are the board above criticism? No. Is the manager above criticism? Nope. Are the players perfect? Nope. There are negatives of course and we footy fans just love to chew over them. Fans of every club do it, it's one of the rights of the modern supporter.
But there are still plenty of positives, and this does not make me a happy clapper. I just weigh up the pros and the cons and think that overall we're in a good place.
We're at the embryo stage of a new management set up that has been implemented to try and reverse several years of doom and rot. Hamshaw is a brand new manager learning his craft, if he was perfect straight away and had us at the top of the table looking invincible then it's a guarantee he'd be offered big money to go elsewhere. But Hamshaw and the team need time to iron out the creases and build up a decent squad. It's a three season project, which I anticipate will all be contested in League One. We can push the panic button if we're in the bottom four come January, but for now I'm happy to be on board to see the project develop.
With the current club structure, the wealth of the chairman, the size of the fan base, I think it's fair to say that our glass ceiling is finishing in the lower half of the Championship. But that is considered by many to be a massive over achievement but yet we have done it a few times in the last 20 years or so. I would imagine clubs of a similar size and set up would look up to us as an example of what can be achieved within our limitations.
Anything more would require vast investment at board level, and for that we roll the dice on who we get. I quite like the fact we have a local businessman in charge, who operates from within the town and knows the community. He's not perfect, as previously mentioned, but who else locally has the wealth and desire to run RUFC? I can't think of anyone, I often look at the Yorkshire Rich List and the only person in the top 50 with the kind of wealth that could move us forward is the guy who owns AES Seal. Given he already has involvement with the club as stadium sponsor etc, I would imagine he's had plenty of opportunities to get involved further. The fact that he hasn't suggests maybe he has no interest at all in that. So then we'd need to rely on someone from further afield with no affinity to the community who would treat RUFC like some vanity project plaything. That might sound appealing but it's a big risk, for every Ryan Reynolds there's probably three Chansiri's.
I'm happy I get to watch my team play, meet my family at the game, have a few beers, discuss the match. I'm happy my club is a strong community club with local people in charge, both at board and manager level. I'm happy that we are more or less at our natural level and slowly building towards a push back towards our glass ceiling. I'm happy I get to have a moan if we play badly because we all love a good moan, but I'll still be there the following week with the usual pre match optimism that is often squashed 10 minutes into the game.
But if it was really that bad, I'd stop going.
That won't be happening any time soon