Posh wrote:I suppose my frustration is that this is probably the best squad I've seen at Morecambe, especially given our budget. This squad also plays fantastic football like destroying Portsmouth for 45 mins, beating three League 1 sides away and at times playing some delightful football. As a result, for the first time under Jim's management it feels like they're under performing. There are some good excuses like Peter Murphy's injury but there aren't many others except budget.
This should be the season we pushed on and challenged for the play offs and done OK in the cups. Instead our home performances are clearly leading to a decline in our fan base that isn't sustainable. There's very little going on off the pitch to provide hope of new investment, new sponsors or new long-term initiatives. We can't afford to get into a home slump and have to turn this around, again at home, or you start to worry about the future.
I've got faith in Jim, Ken and the team but they collectively need to ditch the excuses and start thinking positively and battle together to get some decent home results.
Phil Anderer wrote:An obsession with clean sheets, rather than the free-flowing, goal-scoring football we started the season with, is not helping
mrpotatohead wrote:maybe, given the fact that globes sponsorship was factored into the build of the stadium, the club are asking an unrealistic amount for the stadium naming rights?
If its 250k for 5 years, then a new sponsor needs a return of at least double that on the back of the business it generates, just to get tgeir money back, say, 2k per week, well thats not likely, so its either a short term deal, or a reduction, or ''Barbaras Wool Park''.
Phil Anderer wrote:Jim keeps moaning about the budget, but that is severely impacted on by reducing home attendances. .......... I'm shutting my ears to the budget excuses from now on because it's partly Jim's fault.
KenH wrote:Exactly this! The question is "what's in it for the sponsor?" With such low attendances and little chance of any televised matches, there's going to be a very low rate of return on the investment in sponsoring it. So, the only hope is getting a firm with local connections to do it out of a sense of community rather than to get a return, hence the hope that an electricity company may do it due to Heysham power stations, but other than that, we're a bit snookered as we have virtually no large scale private employers around here - it's all public sector with the RLI and University. I would have hoped that PMG's connections may have secured a national or international sports brand who would have considered £250k small change, but clearly not.
Seasider9601 wrote:I keep harping on about Accrington Stanley but they always manage to attract a ground sponsor on their low attendances and none live TV coverage.
Local sponsors to them in their area too, ok, admitedly, some have gone bump (Fraser Eagle) but they ALWAYS manage to secure a sponsorship deal most seasons on short term one/two season deals.
Worrying how we can't do.
Shrimpy wrote:Phil Anderer wrote:An obsession with clean sheets, rather than the free-flowing, goal-scoring football we started the season with, is not helping
Where has this idea come from that we are now too concerned with keeping clean sheets?
Here are the number of goals we've scored per home game this season and the result.
2 - lost
0 - lost
3 - won
3 - lost
1 - lost
2 - lost
2 - won
4 - won
0 - lost
1 - won
0 - lost
This "free-flowing, goal-scoring football we started the season with" you describe saw us score 1 goal in three games before we put 4 past Notts County and then beat Walsall in the cup.
Since then we've scored 2 or more goals in 4 out of our 6 games but won only one of them. Maybe if we did have an "obsession with clean sheets" we would have managed to pick up a few more points along the way.
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