In the space of less than a year the football style being
deployed at Prenton Park has changed massively, clearly the change of manager
was what led to this but just why have the results turned around so
drastically?
Let's go back twelve months to Les Parry's reign as
Tranmere Manager. At this stage towards the end of December we had seen a
disastrous run of six defeats and one
draw from seven games in all competitions, after thirteen days off between December
17th and December 30th we saw the team win 2-0 at home to Bury, after that the
"one win in twenty" phase began, our next win wasn't until March
10th, a few days after Ronnie Moore had returned as manager.
Now, what went wrong for Les? I'm far from a football
expert, indeed I have no coaching badges or anything of the sort but having
watched every home and quite a few away games during that spell under Mr. Parry
I feel I can give something of a educated view on the whole affair. In my view
and the view of many Tranmere fans the problem was a relatively clear one, the
formation; Parry played a rigid 4-5-1 which he continually insisted was 4-3-3,
the striker (whether it be Showunmi or Tiryaki) was left on his own with nobody
around him, the wingers often refused to move inside and instead hugged the
touchline at every opportunity. In McGurk and Devaney we lacked supply for the
sole striker and all too often on the rare occasion the ball did find its way
into the opposition penalty area from a cross the attacker was outnumbered by
two stronger and taller central defenders. The returns of main strikers Tiryaki
(3 goals in 30 games) and Showunmi (14 goals in 70 games) during Parry's tenure
emphasise the lack of chances we made. The only time we seemed to score goals
was when we did our usual hoof to the striker and the ball either ricocheted
off the striker into the path of whichever midfielder decided to try and
support him or the ball hit a defender before bouncing to one of our players in
lucky fashion. Looking back the football we played really was appalling and how
I went into matches optimistic I don't know.
Now let's move forward twelve months to the football we
see under Ronnie Moore. Ronnie took over with the team in a poor position and
by finishing the season with a record of six wins, four draws and three defeats
he more than earned the job on a full-time basis. In the summer he re-designed
the squad, for me a few pieces of look were on our side (for once) firstly amongst
the players we offered new contracts to John Welsh and David Buchanan were the
only ones to turn us down, Welsh was a player who did little wrong last season
but on reflection that probably disguised his lacklustre uninspiring
performances. Buchanan was voted the player of the season (and indeed he got my
vote) but he was a left back who defended well but rarely got forward and when
he did was often left unsure as to where he should be standing - the team
lacked organisation. The replacement for Welsh was Palmer, like Welsh before
him he is expected to do the easy things but occasionally offer some flair
going forward, from what I have seen of the Sheffield Wednesday loanee so far
it is vital we can extend his loan deal until the end of the season - he is
showing real quality and doing better than Welsh did with a similar role
expected of him. Instead of David Buchanan we now play Zoumana Bakayogo at left
back who is an extremely fast full back who has really come into his own this
season defending brilliantly and overlapping the winger effectively in most
performances, I did not expect "Zoom" to do such a good job but in
the absence of Buchanan's direct replacement Paul Black through injury we have
seen Bakayogo excel. The other player who left the club without being released was
Lucas Akins who requested a transfer before moving to Stevenage in a rumoured
£75,000 deal. Akins was the running joke amongst Tranmere fans for quite a
while - he ran but all too often lacked the finish or cross expected of him,
while most fans would have been content to see him stay getting a fee like that
for him was seen as a goof bit of business. His replacement was Joe Thompson,
signed for a fee rumoured to be below the one we received for Akins. While
Thompson hasn't been the standout player this season he has done a good job
when called upon on the wing, happy to supply the full back and confident
holding the ball up, he also grabbed the vital solemn goal away at Notts County
which led to amazing scenes in the away section at Meadow Lane. As well as
these players coming in Ronnie also secured the services of Jean-Louis Akpa
Akpro, Jake Cassidy, Ben Gibson, James Wallace, Abdulai Bell-Baggie, Paul Black
and Jason Mooney. Max Power and Cole Stockton have progressed from the youth
team and all of these players aside from Black who has had an injury-riddled
start to his career have jelled into the new fluid style of play employed by
Moore.
When at our optimum we play the ball around with real
pace and effectiveness, we look to get the ball to Wallace or Palmer, then on
to Cassidy or Akpa Akpro and then either play it wide to Bell-Baggie or
Robinson or a neat through-ball to whichever striker is not in possession. This
has lead to great attacking football and a great number of chances being
created, games against Colchester and Notts County come to mind as great
attacking performances. Defensively we battle for everything and look composed
when winning the ball, backed up by Owain fon Williams the side have the best goal difference in the
league thanks in no small part to our brilliant Welsh goalkeeper. Unfortunately
injuries have hit the squad hard - at the time of writing we are without Black,
Gibson (whose loan spell looks to be over) Bell-Baggie, Wallace and Akpa Akpro
- for a small squad with a low budget this has been crippling. However we remain
top of the table and while the football going forward hasn't been quite so
strong we remain top of the table. In Max Power we saw a potential star of the
future away at Sheffield United on Saturday and we have seen glimpses of what
Cole Stockton could do should his talent be developed properly.
Whatever happens this season we have improved so much
since last season under Les Parry that we can be forgiven for forgetting just
how bad it was at times. The feeling around the club has gone from one of dull
boring football and low crowds to excitement and at the back of most fans
despite us not even being half way through the season yet a real hope that
promotion could be on the cards. Should we finish outside of the top six it
will be extremely disappointing but at the same time we must reflect on just
how far we have come in twelve months, the end of the season is a long way -
anything is possible. Super White Army!!
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