That's why I don't understand how recruitment went so wrong last year. Venus knew the money side of things and if it was all cut back.... so why not recruit appropriately with suitable league one players that were moving around for free. Not low end championship players still wanted my a wage.
Did MV actually fail his mate?
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I think originally MV and TM actually did their homework on players well. However, it was their business sense in the transfer market that was the result of poor players being bought in. If you look at comments from both MV and TM throughout their tenure, they seemed to be obsessed with beating the system. Or in more accurate terms, making the most of our budget by bringing in players who's quality was better than League One and sticking them on relatively low money. This was the case with the likes of Adam Armstrong, Jacob Murphy, Ryan Kent, Romain Vincelot, Joe Cole, Ben Turner etc. However, this tactic was a risk as CCFC's star players were all on loan deals/one year contracts. All these players are now playing their trade at a higher level, so how did both individuals manage to convince players of this quality to come to CCFC? It seems to me the way he managed to sell CCFC was by selling the club as a 'stepping stone' for their respective careers.
This suggests that both TM and MV saw their crop of players the season before last as a short term fix. So, once the 2016/17 season came about I believe rather than building a squad that could compete competitively at League One level, both felt under pressure to build on the successes of last season and subsequently realised that in doing so, a more permanent team was required. This obviously didn't materialise as both TM and MV once again had this obsession of attempting to beat the system by bringing in his 'Championship quality' players on a small wage. This lead to drab such Turnbull being bought in because TM and MV didn't have an adequate, in-depth shortlist to cope with transfer fall throughs - i.e. Kelvin Wilson. As with on the pitch, TM didn't have a Plan B. Therefore, the result in their failure of this was continuous panic buys that weren't scouted thoroughly enough and bought in as a gamble. It was their risk taking that ended up being their downfall.