Skrevet av Emne: EX-"manager" og "head-coach" : Brian McDermott  (Lest 378055 ganger)

0 medlemmer og 7 gjester leser dette emnet.

Jon R

Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #210 på: Mai 22, 2013, 23:25:33 »
Enig, han må få tid til og bevise , men ser man ikke positiv utvikling av spill / resultater før  nissen kommer , så bør han evt vurdere og ta sekken og finne på noe annet.(McDermott :))

Du mener vel "positiv utvikling av spill/resultater før nissen har dratt"?  ;D
Jon R.

Woody

Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #211 på: Mai 22, 2013, 23:28:27 »
Enig, han må få tid til og bevise , men ser man ikke positiv utvikling av spill / resultater før  nissen kommer , så bør han evt vurdere og ta sekken og finne på noe annet.(McDermott :))
Så 4 mnd skal vi gi han??ja nå snakker vi kontinuitet ;)
LIFE IS LEEDS

p0ndus

  • Gjest
Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #212 på: Mai 23, 2013, 21:44:36 »
Enig, han må få tid til og bevise , men ser man ikke positiv utvikling av spill / resultater før  nissen kommer , så bør han evt vurdere og ta sekken og finne på noe annet.(McDermott :))
Så 4 mnd skal vi gi han??ja nå snakker vi kontinuitet ;)

Ja ligger vi på nedrykk til Jul så bør han få fyken, kontinuitet eller ei.

Leedsulf

Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #213 på: Mai 24, 2013, 08:34:01 »
Nå gikk det vel ikke mer enn en liten omgang før man kunne se bedringer når det gjelder spillet etter at han overtok. Etter Warnock kunne det strengt tatt bare gå én vei, men likevel.

Jeg har tro på McD, og håper han får arbeidsro en tid framover, gjerne hele sesongen for min del, selv om vi ikke skulle ligge å pushe på opprykk/playoff.
Rotet vi sitter igjen med etter Colin kan fort ta litt tid å reparere, så godt mulig vi må ha en "repareringssesong".

Ian Baird

Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #214 på: Juni 30, 2013, 18:24:24 »
Har stor tro på BM. Nå har vi (i mine øyne) en fornuftig og god manager på en forholdsvis lang kontrakt (3 år). BM virket fra første stund ærlig med at han ikke ønsket å mislede oss fans til å tro at det er veldig mye transferpenger tilgjengelig. Ble først veldig skuffet da jeg oppdaget at Morisson var på vei til Millwall, da jeg hadde store forventinger til en skadefri Morisson. Skal ikke gi BM skylda for rotet med spiller inn i januar og ut igjen i juni. Her får tidligere eier ta skylda alene med NW på ettårskontrakt. Slikt blir det ikke kontinuitet av. BM må skyve spillere ut for å gi plass til nye. Trist, men sant. Med det nye regimet med nye eiere og BM vil nok dette opplegget med "salg" før "kjøp" forbli hverdagen i en god stund fremover tipper jeg. Det som er positivt er at BM er på langtidskontrakt og vi kan bygge lag og klubb med kontinuitet. Forventer egentlig ikke store forandringer resultatmessig umiddelbart, men blir deilig å slippe falsk "forventningsoppbygging".
« Siste redigering: Juni 30, 2013, 23:10:27 av Ian Baird »
Cellino 5. April 2014: We will be back in the Premier Leauge by 2016.

Gufrias

Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #215 på: Juni 30, 2013, 21:05:44 »
Har stor tro på TMD. Nå har vi (i mine øyne) en fornuftig og god manager på en forholdsvis lang kontrakt (3 år). TMD virket fra første stund ærlig med at han ikke ønsket å mislede oss fans til å tro at det er veldig mye transferpenger tilgjengelig. Ble først veldig skuffet da jeg oppdaget at Morisson var på vei til Millwall, da jeg hadde store forventinger til en skadefri Morisson. Skal ikke gi TMD skylda for rotet med spiller inn i januar og ut igjen i juni. Her får tidligere eier ta skylda alene med NW på ettårskontrakt. Slikt blir det ikke kontinuitet av. TMD må skyve spillere ut for å gi plass til nye. Trist, men sant. Med det nye regimet med nye eiere og TMD vil nok dette opplegget med "salg" før "kjøp" forbli hverdagen i en god stund fremover tipper jeg. Det som er positivt er at TMD er på langtidskontrakt og vi kan bygge lag og klubb med kontinuitet. Forventer egentlig ikke store forandringer resultatmessig umiddelbart, men blir deilig å slippe falsk "forventningsoppbygging".
Er det Brian med stor T?  ;)
Hekta på Leeds siden 1974

Stian l

Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #216 på: Juni 30, 2013, 23:05:25 »
Håper Brian satser på Dominic Poleon nå som Morison er lånt ut! :)

Ian Baird

Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #217 på: Juni 30, 2013, 23:11:08 »
Har stor tro på TMD. Nå har vi (i mine øyne) en fornuftig og god manager på en forholdsvis lang kontrakt (3 år). TMD virket fra første stund ærlig med at han ikke ønsket å mislede oss fans til å tro at det er veldig mye transferpenger tilgjengelig. Ble først veldig skuffet da jeg oppdaget at Morisson var på vei til Millwall, da jeg hadde store forventinger til en skadefri Morisson. Skal ikke gi TMD skylda for rotet med spiller inn i januar og ut igjen i juni. Her får tidligere eier ta skylda alene med NW på ettårskontrakt. Slikt blir det ikke kontinuitet av. TMD må skyve spillere ut for å gi plass til nye. Trist, men sant. Med det nye regimet med nye eiere og TMD vil nok dette opplegget med "salg" før "kjøp" forbli hverdagen i en god stund fremover tipper jeg. Det som er positivt er at TMD er på langtidskontrakt og vi kan bygge lag og klubb med kontinuitet. Forventer egentlig ikke store forandringer resultatmessig umiddelbart, men blir deilig å slippe falsk "forventningsoppbygging".
Er det Brian med stor T?  ;)

oops... redigert :-)
Cellino 5. April 2014: We will be back in the Premier Leauge by 2016.

Promotion 2010

Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #218 på: Juli 04, 2013, 13:18:50 »
http://www.leedsunited.com/news/20130704/its-all-shaping-up-nicely-boss_2247585_3228116


Uttalelser som dette får Warnock til å se ut som en fjert fra de lavere divisjoner!























Jeg har troen!    :D
Min første Leeds-kamp:
Strømsgodset vs Leeds, 19.september 1973

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Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #219 på: Juli 04, 2013, 20:26:15 »
Sånn. Kjørte 'dagens Gwyn Williams-diskusjon' inn i Gwyn Williams-tråden, jeg :)
Tell me - I've got to know
Tell me - Tell me before I go
Does that flame still burn, does that fire still glow
Or has it died out and melted like the snow
Tell me  Tell me

Dylan

Promotion 2010

Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #220 på: Juli 05, 2013, 11:35:16 »

Leeds United: Small things are key to opening doors

Published on the 05 July
2013
08:58


According to Leeds boss Brian McDermott the little things can mean a great deal – as he found out in Harrogate. Phil Hay reports.


Brian McDermott paid £1million for Luke Murphy on Monday and then went looking for a more modest purchase – a bottle opener.

The first place he tried in Harrogate drew a blank. “I asked the shop owner if they had one and he said no so I walked out the door and crossed the road to my car,” McDermott said. “Then this bloke knocked on my window.

“He said ‘I’ve got two bottle openers and I want to give you one.’ I said ‘you don’t have to do that.’ But he said I’d made his day so he ran up to his flat to get one. I tried to give him 20 quid but he wasn’t having it.

“This was after he’d seen the news about Luke Murphy. It’s only one thing but I think we all needed that.”


Leeds United fans here, Leeds United fans there and most of them encapsulated by the events of the past six days. There is evidence too of a sea-change in McDermott’s mood. This time last week United’s manager was publicly airing his concerns about a club who appeared from the outside to be paralysed by either a lack of money or a dearth of conviction. The signing of Murphy for a seven-figure fee felt like a watershed moment.

McDermott has revealed that on Thursday, Friday and Saturday of last week, he and certain directors at Elland Road spoke repeatedly and at length about a situation where one player had joined, another had left and the work to be done before the start of the season on August 3 was piling up.

The penny dropped and over the weekend a substantial bid for Murphy blew Blackburn Rovers and Wolverhampton Wanderers out of the water. McDermott met with the midfielder on Sunday and signed him from Crewe Alexandra the following day. On top of the sweeping changes at boardroom and senior management level – continuing on Tuesday with the departure of technical director Gwyn Williams, in essence the last remaining member of Ken Bates’ empire – Murphy’s transfer blew away the clouds and earned McDermott a free bottle opener.

The impact of the deal for Murphy, he claimed, was immediate and tangible. “I’ve said that to the owners,” he admitted. “I told them that what they’d done was cause and effect. It’s incredible – but I knew that would be the case.

“I’ll never do a deal that’s going to be absolutely stupid or crazy and put the club in jeopardy but Luke Murphy’s a deal for the future and a deal for today. All of a sudden we’ve competed against clubs to get him and we got him. That was an important day for us.

“I wasn’t so much frustrated last week but you want to get things done and dusted. Sometimes things are a bit slow. But you have to give credit to the owners for what’s happened in the last two or three days.

“We had long conversations last week, Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Obviously the structure of the club is different now so you have to say that the owners are making statements. But they’ve also said that we have to try as best we can to balance the books and I understand that. I understand it’s a business.

“We’ve got three players in and I have to try and do everything I can to do right by the club; to make sure the club’s in a safe and sound place. I’d never jeopardise anything.”

McDermott is adamant that he and United’s board share common ground on the subject of sensible investment. Earlier this week, a potential signing identified by him began to slip through Leeds’ fingers after being offered what McDermott called an “astronomical amount” by another club. The 52-year-old spoke with a director, thought about his options and decided to let the target go.

“We had a situation this week where I was going for a player and the player was offered an astronomical amount of money,” McDermott said. “One of the owners spoke to me about it and asked for my opinion. I said ‘let him sign for the other club.’ It was just ridiculous.

“We’re not going to be held to ransom by anybody. The deals have got to be right for us and this one wasn’t. It was astronomical. Good luck to him but it wasn’t going to happen here.”

Appointed as manager in April, McDermott stated at the start of the summer that “six or seven” signings would be his ballpark figure before next season began. GFH Capital, United’s owner, has faced repeated questions about its ability to supply funds or the likelihood of it holding a majority stake when the Championship term kicks off. Murphy’s signing was nonetheless Leeds’ first £1million cash buy since Richard Cresswell in 2005.

Through the back end of winter and the early days of spring, Dubai-based GFH Capital and its parent company, Gulf Finance House, seemed ever closer to the exit door. Negotiations about the sale of a 51 per cent stake to local businessman Steve Parkin dominated the closing stages of last season without the two sides shaking hands. Parkin is said to be interested still.

There is, however, much to suggest that GFH Capital’s plans for Leeds have shifted from the short to the medium-term. The events of Monday, with Salah Nooruddin replacing Ken Bates as chairman and David Haigh’s appointment as managing director sidelining chief executive Shaun Harvey, painted a picture of owners bedding in and knuckling down. There are many people, McDermott not least, who would tell GFH Capital that its motivation for owning Leeds might not be served by another tepid year of Championship football.

United play their first friendly at Farsley tomorrow and McDermott and his squad fly on tour to Slovenia early on Monday morning. Murphy’s arrival came 48 hours before Leeds announced Noel Hunt as their third signing of the summer.

“We’re getting there and I’m happy,” McDermott said.

“One of the best things is that we’re all working in the same direction. Myself, the owners, everybody; players, staff, fans. I keep saying the same thing, I know, but that’s how you get success, isn’t it?”


http://www.yorkshireeveningpost.co.uk/sport/leeds-united/latest-whites-news/leeds-united-small-things-are-key-to-opening-doors-1-5826480
Min første Leeds-kamp:
Strømsgodset vs Leeds, 19.september 1973

Woody

Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #221 på: Juli 05, 2013, 11:57:56 »

Leeds United: Small things are key to opening doors

Published on the 05 July
2013
08:58


According to Leeds boss Brian McDermott the little things can mean a great deal – as he found out in Harrogate. Phil Hay reports.


Brian McDermott paid £1million for Luke Murphy on Monday and then went looking for a more modest purchase – a bottle opener.

The first place he tried in Harrogate drew a blank. “I asked the shop owner if they had one and he said no so I walked out the door and crossed the road to my car,” McDermott said. “Then this bloke knocked on my window.

“He said ‘I’ve got two bottle openers and I want to give you one.’ I said ‘you don’t have to do that.’ But he said I’d made his day so he ran up to his flat to get one. I tried to give him 20 quid but he wasn’t having it.

“This was after he’d seen the news about Luke Murphy. It’s only one thing but I think we all needed that.”


Leeds United fans here, Leeds United fans there and most of them encapsulated by the events of the past six days. There is evidence too of a sea-change in McDermott’s mood. This time last week United’s manager was publicly airing his concerns about a club who appeared from the outside to be paralysed by either a lack of money or a dearth of conviction. The signing of Murphy for a seven-figure fee felt like a watershed moment.

McDermott has revealed that on Thursday, Friday and Saturday of last week, he and certain directors at Elland Road spoke repeatedly and at length about a situation where one player had joined, another had left and the work to be done before the start of the season on August 3 was piling up.

The penny dropped and over the weekend a substantial bid for Murphy blew Blackburn Rovers and Wolverhampton Wanderers out of the water. McDermott met with the midfielder on Sunday and signed him from Crewe Alexandra the following day. On top of the sweeping changes at boardroom and senior management level – continuing on Tuesday with the departure of technical director Gwyn Williams, in essence the last remaining member of Ken Bates’ empire – Murphy’s transfer blew away the clouds and earned McDermott a free bottle opener.

The impact of the deal for Murphy, he claimed, was immediate and tangible. “I’ve said that to the owners,” he admitted. “I told them that what they’d done was cause and effect. It’s incredible – but I knew that would be the case.

“I’ll never do a deal that’s going to be absolutely stupid or crazy and put the club in jeopardy but Luke Murphy’s a deal for the future and a deal for today. All of a sudden we’ve competed against clubs to get him and we got him. That was an important day for us.

“I wasn’t so much frustrated last week but you want to get things done and dusted. Sometimes things are a bit slow. But you have to give credit to the owners for what’s happened in the last two or three days.

“We had long conversations last week, Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Obviously the structure of the club is different now so you have to say that the owners are making statements. But they’ve also said that we have to try as best we can to balance the books and I understand that. I understand it’s a business.

“We’ve got three players in and I have to try and do everything I can to do right by the club; to make sure the club’s in a safe and sound place. I’d never jeopardise anything.”

McDermott is adamant that he and United’s board share common ground on the subject of sensible investment. Earlier this week, a potential signing identified by him began to slip through Leeds’ fingers after being offered what McDermott called an “astronomical amount” by another club. The 52-year-old spoke with a director, thought about his options and decided to let the target go.

“We had a situation this week where I was going for a player and the player was offered an astronomical amount of money,” McDermott said. “One of the owners spoke to me about it and asked for my opinion. I said ‘let him sign for the other club.’ It was just ridiculous.

“We’re not going to be held to ransom by anybody. The deals have got to be right for us and this one wasn’t. It was astronomical. Good luck to him but it wasn’t going to happen here.”

Appointed as manager in April, McDermott stated at the start of the summer that “six or seven” signings would be his ballpark figure before next season began. GFH Capital, United’s owner, has faced repeated questions about its ability to supply funds or the likelihood of it holding a majority stake when the Championship term kicks off. Murphy’s signing was nonetheless Leeds’ first £1million cash buy since Richard Cresswell in 2005.

Through the back end of winter and the early days of spring, Dubai-based GFH Capital and its parent company, Gulf Finance House, seemed ever closer to the exit door. Negotiations about the sale of a 51 per cent stake to local businessman Steve Parkin dominated the closing stages of last season without the two sides shaking hands. Parkin is said to be interested still.

There is, however, much to suggest that GFH Capital’s plans for Leeds have shifted from the short to the medium-term. The events of Monday, with Salah Nooruddin replacing Ken Bates as chairman and David Haigh’s appointment as managing director sidelining chief executive Shaun Harvey, painted a picture of owners bedding in and knuckling down. There are many people, McDermott not least, who would tell GFH Capital that its motivation for owning Leeds might not be served by another tepid year of Championship football.

United play their first friendly at Farsley tomorrow and McDermott and his squad fly on tour to Slovenia early on Monday morning. Murphy’s arrival came 48 hours before Leeds announced Noel Hunt as their third signing of the summer.

“We’re getting there and I’m happy,” McDermott said.

“One of the best things is that we’re all working in the same direction. Myself, the owners, everybody; players, staff, fans. I keep saying the same thing, I know, but that’s how you get success, isn’t it?”


http://www.yorkshireeveningpost.co.uk/sport/leeds-united/latest-whites-news/leeds-united-small-things-are-key-to-opening-doors-1-5826480


Det som står i siste linjer om at alle dreg i same retning,det er det vel lenge sidan vi har sett i Leeds.Måtte det berre vare. :)
LIFE IS LEEDS

Sydhagen

Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #222 på: Juli 06, 2013, 20:53:31 »
@PhilHayYEP: Brian Mc, bless him, spent half an hour shaking hands with fans on one side of the pitch. McCormack trying to get out of Farsley before Xmas
"Paynter, a striker whose danger factor is akin to a blind sniper, who has no fingers, or a gun."

Hallgeir *

Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #223 på: Juli 08, 2013, 18:02:31 »
"Ny" taktikk av McDermott?

Split Centre Backs & The New Tactical Outlook

Posted on July 8, 2013 by Amitai Winehouse •

In his commentary of Saturday’s pre-season clash with Farsley, Dom Matteo complained about Paddy Kenny messing around with the ball in defence. A ball that went astray led to a chance that wasn’t taken. He railed against the very notion of goalkeepers attempting to do complicated things in defence.

On the pitch, Matt Smith won very nearly everything in the air. As I said later, defenders don’t suddenly grow a few inches on average the higher up the pyramid of football you go. Matt Smith’s inherent height will win him aerial battles over and over.

Despite these two notions, Saturday’s match presented an opportune example to discuss a key facet of McDermott’s tactics since he came to Leeds, the use of split centre backs from goal kicks. Split centre backs have been pioneered by those sides highly respected for playing football the ‘right way’ – Barcelona, the Spanish National Side and those sides Marcelo Bielsa has coached in recent times. It involves an inherent trust of the ball playing abilities of your central pairing.

The two centre backs split and occupy positions on either side of the box as the keeper lines up a goal kick. Occupying a position that one would assume the full backs occupy allows the right and left back to push up the field immediately from a position of possession. Given the ease with which two defensively sound front-men could mark them, the deepest lying midfielder usually joins them in a three, as Paul Green did on Saturday, coming deeper to collect the ball.

This has massive benefits in terms of ball retention, in that it gives the keeper three solid points of distribution in the face of likely pressing that almost certainly guarantee possession remains in Leeds’s hands.

What is truly effective about it is the manner in which it requires the opposition to react. If they do not press and instead drop back, it would provide Leeds with an easy route into the opposition half with none of the chance of the ball being lost in an aerial duel that a punt to a striker’s head would involve. If the opposition do press, they open themselves up for effective attacking play. The lines break down and space can be found over and over. Where under Neil Warnock the overuse of straight line play led to easy responses from defences, the triangular passing play that McDermott prefers means that ball retention from a goal kick coupled with opposition pressure would allow for movement up the field and the creation of goal scoring opportunities.

Admittedly this tactic is risky, and a display against Farsley means little, but the fact that it is already being coached into our players is a massive plus. Little concepts like this can give us the edge over the opposition, and shows the forward thinking nature of our still relatively new manager.

Follow Amitai Winehouse on Twitter (@awinehouse1).
Super Leeds since 1968

Trulsaren

Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #224 på: Juli 12, 2013, 16:13:34 »
Noen som vet hvem denne spilleren McD nevner fikk tilbudt en latterlig i en annen klubb høy lønn er?

Det synker mer og mer inn for meg at Leeds har gjort en kjempekupp med å signere McDermott. Jeg var litt skeptisk i starten til karen, men han har til å klart å overbevise meg. Kombinasjonen av alt som har skjedd de siste ukene får meg til å virkelig ha troen på at vi kan snakke opprykk kommende sesong.
Some fans have gone from begging for Omar Bogle from Grimsby to being disappointed with Lasogga from Hamburg in 6 months... #lufct

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Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #225 på: Juli 16, 2013, 11:27:26 »
Nytt flott intervju med BM i YEP :)

Leeds United: I’ll always do what’s best for this club – Machttp://www.yorkshireeveningpost.co.uk/sport/leeds-united/latest-whites-news/leeds-united-i-ll-always-do-what-s-best-for-this-club-mac-1-5858395


United boss Brian McDermott is happy with the way things are panning out on and off the field at Leeds as he tells Phil Hay.


At certain points of his Slovenian tour, Brian McDermott has found himself speechless.

Saturday afternoon was one of those moments as Leeds United’s adoring public flashmobbed him and his squad as they drove into a car park in Domzale.

McDermott retreated into the quiet of the stadium and sat down by the press box, drawing breath and shaking his head. “They remind me of the Irish,” he said. “They’re just so into their club.” It will take time for him and others to forget the naked supporter who appeared in front of them.

He has learned this week that devotion to Leeds takes many forms. The tale of his 50 Euro note and the treatment it got has been told to death and McDermott himself described how two of United’s kit men, Chris Beasley and Shaun Ford, drove 24 hours without a break to bring piles of equipment to Ptuj. “The ethos and the attitude – it’s everywhere and I love it,” he says. “That’s how a club should be.”

McDermott created and nurtured a family of his own at Reading, which is one reason why his sacking in March wounded him. Away from the matter of how ruthlessly he was treated, in leaving Reading he left a lot behind – not least a club who mattered to him. Four months on, Leeds are easily filling what might have been a demoralising void.

“It would have been hard to be without that,” McDermott says. “It was hard at first. I didn’t see Reading’s decision coming. There’s wasn’t a great deal of warning. But do I think about it now? Not much.

“When it first happened it was on my mind a lot. That’s only natural. These days I think about Leeds United and there’s plenty to think about. People maybe underestimate that. When you ask ‘does what happened at Reading still rankle’, the honest answer is that it doesn’t have time to rankle.

“I was sure I’d find more work when the time was right but what I’ve got here is truly special. I’ve ended up at a club who are steeped in history and have a fanbase which, quite honestly, you can’t get your head around sometimes. No matter what I thought back then, I feel very lucky now.” The passing of time and four months of living with Leeds United has repaired any cracks in McDermott’s relationship with Reading’s hierarchy. Their chairman, John Madejski, was a long-time ally and honest enough to say that he “would have kept him.” The man who sacked McDermott and appointed Nigel Adkins, Russian owner Anton Zingarevich, sent the 52-year-old a supportive and conciliatory text on the day of his appointment at Leeds. They will be able to share a drink when United and Reading play in Berkshire on September 17.

“Reading are happy with the manager they’ve got and I hope Leeds are happy with the manager they’ve got,” McDermott says. “I don’t see the need for either of us to dwell on it any longer. I’m loving working here, absolutely loving it.

“I’ll never say a bad word about Reading because I was there for 13 years and had a lot of success in different jobs. I’m not going to rewrite history. It was a fantastic part of my life. I’ve no problem with the owner, honestly I haven’t. I said to him that we’ll always be friends because we won a championship together. That’s how I feel.

“I got a really nice text from Anton when I went to Leeds. That tells you something. They decided to go in a different direction and at the time that was difficult for me to accept. But when I step back now, I’ve actually got no problem with that. They went their own way just as Leeds did with me.”

Zingarevich bid for a controlling stake in Reading in 2012, midway through McDermott’s three-year tenure, and was free to make a change which Madejski might not have countenanced.

The experience of seeing power shift and directors come and go will not be wasted at Elland Road. Already McDermott has witnessed a change of chairman at Leeds – Ken Bates out, Salah Nooruddin in – and alterations to the day-to-day management structure. He deals directly with David Haigh, Leeds’ newly-appointed managing director, and is regularly on the phone to Bahrain, the base of Gulf Finance House which, when all is said and done, controls 86.77 per cent of United.

Some managers leave the boardroom to look after itself. Others, like McDermott, prefer to watch it closely.

“Oh yeah, I take an interest in that,” he says. “I’m very mindful of what’s going on and the changes that take place. I think it’s a naive manager who isn’t aware of what’s happening in the boardroom. It’s vital that you know.

“But I’m very comfortable dealing with the owners here. I’m dealing with David Haigh now, I’m on the phone to him constantly and on the phone to other people in Bahrain. They want the club to go forward and at the moment I think the structure’s good. I’m happy with it.”

GFH Capital, the subsidiary of Gulf Finance House which bought Leeds last December, has bobbed and weaved in the fight for credibility and trust. Arguably, the company holds higher public stock now than at any stage of the past seven months. The decision last week to return matchday commentary rights to BBC Radio Leeds was, in the eyes of many, another attempt to address a matter which the previous regime got wrong. The recent movement in the boardroom also appealed to those who were tired of Bates’ methods of football club ownership.

But more than anything, the £1million signing of Luke Murphy on the first day of July gave a riposte to the burning question in Leeds – can GFH Capital give its manager all he needs in the Championship?

McDermott’s appointment in April as Leeds’ replacement for Neil Warnock was immensely popular, as Warnock’s appointment had been 13 months earlier, but by the end of June he began to give the impression that the slow drag in the summer transfer market was testing his patience. After days of discussions between manager and board, Murphy was signed and McDermott felt refreshed. “Signing Luke at the value we did was a big step forward,” he says.

The situation, still, is not so straightforward. McDermott has been chasing his fourth signing for many weeks and is stuck in what appears to be a bit of an impasse. He has players who he would happily move on if Leeds could find takers and directors who have made plain to him the need to keep the wage bill on a leash. It might be too simple to say that McDermott needs to sell before he can buy but he has work to do on both fronts.

“I’ve been supported in my time here but I also know that balancing the books is necessary,” he says. “If you look at my career I’ve always done that. I do what I have to do.

“At Reading we sold Gylfi Sigurdsson, a massively gifted player, for a load of money to Germany. That was hard –hard for me – but it kept the place going and it kept us in the black. So we built again. Then we got to a play-off final and we lost Shaun Long, Zurab Khizanishvili and Matt Mills, £10million worth of talent. Then we built again and won the league.

“Was I happy with that? Quite frankly I’d like to be keeping all my players but you have to be mindful of the club and their circumstances. And as that period at Reading proves, balancing the books isn’t a barrier to success.

“As long as everything is done for the best intentions of your club, nothing else matters to me. And I’ll always do what’s best for this club. Always.”

To listen to McDermott throughout the summer, it is perfectly clear that the purpose of his pre-season programme is to be inclusive of everyone and to make the best of what he has.

Maximising the potential of his existing squad is one way of insuring against deals which might not happen and are still unconcluded.

“There’s obviously one particular player I’m trying to get in,” he says.

“I need that to happen. But I’ll tell you now, someone will come from within this squad and surprise you, I’m convinced about it. It happens a lot.

“I had Jimmy Kebe at Reading. When I got the job he wasn’t a fans’ favourite but he turned himself into a fans’ favourite and became a terrific asset. It got to the point where if Jimmy wasn’t fit or able to play, it was seen as a bonus for the opposition. You just never know.”

So onto next season and United’s chances. McDermott claims he hasn’t thought about that.

“Pre-season sets you up for the season,” he says, with United’s players training around him, “so I’m only thinking about pre-season. This session actually. That’s how I work.”

Speak to the players and supporters at large and it becomes apparent that McDermott is winning the battle of hearts and minds. He has several sides to him – serious and considered on camera but dry and witty away from it; evidently driven yet strangely short of ego. He was utterly bemused when the fan who took a 50 Euro note from him in Murska Sobota last week decided to keep it and get it signed. “Why on earth would he want to do that?” McDermott asked.

Already, the mood at Leeds is as he wants it.

“We’ve got no egos here and no-one cares who the credit goes to,” he says. “That’s a pretty fundamental situation. I don’t see how you can make a go of things if people are fighting or worrying about who’s getting which plaudits.

“I don’t know what happened here last season. It doesn’t really matter. But I made the point when I came here that the way I work is everyone together.

“If you don’t like that or you can’t cope with that then this isn’t the place for you – although how anyone can have a problem with working together and pushing in the same direction I’ve no idea.”

He almost makes the job of managing Leeds United sound simple. Only McDermott could do that.
Tell me - I've got to know
Tell me - Tell me before I go
Does that flame still burn, does that fire still glow
Or has it died out and melted like the snow
Tell me  Tell me

Dylan

Sydhagen

Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #226 på: Juli 16, 2013, 11:50:41 »
Fin fyr!  :)
"Paynter, a striker whose danger factor is akin to a blind sniper, who has no fingers, or a gun."

nord

Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #227 på: Juli 16, 2013, 12:07:20 »
jeg ser solen stige i østen  ;D
 

fmtj

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Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #228 på: Juli 16, 2013, 13:50:41 »
Nytt flott intervju med BM i YEP :)

Leeds United: I’ll always do what’s best for this club – Machttp://www.yorkshireeveningpost.co.uk/sport/leeds-united/latest-whites-news/leeds-united-i-ll-always-do-what-s-best-for-this-club-mac-1-5858395


United boss Brian McDermott is happy with the way things are panning out on and off the field at Leeds as he tells Phil Hay.


At certain points of his Slovenian tour, Brian McDermott has found himself speechless.

Saturday afternoon was one of those moments as Leeds United’s adoring public flashmobbed him and his squad as they drove into a car park in Domzale.

McDermott retreated into the quiet of the stadium and sat down by the press box, drawing breath and shaking his head. “They remind me of the Irish,” he said. “They’re just so into their club.” It will take time for him and others to forget the naked supporter who appeared in front of them.

He has learned this week that devotion to Leeds takes many forms. The tale of his 50 Euro note and the treatment it got has been told to death and McDermott himself described how two of United’s kit men, Chris Beasley and Shaun Ford, drove 24 hours without a break to bring piles of equipment to Ptuj. “The ethos and the attitude – it’s everywhere and I love it,” he says. “That’s how a club should be.”

McDermott created and nurtured a family of his own at Reading, which is one reason why his sacking in March wounded him. Away from the matter of how ruthlessly he was treated, in leaving Reading he left a lot behind – not least a club who mattered to him. Four months on, Leeds are easily filling what might have been a demoralising void.

“It would have been hard to be without that,” McDermott says. “It was hard at first. I didn’t see Reading’s decision coming. There’s wasn’t a great deal of warning. But do I think about it now? Not much.

“When it first happened it was on my mind a lot. That’s only natural. These days I think about Leeds United and there’s plenty to think about. People maybe underestimate that. When you ask ‘does what happened at Reading still rankle’, the honest answer is that it doesn’t have time to rankle.

“I was sure I’d find more work when the time was right but what I’ve got here is truly special. I’ve ended up at a club who are steeped in history and have a fanbase which, quite honestly, you can’t get your head around sometimes. No matter what I thought back then, I feel very lucky now.” The passing of time and four months of living with Leeds United has repaired any cracks in McDermott’s relationship with Reading’s hierarchy. Their chairman, John Madejski, was a long-time ally and honest enough to say that he “would have kept him.” The man who sacked McDermott and appointed Nigel Adkins, Russian owner Anton Zingarevich, sent the 52-year-old a supportive and conciliatory text on the day of his appointment at Leeds. They will be able to share a drink when United and Reading play in Berkshire on September 17.

“Reading are happy with the manager they’ve got and I hope Leeds are happy with the manager they’ve got,” McDermott says. “I don’t see the need for either of us to dwell on it any longer. I’m loving working here, absolutely loving it.

“I’ll never say a bad word about Reading because I was there for 13 years and had a lot of success in different jobs. I’m not going to rewrite history. It was a fantastic part of my life. I’ve no problem with the owner, honestly I haven’t. I said to him that we’ll always be friends because we won a championship together. That’s how I feel.

“I got a really nice text from Anton when I went to Leeds. That tells you something. They decided to go in a different direction and at the time that was difficult for me to accept. But when I step back now, I’ve actually got no problem with that. They went their own way just as Leeds did with me.”

Zingarevich bid for a controlling stake in Reading in 2012, midway through McDermott’s three-year tenure, and was free to make a change which Madejski might not have countenanced.

The experience of seeing power shift and directors come and go will not be wasted at Elland Road. Already McDermott has witnessed a change of chairman at Leeds – Ken Bates out, Salah Nooruddin in – and alterations to the day-to-day management structure. He deals directly with David Haigh, Leeds’ newly-appointed managing director, and is regularly on the phone to Bahrain, the base of Gulf Finance House which, when all is said and done, controls 86.77 per cent of United.

Some managers leave the boardroom to look after itself. Others, like McDermott, prefer to watch it closely.

“Oh yeah, I take an interest in that,” he says. “I’m very mindful of what’s going on and the changes that take place. I think it’s a naive manager who isn’t aware of what’s happening in the boardroom. It’s vital that you know.

“But I’m very comfortable dealing with the owners here. I’m dealing with David Haigh now, I’m on the phone to him constantly and on the phone to other people in Bahrain. They want the club to go forward and at the moment I think the structure’s good. I’m happy with it.”

GFH Capital, the subsidiary of Gulf Finance House which bought Leeds last December, has bobbed and weaved in the fight for credibility and trust. Arguably, the company holds higher public stock now than at any stage of the past seven months. The decision last week to return matchday commentary rights to BBC Radio Leeds was, in the eyes of many, another attempt to address a matter which the previous regime got wrong. The recent movement in the boardroom also appealed to those who were tired of Bates’ methods of football club ownership.

But more than anything, the £1million signing of Luke Murphy on the first day of July gave a riposte to the burning question in Leeds – can GFH Capital give its manager all he needs in the Championship?

McDermott’s appointment in April as Leeds’ replacement for Neil Warnock was immensely popular, as Warnock’s appointment had been 13 months earlier, but by the end of June he began to give the impression that the slow drag in the summer transfer market was testing his patience. After days of discussions between manager and board, Murphy was signed and McDermott felt refreshed. “Signing Luke at the value we did was a big step forward,” he says.

The situation, still, is not so straightforward. McDermott has been chasing his fourth signing for many weeks and is stuck in what appears to be a bit of an impasse. He has players who he would happily move on if Leeds could find takers and directors who have made plain to him the need to keep the wage bill on a leash. It might be too simple to say that McDermott needs to sell before he can buy but he has work to do on both fronts.

“I’ve been supported in my time here but I also know that balancing the books is necessary,” he says. “If you look at my career I’ve always done that. I do what I have to do.

“At Reading we sold Gylfi Sigurdsson, a massively gifted player, for a load of money to Germany. That was hard –hard for me – but it kept the place going and it kept us in the black. So we built again. Then we got to a play-off final and we lost Shaun Long, Zurab Khizanishvili and Matt Mills, £10million worth of talent. Then we built again and won the league.

“Was I happy with that? Quite frankly I’d like to be keeping all my players but you have to be mindful of the club and their circumstances. And as that period at Reading proves, balancing the books isn’t a barrier to success.

“As long as everything is done for the best intentions of your club, nothing else matters to me. And I’ll always do what’s best for this club. Always.”

To listen to McDermott throughout the summer, it is perfectly clear that the purpose of his pre-season programme is to be inclusive of everyone and to make the best of what he has.

Maximising the potential of his existing squad is one way of insuring against deals which might not happen and are still unconcluded.

“There’s obviously one particular player I’m trying to get in,” he says.

“I need that to happen. But I’ll tell you now, someone will come from within this squad and surprise you, I’m convinced about it. It happens a lot.

“I had Jimmy Kebe at Reading. When I got the job he wasn’t a fans’ favourite but he turned himself into a fans’ favourite and became a terrific asset. It got to the point where if Jimmy wasn’t fit or able to play, it was seen as a bonus for the opposition. You just never know.”

So onto next season and United’s chances. McDermott claims he hasn’t thought about that.

“Pre-season sets you up for the season,” he says, with United’s players training around him, “so I’m only thinking about pre-season. This session actually. That’s how I work.”

Speak to the players and supporters at large and it becomes apparent that McDermott is winning the battle of hearts and minds. He has several sides to him – serious and considered on camera but dry and witty away from it; evidently driven yet strangely short of ego. He was utterly bemused when the fan who took a 50 Euro note from him in Murska Sobota last week decided to keep it and get it signed. “Why on earth would he want to do that?” McDermott asked.

Already, the mood at Leeds is as he wants it.

“We’ve got no egos here and no-one cares who the credit goes to,” he says. “That’s a pretty fundamental situation. I don’t see how you can make a go of things if people are fighting or worrying about who’s getting which plaudits.

“I don’t know what happened here last season. It doesn’t really matter. But I made the point when I came here that the way I work is everyone together.

“If you don’t like that or you can’t cope with that then this isn’t the place for you – although how anyone can have a problem with working together and pushing in the same direction I’ve no idea.”

He almost makes the job of managing Leeds United sound simple. Only McDermott could do that.



Dæven altså, dette ser ut til å være en bra mann!! Liker dette!!
Yeboahs vitne

Leedsfan

Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #229 på: Juli 22, 2013, 20:44:08 »
Burde vi se på denne sesongen som en "mellomsesong" og gi McD to transfervinduer til før vi virkelig begynner å sette krav?

Neste år så blir vi kvitt disse:

Ryan Hall
Michael Brown
Charlie Taylor
Alex Cairns
Zac Thompson
Danny Pugh
Luke Varney                                       
Adam Drury                                         
Jamie Ashdown   
El Hadji Diouf   

Burde frigjøre penger til noen nye spillere...
I scored 24 goals helping my side win promotion back to the Premier League aged just 22. Then in my first season in the top flight I had bagged an impressive 15 goals by the end of January. My form earned me an England call-up. Am I a £35m striker? No. I am Michael Ricketts, February 2002.

Kato

Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #230 på: Juli 22, 2013, 21:25:45 »
Synes ikke han skal begynne å bli usikker å rote med spillestil, formasjoner osv. Lag en plan på det han har tro på, gi han tid, og la dette bli en mellomsesong. Opprykkslag bygges ikke på to måneder med den stallen han arvet.
 

marve

Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #231 på: Juli 22, 2013, 23:20:58 »
Burde vi se på denne sesongen som en "mellomsesong" og gi McD to transfervinduer til før vi virkelig begynner å sette krav?

Neste år så blir vi kvitt disse:

Ryan Hall
Michael Brown
Charlie Taylor
Alex Cairns
Zac Thompson
Danny Pugh
Luke Varney                                       
Adam Drury                                         
Jamie Ashdown   
El Hadji Diouf   

Burde frigjøre penger til noen nye spillere...
Har vi egentlig noe annet valg da?.
Med eiere uten mye penger så har vi vell ikke noe annet valg en å være tolmodige .
Virker som at vi får beholde våre topp spillere nå da ,det er en liten trøst det . :)
 

Kontakinte

Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #232 på: Juli 22, 2013, 23:52:08 »
Hehe må le.. mellomsessong!!! Mellom hva da? Nå og 2020 eller?

h.b

  • Gjest
Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #233 på: Juli 23, 2013, 11:01:52 »
Mellomsesong my ass. Slik tankegang går rett og slett ikke. De beste spillerne vil da bli solgt i vinduet i januar grunnet ingen ambisjoner eller mulighet for opprykk. Så må manageren bygge på nytt neste sommer og vi sier det samme da igjen. Mellosesong.
Nei opp denne sesongen. Havner vi utenfor playoff må vi ha ny manager neste sesong uansett

Mr. Leeds

Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #234 på: Juli 23, 2013, 11:18:48 »
Mellomsesong my ass. Slik tankegang går rett og slett ikke. De beste spillerne vil da bli solgt i vinduet i januar grunnet ingen ambisjoner eller mulighet for opprykk. Så må manageren bygge på nytt neste sommer og vi sier det samme da igjen. Mellosesong.
Nei opp denne sesongen. Havner vi utenfor playoff må vi ha ny manager neste sesong uansett
Blir imponert om vi klarer playoff med stallen vi har nå. 10-18 plass er der jeg tipper oss foreløpig dessverre.
Ny manager hvert år tror jeg heller ikke er en fordel. Blackburn hadde en haug managere sist - og lyktes ikke spesielt med det.

Jeg liker en del uttalelser fra McDermott, bla at han har en måte å spille på og er bevisst i fht det. Ikke alle forhenværende managere i Leeds som kan beskyldes for det.
Sjekk ut dette gratis manager spillet på nettet:

www.hattrick.org

Torpe-do

Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #235 på: Juli 23, 2013, 12:18:48 »
Mellomsesong my ass. Slik tankegang går rett og slett ikke. De beste spillerne vil da bli solgt i vinduet i januar grunnet ingen ambisjoner eller mulighet for opprykk. Så må manageren bygge på nytt neste sommer og vi sier det samme da igjen. Mellosesong.
Nei opp denne sesongen. Havner vi utenfor playoff må vi ha ny manager neste sesong uansett

Her er jeg temmelig uenig med deg, hb. Jeg har troen på McDermott og håper han får muligheten til å bygge litt langsiktigt. Forhåpentligvis med tilstrekkelig midler fram nye eiere.

Unntaket blir vel dersom denne sesongen går rett i dass. I mine øyne blir det om vi fra dag en kjemper om nedrykk. Om vi klarer å kjempe om PO er jeg fornøyd for denne sesongen, med den baktanke at vi forhåpentligvis har en langsiktig plan som gjør oss enda bedre neste år igjen.

Naivt? Kanskje. Hørt det før? Godt mulig. Men slik tenker i alle fall jeg om dagen :)

B_Ød

Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #236 på: Juli 23, 2013, 12:33:50 »
jeg tror på manageren..og følgelig at dette blir den beste sesongen siden SG's glansdager  ;)
Ups & Ups!!

Runar

Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #237 på: Juli 23, 2013, 13:57:01 »
Mellomsesong my ass. Slik tankegang går rett og slett ikke. De beste spillerne vil da bli solgt i vinduet i januar grunnet ingen ambisjoner eller mulighet for opprykk. Så må manageren bygge på nytt neste sommer og vi sier det samme da igjen. Mellosesong.
Nei opp denne sesongen. Havner vi utenfor playoff må vi ha ny manager neste sesong uansett

Manageren kan ikke BARE vurderes på resultater, vi har ikke så mye "gode" spillere at dersom vi ikke rykker opp så vil spillere forsvinne, samme som forrige sesong har jo ikke mistet noen denne sommeren nettopp fordi vi ikke har spennende spillere som tidligere (Johnson, Snodgrass, Howson, Gradel, Beckford og Beckford)....

Jeg mener alltid at ALLE sesonger er en mellomsesong, suksess i framtiden er målsetningen. Derfor kan vi godt sparke McDermott etter et opprykk for mindel dersom vi har tilgang på noe som øker sannsynligheten for videre utvikling.



Vi må være tålmodig uttålmodig, vi må kunne se at det vi gjør og måten ledelse og manager bygger opp klubben er hensiktsmessig med tanke på videre framgang.
 

Gufrias

Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #238 på: Juli 23, 2013, 15:50:13 »
Burde vi se på denne sesongen som en "mellomsesong" og gi McD to transfervinduer til før vi virkelig begynner å sette krav?

Neste år så blir vi kvitt disse:

Ryan Hall
Michael Brown
Charlie Taylor
Alex Cairns
Zac Thompson
Danny Pugh
Luke Varney                                       
Adam Drury                                         
Jamie Ashdown   
El Hadji Diouf   

Burde frigjøre penger til noen nye spillere...
Ikke alle jeg gleder meg til å bli kvitt. De fleste er has beens, det er klart. Og Hall er tydeligvis langt ute i kulda, ettersom McD påstår at vi ikke har vinger. Derimot har jeg tro på Taylor og Cairns, og skulle gjerne sett at de slår igjennom og viser seg verdig en kontraktsforlengelse.  Thompson også, kanskje.
Hekta på Leeds siden 1974

Dennis

Sv: Manager: Brian McDermott
« Svar #239 på: Juli 23, 2013, 18:19:07 »
Mellomsesong my ass. Slik tankegang går rett og slett ikke. De beste spillerne vil da bli solgt i vinduet i januar grunnet ingen ambisjoner eller mulighet for opprykk. Så må manageren bygge på nytt neste sommer og vi sier det samme da igjen. Mellosesong.
Nei opp denne sesongen. Havner vi utenfor playoff må vi ha ny manager neste sesong uansett

Selvsagt kan det argumenteres for at 2013/14 kan bli en mellomsesong. Det kalles å tenke langsiktig og er i de aller, aller, aller fleste tilfeller langt mer riktig enn å satse alt på ett kort/en sesong. Klubben MÃ… ikke rykke opp for å eksistere også neste sesong. Kanskje er det slik - sett i lys av at jeg aller helst vil ha Leeds opp denne sesongen - at vi kan være bedre rustet om to-tre sesonger, gitt at dagens eiere ikke har råd til en storrengjøring i stallen neste sommer.

En klubb med et godt og riktig fundament på alle de forskjellige pilarene en sportsklubb bygges på er langt mer egnet for vedvarende suksess, enn en klubb som bruker over evne for å slå til samme sesong. Her tror jeg eierne har valgt dønn riktig mtp Brian McDermott. Han bygger en klubb, ikke bare et lag.

At å tenke langsiktig er ensbetydende med å selge de beste spillerne, ser jeg overhodet ikke logikken bak. Vi vet lite om hva som foregår "i garderoben", men jeg er ikke i tvil om at stemningen der kan være ganske så annerledes mtp fremtiden, uavgengig av tabellposisjon. Spillerne vil merke om klubben ikke har lys i tunnelen eller om det faktisk gror et håp om et mer slagkraftig lag snart.

Og dette med evig sparking av managere er bare tull. Vi ser hvilke klubber i England som har vedvarende suksess og hvilke som ikke har. Kontinuitet er en nøkkel som de aller fleste driter i. Hadde alle gjort på samme måte, hadde klubben du ofte refererer til sparket tyggeren tidlig og historien ville hatt en langt mer lykkelig utvikling for oss andre.
« Siste redigering: Juli 23, 2013, 18:25:41 av Mr Kaizer »
Marching on together!