You are trying to blame me ffs
I'm well aware it's not just the happy clappers but it fuels it. Soon as you mention him getting papped out someone disagrees and all of sudden they are the measured one and we are just pant pishers.
He's had his chance, he's come up far too short. Should have been sacked years ago. All for reasons that's nothing to do with Goodwillie or talking to the Huns.
Not you especially I said we were all to blame and not just the happy clappers.
We have become a club who win a trophy every 20 years,that should never have been accepted by any of us but we seem to have sleep walked into this situation.
Personally I think we should be a club who sees winning trophies as being successful but the way Cormack was going on the other day he thinks qualifying for Europe is a success which was disappointing to hear.
He wants us to try to finish 2nd so we get a champions league place.
I would rather win the Scottish cup.
Under Derek McInnes we have absolutely no chance of finishing above a poor Celtic. I don’t think we need to concern ourselves with the champions league. The reality is, I don’t think we should really concern ourselves with the Scottish cup either. No point kidding ourselves on at this point.
I tend to agree with Rico, and I think I'm as guilty as anyone. That period from the mid-90s on was truly horrible. Although I'm not sure it's fair to say we did nothing about it - I'm sure we helped get a fair few managers sacked. It's just that when they were sacked, Milne could be relied upon to choose another dud to replace them.
All of which meant that by the time Pa Broon came along, our expectations were close to 0. So when McInnes followed, won something, signed some talent, sounded reasonable by comparison in front of the media, etc. and started to get us competing at the top end of the table, and regularly playing in Europe (yes, I know, I know) it did feel like we'd taken a step up. In fact, let's be honest, we did take a step up. It was from a low base, but that low base had endured for a miserably long time. So it was progress and there was a wee bit of hope.
The problem was then that the hope he kindled has never really blossomed into anything. I want us to win the league, I want the players to believe we can win the league and although I don't think that's likely without significant financial investment, that should be the aim.
But the thing that's really done for him in my view, is our failure to perform well in Cup Finals and Semis. Yes we won one, but it was a miserable match and we scraped through. It's the lack of real belief when we come up against the gruesome twosome and the general negative tactics in big matches that's holding us back. For those games, I'd much rather we could go back to Jimmy Calderwood. At least we'd get stuck in.
So I think it is now time for a change. And I don't believe that Cormack would make a dire appointment like Milne would have done. Obviously there's an element of risk with any change of manager, but once we've got crowds back in and an income stream, the time has come.
When Cormack spoke pish at the AGM about how, under McInnes, we've climbed from 289th to 140th in the Uefa rankings, it was very disingenuous.
Firstly, we should've never been as low as 289th. Around us were Latvian, Lithuanian, Finnish teams and the like.
Secondly, Wllie and Elaine Donald wiped out the 14.5 million debt allowing any new incumbent to the job conditions that weren't experienced by his immediate predecessors.
Therefore, given the circumstances, Mike Bassett could've guided us 150 places up the rankings. But Delboy's inability to learn from defeats means that we're finding it impossible to climb any higher.
Cormack is trying to impress investors at the AGM but he also knows that what he's saying is being soaked up by the majority of Dons supporters who think the club can do no wrong.
I'm afraid that I've heard enough from Cormack to think that he'll be just another also-ran in the Milne mould.