Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?
June 20, 2024, 12:35:43 pm

Login with username, password and session length

Links


FSA logo

Author Topic: Ostler thinks maybe as far as we can go  (Read 2686 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Norfolk N Chance

  • Forum Member
  • Posts: 3480
Ostler thinks maybe as far as we can go
« on February 23, 2010, 01:14:59 pm by Norfolk N Chance »
given current wages structure - see yorks post



(want to hide these ads? Join the VSC today!)

Filo

  • VSC Member
  • Posts: 30168
Re:Ostler thinks maybe as far as we can go
« Reply #1 on February 23, 2010, 01:21:24 pm by Filo »
Who`s Ostler?

Snods Shinpad 2

  • Forum Member
  • Posts: 1637
Re:Ostler thinks maybe as far as we can go
« Reply #2 on February 23, 2010, 01:33:30 pm by Snods Shinpad 2 »
Link

Quote
JOHN OSTER says now is the time for Doncaster Rovers to push for the Premier League.

The former Everton and Sunderland winger is keen to stay at the Keepmoat Stadium next season and feels the opportunity is there to join the game's elite.

Rovers, who were playing Conference football just seven years ago, are currently on the fringes of the Championship promotion race and a victory over sixth-placed Leicester City tonight will lift the club to within five points of the play-off zone with 14 games to go.

Welsh international Oster said: \"It would be nice to play in the Premier League again and you just never know what can happen. No-one expected Burnley to go up last season and this year is offering as good a chance as any for a club like us.\"

Oster, 32, has enjoyed a new lease of life with Rovers this season but fears manager Sean O'Driscoll may only be able to take the club so far under the current wage restrictions.

\"I am not expecting people to throw in money and go stupid,\" he said. \"Obviously, we have to be sensible – but you can't keep expecting the manager to find players from lower league teams who can perform in this division.

\"Everyone at the club, from top to bottom, has to realise where we are now. For us to get onto the next level, things like the wage structure have to increase.\"

Oster's first club, Grimsby Town, spent five years defying the odds in the Championship during the Nineties but are now fighting to stay in the Football League.

While he insists there is far greater potential at Rovers, Oster does not want his current club to make the mistakes that led to the decline at Blundell Park.

\"Unless the chairman loosens the purse strings, it is going to be a difficult one for the manager,\" he said. \"At the end of the day, it will come to a head and, sooner or later, you are going to find yourself struggling again. That's not what we want.

\"It was never going to be right, financially, for Grimsby to kick on and get in the play-offs. They were punching above their weight and they only got 4,000 supporters every week,\" he said.

\"But this club is on a better stepping stone to reach the next level and that's what we hope to achieve. While we are doing okay, and trying to push on, that is the time when we should be trying to improve things.\"

Chairman John Ryan invested around £6m of his own money to drag Rovers back to the second tier of English football but, two years ago, made it clear that the club now had to live within its own means.

He has recently been exploring the possibility of buying the Keepmoat Stadium from the local council and this may also have an affect on money being made available for team-strengthening.

Former Rovers midfielder Richie Wellens was sold to Leicester last summer for a fee rising to £1.2m and is set to make his first return to the Keepmoat Stadium tonight.

Rovers also raised £2m via the sale of defender Matthew Mills to Reading in August but manager O'Driscoll takes a pragmatic view towards the club's financial situation.

\"If we had kept Richie and Matt Mills – and added one or two – we would have been a real force in this division,\" O'Driscoll admitted yesterday.

\"But look what is happening in football – teams are paying out money that they either can't afford or haven't got.

\"This club is a well-run club and that is testiment to the people that run it,\" he stressed.

\"The way football is going at the moment, more clubs that are well-run will be successful in the long term.\"

Rovers suffered a disappointing 2-1 defeat against Queens Park Rangers at the weekend with O'Driscoll labelling the performance 'awful'.

\"Our results have been better but our level of performances have struggled, at times, to find the level we had last season,\" he said.

\"However, with better results, it means we have improved in a different way.\"

Midfielder Brian Stock will struggle to be fit for tonight's game due to a back problem while Shelton Martis, Jason Shackell, Martin Woods, Adam Lockwood, Byron Webster, and Steve Brooker are still ruled out.

The two clubs fought out a goalless draw at the Walkers Stadium just a fortnight ago and Leicester are now unbeaten in six games.

redflag

  • Newbie
Re:Ostler thinks maybe as far as we can go
« Reply #3 on February 23, 2010, 02:12:18 pm by redflag »
Journalese, NNC... what he actually said was Rovers have the potentiality to push on to the Premier League but tying the managers hands with the limited wage bill could work against us.

SOD however says \"The way football is going at the moment, more clubs that are well-run will be successful in the long term.\"

Its a debate and a hot bed of opinions this one.

TheRev

  • Forum Member
  • Posts: 275
Re:Ostler thinks maybe as far as we can go
« Reply #4 on February 23, 2010, 11:09:39 pm by TheRev »
With a performance that he put in tonight we'll never get there!!

MrFrost

  • Forum Member
  • Posts: 8827
Re:Ostler thinks maybe as far as we can go
« Reply #5 on February 23, 2010, 11:44:20 pm by MrFrost »
I don't think its the chairman who needs to loosen the purse strings, rather the other directors or find some potential new investors.
It depends what the intentions for the future are. Push on in this division and make a go of it, or flirt with relegation every season, where eventually the trap door will open.
As well as the club is run, I really don't think they have any aspirations beyond the end of this season, and then again the target at the beginning of next season will be to simply to survive in this league. This will happen year on year until eventually we are in League One again.

I'm not trying to be negative, but we won't get far on loan signings and free transfers. I just want to see more of an indication what the board's plans are, if they have any at all.

Its not an easy situation, and I'm not suggesting we should be throwing millions at it, but we know the fact of the matter is we have no money for transfers, which isn't ideal. We have said we won't break our wage structure for the likes of Billy Sharp. Something has to give somewhere.

Another thing that alarms me is the lack of talent coming through the youth ranks. Paul Green came through, and possibly Fairhurst if we see more of him. But out of the countless thousands no doubt invested in this scheme over what must be ten years now, is two players a worth while return? Could this money be better spent elsewhere?

I can see how my post might be taken as negative. Its not intended to be. I'm just trying to see where the club are going, and what the next goal is.

 

TinyPortal © 2005-2012