Once were Loiners wrote:
I'm not sure anyone doesn't want JJB to succeed in the short term. But we must avoid the risk of an 'interim' coach getting good/OK results leading to their permanent appointment, the inevitable longer-term disappointment and then back to square one. We've just seen exactly that with Agar, and its happened numerous times with other clubs.
The short-term is important, but fundamental changes are required and we need a high quality coach to get us there. Going cheap and/or in-house with yet another old boy seems the least likely way to succeed in the long term.
I couldn't agree more. In sports, a team in the short-term can run on fumes of an increase in morale when a new coach comes in, but long-term success will always be achieved by quality coaching not just being likeable.
For years now, we go into the season with an inadequate coaching set up, screw the season up nice and early, waste the season trying to survive focusing only on the short-term then go into the next season and do it all again. Until we actually hire a quality coach, we just repeat the same mistakes and never actually move forward.
I think we as Leeds fans can accept that in one season we aren't just going to magically compete at the top, but we need to see a long-term plan and the club actually moving forward. Continuing with Agar again this season just reeks of accepting mediocrity. My patience is wearing thin now, not because we're not winning everything, but because the transition to us building a coaching line-up that can once again compete hasn't even started yet despite Brian McDermott leaving in 2018.
Stop-gap after stop-gap, constantly fire fighting, complete short-termism and having to buy cheap buy twice. I think it's fair to say the decision-making has been horrendous at the top.