Have to start by admitting I was only able to watch/listen to the first hour of last night’s online fans meeting (French timings you know), so any comments/conclusions may need qualification if something more on the topic was said later. That said, within the context of appreciation for the time taken by all concerned and the information given, my overall impression was slight disappointment regarding ambitions for this season.
From all concerned – Gavin Carter and Charlie Methven at The Valley and James Rodwell and Nathan Jones at Sparrows Lane – there was the understandable emphasis on moving in the right direction, building steadily on and off the pitch etc, with openness on issues such as the state of the pitch (disappointing but the expectation it will be better from March and for next season) and some aspects of the club’s finances (although the figures were headline ones and gave no insight into key areas, including the balance on transfer dealings). When it came to hopes for this season the messaging was mixed.
Methven kicked off by acknowledging that it is pointless to talk about success as long as we are playing in League One, the only measure of success being a return to the Championship (the only other yardstick is the club remaining afloat). Amen to that. By implication, and with no disagreement from me, this season will be another of failure if we do not get promoted (of course a strong second half of the campaign and only just missing out on the play-offs or not winning them would make it a qualified failure, with reasons for confidence in next season’s prospects).
When we moved to Rodwell and Jones the message was relaxed. It was reiterated that this transfer window was about some streamlining of the squad and perhaps a little tweaking, possibly a couple more out and maybe, if the right target became available, one or two coming in. Rodwell said Jones was happy with the current squad and the club was under no pressure to either sell or buy. On the balance between loans and permanent signings and promotion of players from the academy, Rodwell gave a rather lame justification for preferring the last over loans, that with loans we are helping develop players to the benefit of their parent clubs (well sure, but the club benefits from the contribution of those players on the pitch here and now). He did acknowledge that if the squad was light in a certain area, and there was no available home-grown youngster, and a suitable loan signing became possible …
The question I would have liked to ask, given all this, was whether Jones being happy with the squad was because he felt it was strong enough to win us promotion this season, or just because he felt it was all moving in the right direction? The implication was the latter (Jones said the squad was stronger than last year, including in the forward department).
What was missing, for me, was any sense that this season we have the opportunity to get promoted, now that players have returned from injury and form and results have improved (Rotherham notwithstanding), and that on that basis that the club is working day and night to attract one or two influential signings, whether or not permanent, to help get us over the line. It is after all what most clubs around us are doing. Rodwell talked of an ambition to win more games than we lost (sure, that’s taken out of context but he had the opportunity to say we want to get promoted this season and that is the objective). Yes, we love a young player coming through the ranks, but I love promotion more.
Of course the club may announce today one or two signings to revoke all of the above. There is always that possibility. But nothing was said or indicated to that effect. It was added that retaining key players was as important as bringing some in, which is fair enough. Jones and Small were both cited. And with the news that Ramsay and Watson are both fit again it is like adding a couple of signings, or at least removing the need to bring in cover for a right-side wing-back.
With Taylor and Edun having left the building (and both go with our best wishes; it didn’t work out for Edun, not least given our style of play, and whether Taylor returns remains to be seen), it is apparent to all that we are light on midfield options. For the central three positions we have Coventry, Docherty, Berry, Anderson, and Campbell(A), if he is retained. The promising Enslin could be added to the list, but we are clearly thin on the ground in this department. An injury or two and/or suspension and we would struggle, plus we all know that someone to add more guile going forward would be welcome. Of course there’s no guarantee that a January loan signing will work out, it’s always possible that a new face or two will not help team bonding.
It all rather echoes an exchange with fellow Addicks over whether we need to get better over the rest of the season, ie to strengthen the team, to make the play-offs or whether with a fit squad now and form/results improved we are kicking on in the necessary fashion. If you take our results for all the season to date, you conclude the former. If you focus on recent form – 13 points from the last six games – you conclude the latter (and our season has been erratic, with three wins to start, then relegation form, now the upturn).
There is broad agreement on the need to average two points per game over the final 21 matches to make the play-offs. That would give us 79 points, probably enough (76 was enough last season, 77 in the one before). That has to be the target. If we end up falling short having lost players to injury/suspension (or loss of form) having failed to make material additions during the transfer window, that, with hindsight, you would have to conclude was a mistake. I hope the reality behind the scenes is different from the message conveyed on this front last night.