Sunday 14 October 2012

The Robins Revolution - The Tales of Coventry City in League One - Chapter 2

Richard Shaw
A lot has happened since my last blog on September 5th, a new manager, new players and for the first time in a long while a sense of optimism amongst Coventry City fans. Before I get onto what is new at the club I have to address the final days of the previous regime. I stated in my previous post that as much as I respected Richard Shaw for what he did as a player here and as a coach at Millwall, I felt that he was not ready for management. This lack of managerial experience was shown in the next three fixtures, as the Sky Blues slumped to three of the most embarrassing defeats in the club's history.


McGoldrick on debut
The first being against Stevenage, the game was also televised live on Sky which lead to the usual comments from viewers such as, 'Is the volume on mute? Oh no the Ricoh is just that empty'. What the viewers did witness was a wonder goal from new signing David McGoldrick (a sign of things to come) and then a complete capitulation as Stevenage exposed our defensive frailties and won the game 2-1. The following Monday there were various calls from the fans to get the new manager in asap, yet the club didn't expect to name Andy Thorn's successor until after the Shrewsbury game on Tuesday 18th thus forfeiting 6 points there and then. The second game saw the City travel to Birkenhead to face surprise league leaders Tranmere Rovers, the players put in an improved performance up until the 79th minute when we were horrendously exposed twice in four minutes by Jake Cassidy and Andy Robinson. The defensive problems were highlighted after the game by Carl Baker, 'Everyone who was at the game could see that we probably looked the better team but at the end of the day when they need to defend they are defending and we’re not, and, personally that’s where I think we’re going wrong'. For a team put together by a centre half in Andy Thorn and now under the 'leadership' of another centre half in Richard Shaw you would think that getting a team defensively stable would be straight forward, yet it appeared that this was not case.


Not quite the Managerial Dream Team
Along came Tuesday and a short trip to Shrewsbury Town for Richard Shaw's final game at the helm.....for a long, long time. I must show my appreciation to all 610 of the Sky Blue Army who travelled down to the New Meadow only to observe one of the worst performances by a City eleven. 4-0 down after 64 minutes against a team who were in League 2 last season is possibly a bad as it can get for a City fan, and many were asking whether we could come back from this. After this result Shaw admitted he hadn't tried anything tactically different since the departure of Thorn to prevent the players having to change their approach again if he wasn't installed as the manager. This coming from a man who openly admitted to wanting the job is frankly amazing, this was an opportunity for Shaw and Carsley to put their own stamp on the club yet they did nothing, throwing away priceless points in the process. 


Mark Robins
September 20th 2012......remember this date it could well be the start point to the rebuilding process of this once great football club. This was when weeks of speculation came to an end and finally it was announced that Mark Robins was to be the Manager of Coventry City Football Club. For weeks we were hearing about the likes of Chris Wilder, Dennis Wise and Phil Brown being touted for the job, so Robins was a bit of curveball. A minority were questioning the appointment before he had even taken the obligatory picture with the City shirt, highlighting the pressure managers face day in day out. Robins’ record speaks for itself twice getting Rotherham into the upper echelons of League 2 only for point deductions to foil any promotion hopes.He was then hired by Barnsley and kept an average group of players in the championship on a shoestring budget, underlining his ability to work with clubs with tight finances (Like Ourselves!).


McGoldrick scores in Robins
first game
Robins immediately was saying the things City fans were yearning to hear, 'It’s got tradition and potential and I am going to try to build on that. There has been a ten-year slide in terms of results and we have got to try to stop that'. He certainly talked a good game, but he had to get to work straight away with Carlisle to come in the next few days. As Saturday arrived there was the initial optimism that comes with a new manager, yet many had seen too many managers come in and say the right things yet be out the door several months later to get too excited. There was little optimism after the game as the City slumped to a 2-1 defeat to the Cumbrians, despite the loss in the two or so days Robins had been in the job he had already made slight improvements to a squad with no confidence in their ability which Robins alluded to after the game, 'The clear thing to come from the game is that we are totally bereft of confidence. They are better players than the opposition – there’s no doubt in my mind about that – but they’re just not showing it. It’s a mental thing and you can’t wave a magic wand and suddenly everything’s great again because it’s more deep-seated than that'. For once a manager was seeing exactly what the fans were seeing, next for Robins was the daunting prospect of Arsenal in the League Cup. Robins was also at work in the transfer market bringing in Franck Moussa, Conor Henderson, James Bailey and Jamie Reckord. 


Ball gives the City fans something to shout about
9000 City fans made the mid-week journey south to London with no hope or expectation, but came away with a sense of belief in what Robins was trying to do with the team. Despite the 6-1 scoreline for 40 minutes we matched Arsenal for possession, shots and ability on the ball, Robins had talked about the players having ability and for 40 minutes against an Arsenal side that included Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, Oliver Giroud, Theo Walcott and Andrey Arshavin we saw this ability come out. The quality of Arsenal eventually showed along with their ruthless finishing, but I left that night knowing that if we could repeat some of the play we had shown at the Emirates in League 1 then something special could happen with Robins at the helm of our club. 


McGoldrick bags the winner
 against Bournemouth
He just can't stop scoring
Fast forward to the 13th October and the Sky Blues are walking off the County Ground pitch annoyed that they hadn’t beaten league title contenders Swindon Town having given up a 2-0 lead, nevertheless we are still unbeaten in five games under Robins which include wins over Oldham, Bournemouth and York and a draw against MK Dons. Each game there have been improvements and players again playing with confidence, Robins has overseen the squad in action for just over three weeks now, seeking out those who are reluctant to change and getting the best out of them like Chris Hussey who looks a rejuvenated player in a left midfield role. He is attempting to change the whole image and mentality of the club like a certain Jimmy Hill did all those years ago, of course its early days but everything he has said he has gone and done. He has removed players who just aren't ready yet like Billy Daniels and players that are over the hill like Kevin Kilbane. The thoughts of Callum Ball emphasise the effect Mark Robins is having, 'Since he has come in it has been brilliant; training has been more enjoyable and everyone has been buzzing and looking forward to games. Since the gaffer has come in, there is a lot more discipline. There are a few fines being thrown out there with one of the fines being if your man scores at a set-piece, it’s a £100 fine'. Discipline, confidence and ability are what Robins has talked about since coming in; he has disciplined the players, he has given the players confidence and allowed them to express their ability. Is this the start of a Revolution under Robins........I believe so


The Robins Revolution