Judge Red
Don't Call Me Douglas
- Joined
- Feb 11, 2006
- Messages
- 5,993
We’re not the ones who should feel bad about this. He was never going to come here at this point in time, rightly so. Other clubs who could have got him didn’t show any interest.
Have to play devil's advocate now.
This demonisation of Raiola is getting a little bit out of hand. His bad reputation primarily comes from the fact that he's fiercely loyal towards his players and prioritizes their well-being above everything. I've never heard that he fell out with one of his clients and if he would try to manipulate them into deals only he profits from, this would have happened quite a few times by now. So I think if the player tells Raiola he wants to stay, he'll eventually support that. As a club, you have a problem the moment the player wants out and you want him to stay. In such situations, Raiola is pretty much your nightmare.
Funny thing is, clubs complain about him but when he's on their side, they have absolutely no problem with his methods. When Dortmund wanted Mkhitaryan as a Götze replacement but Donezk was eager to make him stay, they even "hired" Raiola to get him out of his contract. A few years down the road, this came back to bite them in the ass when Mkhitaryan wanted to leave for United and became a persona non grata because of his behaviour. And now you're the ones complaining about him while Dortmund is happy to make a deal with him again. It's always the same story.
I don't think Raiola is that morally reprehensible. Yes, some of his methods are shady, but most of the time he's just doing his job, which means achieving the best results for the players he consults. He helps players make the best out of their bargaining position and since clubs don't like that (and fans are loyal towards clubs, not players) hes often the scapegoat.
Arsenal signed Dortmunds best player Aubameyang with no champions league so there answers your question. Money is the single greatest factor in anything business related. Lets not pretend it isnt. Whether our reputation has declined or not we will still have no trouble signing those you have listed as long as we can pay. Thats the difference between United and a Dortmund/leverkusen, our long history of success has merged more into the commercial side and kept us going till we can shift back to winning things. The only players who wont come here are limited to 5 and they are all Worldclass(they have the money so trophies is more important). Anyone else is fair game.
Also Haaland didnt come here because he was willing to wait a full year before he did or moved to another top club. Raoila is an expert planner and knows Dortmund is not his final destination. Dortmund are also aware of this and are okay because they know they are a top tier feeder club. A historical German club has been reduced to nothing but a stepping stone for other clubs that it was on par with a few years ago.
Have to play devil's advocate now.
This demonisation of Raiola is getting a little bit out of hand. His bad reputation primarily comes from the fact that he's fiercely loyal towards his players and prioritizes their well-being above everything. I've never heard that he fell out with one of his clients and if he would try to manipulate them into deals only he profits from, this would have happened quite a few times by now. So I think if the player tells Raiola he wants to stay, he'll eventually support that. As a club, you have a problem the moment the player wants out and you want him to stay. In such situations, Raiola is pretty much your nightmare.
Funny thing is, clubs complain about him but when he's on their side, they have absolutely no problem with his methods. When Dortmund wanted Mkhitaryan as a Götze replacement but Donezk was eager to make him stay, they even "hired" Raiola to get him out of his contract. A few years down the road, this came back to bite them in the ass when Mkhitaryan wanted to leave for United and became a persona non grata because of his behaviour. And now you're the ones complaining about him while Dortmund is happy to make a deal with him again. It's always the same story.
I don't think Raiola is that morally reprehensible. Yes, some of his methods are shady, but most of the time he's just doing his job, which means achieving the best results for the players he consults. He helps players make the best out of their bargaining position and since clubs don't like that (and fans are loyal towards clubs, not players) hes often the scapegoat.
Good read! I just thought that the next best German team after Bayern had to be up there. But that’s what bad management can do to you. I also hope that Haaland is the last wonderkid you buy with a low release clause. If you look at the best players with these clauses the fees are always insane which means it’s always a win/win situation for the selling club. If Haaland is as good as everyone says he is 70 million might be too low after all the work you are putting into developing him. At least 100 should have been the minimum.I don't know if you are aware of Dortmunds recent history, but the club was basically bankrupt 15 years ago and a far cry from being on par with anyone. Reason for that bankruptcy was that we signed players for more money than we had and started selling goods like the stadium to investors. When there were no goods left to sell, BVB imploded.
We had a bit of luck and some exceptional decisions.
1. Aki Watzke the leader of the club managed to steer the club into safe financial waters, everything expensive had to go.
2. 3 years after the breakdown we signed Juergen Klopp, the television coach who was way too casual for other clubs that did not like his appearance.
3. Even though Klopp carried us to new heights, it was a big problem that we could match the financial power of other clubs, so we had our best players taken from us again and again. Huge example was Mario Götze who was basically valued as the next Messi and who transferred to Bayern via exit clause, which was by far lower than his market value. Here the leaders of the club decided to never accept exit clauses any more.
4. Our first money went into paying off debt and it took nine years till we finally paid the last bit
5. The next money went into infrastructure. BVB has one of the best scouting and training teams soccer has to offer. Even top players that have seen other big clubs are impressed about our infrastructure.
6. Now we started paying more money for our top players, but it was still not enough. We lost Hummels, Mhkitaryan, Gündogan in one season and that was a huge throwback for us.
7. Luckily we also invested heavily into the future of soccer: big talent. So we were able to snatch Dembele who was absolutely amazing. Yet again, our weakness of not being a star club and not able to pay top wages caught up with us again and Dembele left us one year later. The same year when Dembele left, we bought Sancho from Chelsea.
8. Inbetween we try to buy players who might want to stay with the club so that we have a solid ground to build a team. There were many decision that were a bit unlucky: Schürrle, Rode and others failed to meet expectations
9. Due to bigger financial power we managed to sign Brandt and now Can, who are arguably not from the top shelf of players, but still amazing signings for the BVB.
10. We signed Haaland and this has torn the fans in half, because as everyone knows, he has an exit clause and as a BVB fan, those exit clauses have hurt us a lot. But since we were in desperate need of a striker, I guess our leaders decided that it was worth the risk. To be honest, still after his first amazing games, I don't feel entirely comfortable with that decision. We'll see how this will work out, but I completely understand Uniteds sentiment to stay away from the transfer.
Basically we made a virtue out of necessity and at one point said "alright, we are a feeder club, so lets be the best feeder club the world has ever seen".
This won't be sustainable longterm, because maybe you will hit a dry spell and won't be so lucky that Dembele comes after Gündogan and Sancho comes after Dembele and this is the point here this model might collapse. If we have a look in soccers history, it happened to a lot of teams, FC Porto coming to my mind immediately.
So yeah, short version: No, BVB has not been reduced to be a stepping stone, we have risen to be a stepping stone and we managed to crawl slowly into the top 15 of Europe financially. And since BVB in some recent history was only able to keep its players when we overshot our budget by a lot which nearly ruined the club, no we have not been on par with the top 10 in Europe any time in the last 30 years.
To come back to Haaland. This guy has a way of making score goals look really easy. Always seems to be ahead of the defense he is playing against. But as much as I am happy for every goal, I am also thinking about the exit clause, so I am not 100% happy, only 85%.
Have to play devil's advocate now.
This demonisation of Raiola is getting a little bit out of hand. His bad reputation primarily comes from the fact that he's fiercely loyal towards his players and prioritizes their well-being above everything. I've never heard that he fell out with one of his clients and if he would try to manipulate them into deals only he profits from, this would have happened quite a few times by now. So I think if the player tells Raiola he wants to stay, he'll eventually support that. As a club, you have a problem the moment the player wants out and you want him to stay. In such situations, Raiola is pretty much your nightmare.
Funny thing is, clubs complain about him but when he's on their side, they have absolutely no problem with his methods. When Dortmund wanted Mkhitaryan as a Götze replacement but Donezk was eager to make him stay, they even "hired" Raiola to get him out of his contract. A few years down the road, this came back to bite them in the ass when Mkhitaryan wanted to leave for United and became a persona non grata because of his behaviour. And now you're the ones complaining about him while Dortmund is happy to make a deal with him again. It's always the same story.
I don't think Raiola is that morally reprehensible. Yes, some of his methods are shady, but most of the time he's just doing his job, which means achieving the best results for the players he consults. He helps players make the best out of their bargaining position and since clubs don't like that (and fans are loyal towards clubs, not players) hes often the scapegoat.
I don't know if you are aware of Dortmunds recent history, but the club was basically bankrupt 15 years ago and a far cry from being on par with anyone. Reason for that bankruptcy was that we signed players for more money than we had and started selling goods like the stadium to investors. When there were no goods left to sell, BVB imploded.
We had a bit of luck and some exceptional decisions.
1. Aki Watzke the leader of the club managed to steer the club into safe financial waters, everything expensive had to go.
2. 3 years after the breakdown we signed Juergen Klopp, the television coach who was way too casual for other clubs that did not like his appearance.
3. Even though Klopp carried us to new heights, it was a big problem that we could match the financial power of other clubs, so we had our best players taken from us again and again. Huge example was Mario Götze who was basically valued as the next Messi and who transferred to Bayern via exit clause, which was by far lower than his market value. Here the leaders of the club decided to never accept exit clauses any more.
4. Our first money went into paying off debt and it took nine years till we finally paid the last bit
5. The next money went into infrastructure. BVB has one of the best scouting and training teams soccer has to offer. Even top players that have seen other big clubs are impressed about our infrastructure.
6. Now we started paying more money for our top players, but it was still not enough. We lost Hummels, Mhkitaryan, Gündogan in one season and that was a huge throwback for us.
7. Luckily we also invested heavily into the future of soccer: big talent. So we were able to snatch Dembele who was absolutely amazing. Yet again, our weakness of not being a star club and not able to pay top wages caught up with us again and Dembele left us one year later. The same year when Dembele left, we bought Sancho from Chelsea.
8. Inbetween we try to buy players who might want to stay with the club so that we have a solid ground to build a team. There were many decision that were a bit unlucky: Schürrle, Rode and others failed to meet expectations
9. Due to bigger financial power we managed to sign Brandt and now Can, who are arguably not from the top shelf of players, but still amazing signings for the BVB.
10. We signed Haaland and this has torn the fans in half, because as everyone knows, he has an exit clause and as a BVB fan, those exit clauses have hurt us a lot. But since we were in desperate need of a striker, I guess our leaders decided that it was worth the risk. To be honest, still after his first amazing games, I don't feel entirely comfortable with that decision. We'll see how this will work out, but I completely understand Uniteds sentiment to stay away from the transfer.
Basically we made a virtue out of necessity and at one point said "alright, we are a feeder club, so lets be the best feeder club the world has ever seen".
This won't be sustainable longterm, because maybe you will hit a dry spell and won't be so lucky that Dembele comes after Gündogan and Sancho comes after Dembele and this is the point here this model might collapse. If we have a look in soccers history, it happened to a lot of teams, FC Porto coming to my mind immediately.
So yeah, short version: No, BVB has not been reduced to be a stepping stone, we have risen to be a stepping stone and we managed to crawl slowly into the top 15 of Europe financially. And since BVB in some recent history was only able to keep its players when we overshot our budget by a lot which nearly ruined the club, no we have not been on par with the top 10 in Europe any time in the last 30 years.
To come back to Haaland. This guy has a way of making score goals look really easy. Always seems to be ahead of the defense he is playing against. But as much as I am happy for every goal, I am also thinking about the exit clause, so I am not 100% happy, only 85%.
Mate, I don't hate or love raiola any more than the next bloke.
Fact of the matter is, this guy is always looking to move his clients from one club to the next which is NOT how Manchester United operate. We value loyalty and longevity. When a player signs for us the expectation is that he will stay for the rest of his career, not use us as a stepping stone or have clauses inserted in contracts which allow them to hold the club hostage.
Its fine for a smaller club like dortmund who are just looking to get paid and make most of their money from transfer fees. Its not compatible with a club like Manchester United.
I'm sure come summer time he will be making noises about Pogba wanting to leave. Most likely to get him the biggest possible contract renewal as I don't see many clubs coming in for him anymore.
10. We signed Haaland and this has torn the fans in half, because as everyone knows, he has an exit clause and as a BVB fan, those exit clauses have hurt us a lot. But since we were in desperate need of a striker, I guess our leaders decided that it was worth the risk. To be honest, still after his first amazing games, I don't feel entirely comfortable with that decision. We'll see how this will work out, but I completely understand Uniteds sentiment to stay away from the transfer.
I don't know if you are aware of Dortmunds recent history, but the club was basically bankrupt 15 years ago and a far cry from being on par with anyone. Reason for that bankruptcy was that we signed players for more money than we had and started selling goods like the stadium to investors. When there were no goods left to sell, BVB imploded.
We had a bit of luck and some exceptional decisions.
1. Aki Watzke the leader of the club managed to steer the club into safe financial waters, everything expensive had to go.
2. 3 years after the breakdown we signed Juergen Klopp, the television coach who was way too casual for other clubs that did not like his appearance.
3. Even though Klopp carried us to new heights, it was a big problem that we could match the financial power of other clubs, so we had our best players taken from us again and again. Huge example was Mario Götze who was basically valued as the next Messi and who transferred to Bayern via exit clause, which was by far lower than his market value. Here the leaders of the club decided to never accept exit clauses any more.
4. Our first money went into paying off debt and it took nine years till we finally paid the last bit
5. The next money went into infrastructure. BVB has one of the best scouting and training teams soccer has to offer. Even top players that have seen other big clubs are impressed about our infrastructure.
6. Now we started paying more money for our top players, but it was still not enough. We lost Hummels, Mhkitaryan, Gündogan in one season and that was a huge throwback for us.
7. Luckily we also invested heavily into the future of soccer: big talent. So we were able to snatch Dembele who was absolutely amazing. Yet again, our weakness of not being a star club and not able to pay top wages caught up with us again and Dembele left us one year later. The same year when Dembele left, we bought Sancho from Chelsea.
8. Inbetween we try to buy players who might want to stay with the club so that we have a solid ground to build a team. There were many decision that were a bit unlucky: Schürrle, Rode and others failed to meet expectations
9. Due to bigger financial power we managed to sign Brandt and now Can, who are arguably not from the top shelf of players, but still amazing signings for the BVB.
10. We signed Haaland and this has torn the fans in half, because as everyone knows, he has an exit clause and as a BVB fan, those exit clauses have hurt us a lot. But since we were in desperate need of a striker, I guess our leaders decided that it was worth the risk. To be honest, still after his first amazing games, I don't feel entirely comfortable with that decision. We'll see how this will work out, but I completely understand Uniteds sentiment to stay away from the transfer.
Basically we made a virtue out of necessity and at one point said "alright, we are a feeder club, so lets be the best feeder club the world has ever seen".
This won't be sustainable longterm, because maybe you will hit a dry spell and won't be so lucky that Dembele comes after Gündogan and Sancho comes after Dembele and this is the point here this model might collapse. If we have a look in soccers history, it happened to a lot of teams, FC Porto coming to my mind immediately.
So yeah, short version: No, BVB has not been reduced to be a stepping stone, we have risen to be a stepping stone and we managed to crawl slowly into the top 15 of Europe financially. And since BVB in some recent history was only able to keep its players when we overshot our budget by a lot which nearly ruined the club, no we have not been on par with the top 10 in Europe any time in the last 30 years.
To come back to Haaland. This guy has a way of making score goals look really easy. Always seems to be ahead of the defense he is playing against. But as much as I am happy for every goal, I am also thinking about the exit clause, so I am not 100% happy, only 85%.
So I take it that everyone has been convinced by him now, even those who didn’t want him at United?
Genuine question, who didn’t want him or thought he would block Martial’s development? It’s a bit of a meme in here but I can’t actually find the posts.
I think it was more about Greenwood his development since they are about the same age.
Would a combination of Mata, Pereira, James, Lingard and Andreas even have created seven goalscoring chances for him by now if he had joined Manchester United?
What a windup this transfer saga has been. Close the thread and move on. Stuff like the Ighalo signing and zero goals in 4 hours of PL football is just making it worse.
So I take it that everyone has been convinced by him now, even those who didn’t want him at United?
Remember when there were some people on the forum who said that he would block Martial, Rashford and/or Greenwood's progress and how we don't need another forward. Wonder how those people must've felt when we signed Ighalo.
Have to play devil's advocate now.
This demonisation of Raiola is getting a little bit out of hand. His bad reputation primarily comes from the fact that he's fiercely loyal towards his players and prioritizes their well-being above everything. I've never heard that he fell out with one of his clients and if he would try to manipulate them into deals only he profits from, this would have happened quite a few times by now. So I think if the player tells Raiola he wants to stay, he'll eventually support that. As a club, you have a problem the moment the player wants out and you want him to stay. In such situations, Raiola is pretty much your nightmare.
Funny thing is, clubs complain about him but when he's on their side, they have absolutely no problem with his methods. When Dortmund wanted Mkhitaryan as a Götze replacement but Donezk was eager to make him stay, they even "hired" Raiola to get him out of his contract. A few years down the road, this came back to bite them in the ass when Mkhitaryan wanted to leave for United and became a persona non grata because of his behaviour. And now you're the ones complaining about him while Dortmund is happy to make a deal with him again. It's always the same story.
I don't think Raiola is that morally reprehensible. Yes, some of his methods are shady, but most of the time he's just doing his job, which means achieving the best results for the players he consults. He helps players make the best out of their bargaining position and since clubs don't like that (and fans are loyal towards clubs, not players) hes often the scapegoat.
They had no problem declaring Ighalo signing a smart move. #facepalmRemember when there were some people on the forum who said that he would block Martial, Rashford and/or Greenwood's progress and how we don't need another forward. Wonder how those people must've felt when we signed Ighalo.
Oh, come on, the early December posts once the chase was hotting up are ridiculous.Genuine question, who didn’t want him or thought he would block Martial’s development? It’s a bit of a meme in here but I can’t actually find the posts.
Quote them please
From his pov, I think he'd struggle to knock Martial off the first team. Then we have Greenwood as well.
That’s literally first page of this thread but it’s also a mantra that was popular during multiple transfer forum threads when we were linked
You’re right on that score; it is indeed rather poor.The defending in the bundelisga looked atrocious based off the goals I have seen him score. Chaotic and lax.
Great post, Darkness.I don't know if you are aware of Dortmunds recent history, but the club was basically bankrupt 15 years ago and a far cry from being on par with anyone. Reason for that bankruptcy was that we signed players for more money than we had and started selling goods like the stadium to investors. When there were no goods left to sell, BVB imploded.
We had a bit of luck and some exceptional decisions.
1. Aki Watzke the leader of the club managed to steer the club into safe financial waters, everything expensive had to go.
2. 3 years after the breakdown we signed Juergen Klopp, the television coach who was way too casual for other clubs that did not like his appearance.
3. Even though Klopp carried us to new heights, it was a big problem that we could match the financial power of other clubs, so we had our best players taken from us again and again. Huge example was Mario Götze who was basically valued as the next Messi and who transferred to Bayern via exit clause, which was by far lower than his market value. Here the leaders of the club decided to never accept exit clauses any more.
4. Our first money went into paying off debt and it took nine years till we finally paid the last bit
5. The next money went into infrastructure. BVB has one of the best scouting and training teams soccer has to offer. Even top players that have seen other big clubs are impressed about our infrastructure.
6. Now we started paying more money for our top players, but it was still not enough. We lost Hummels, Mhkitaryan, Gündogan in one season and that was a huge throwback for us.
7. Luckily we also invested heavily into the future of soccer: big talent. So we were able to snatch Dembele who was absolutely amazing. Yet again, our weakness of not being a star club and not able to pay top wages caught up with us again and Dembele left us one year later. The same year when Dembele left, we bought Sancho from Chelsea.
8. Inbetween we try to buy players who might want to stay with the club so that we have a solid ground to build a team. There were many decision that were a bit unlucky: Schürrle, Rode and others failed to meet expectations
9. Due to bigger financial power we managed to sign Brandt and now Can, who are arguably not from the top shelf of players, but still amazing signings for the BVB.
10. We signed Haaland and this has torn the fans in half, because as everyone knows, he has an exit clause and as a BVB fan, those exit clauses have hurt us a lot. But since we were in desperate need of a striker, I guess our leaders decided that it was worth the risk. To be honest, still after his first amazing games, I don't feel entirely comfortable with that decision. We'll see how this will work out, but I completely understand Uniteds sentiment to stay away from the transfer.
Basically we made a virtue out of necessity and at one point said "alright, we are a feeder club, so lets be the best feeder club the world has ever seen".
This won't be sustainable longterm, because maybe you will hit a dry spell and won't be so lucky that Dembele comes after Gündogan and Sancho comes after Dembele and this is the point here this model might collapse. If we have a look in soccers history, it happened to a lot of teams, FC Porto coming to my mind immediately.
So yeah, short version: No, BVB has not been reduced to be a stepping stone, we have risen to be a stepping stone and we managed to crawl slowly into the top 15 of Europe financially. And since BVB in some recent history was only able to keep its players when we overshot our budget by a lot which nearly ruined the club, no we have not been on par with the top 10 in Europe any time in the last 30 years.
To come back to Haaland. This guy has a way of making score goals look really easy. Always seems to be ahead of the defense he is playing against. But as much as I am happy for every goal, I am also thinking about the exit clause, so I am not 100% happy, only 85%.
He is looking impressive, just not sure we would produce the number of chances for him. He would score certainly, but there I can see at least two goals in most games.Really disgusted we missed out on this guy. Top 4 and probably Europa League winners with him and Fernandes in our side.
Yes, your right. We would probably need a good winger to feed him crosses, but with Pogba and Fernandes in the middle feeding him, I would expect enough goals to win games that we are losing now.He is looking impressive, just not sure we would produce the number of chances for him. He would score certainly, but there I can see at least two goals in most games.
I think this lad just enjoys scoring goals, if he misses the chance he will follow in to make sure he gets his goal. Some miss and stand there looking disgusted when sometimes the chance of a goal is still there.Yes, your right. We would probably need a good winger to feed him crosses, but with Pogba and Fernandes in the middle feeding him, I would expect enough goals to win games that we are losing now.