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Rob Fielding

Rob Fielding is the editor of onevalefan and has been a Port Vale FC fan since 1980. He has written about Port Vale for 30 years. Rob has worked in many roles including in sports journalism and marketing. He has written a Port Vale book “No Ordinary Season” and curated the “Vale Vaults” Port Vale memorabilia exhibition. Rob has appeared on numerous radio broadcasts and podcasts (including BBC Radio Stoke) and written for multiple publications (including submissions for the Guardian, 442 and Word Soccer) about his club. His favourite player is striker Andy Jones and his favourite match is the FA Cup win over Spurs in 1988.

8 Comments

I argee a settled squad is best way to success. Subs r OK when needed and something necessary and can change the game 4 the better, but j not just 4 the sake of it. And when Moore puts subs on , he tends to also change the shape and tic-tacs of the side .

It’s a results business in the end, which is where I guess you’re coming from. However, there does not seem a lack of cohesion, 1st half of Rotherham and Orient aside, we have played extremely well creating more chances than most teams in the league. Individual errors having contributed massively to the poor points haul. Cut out these and we should reach mid table safety.

Selecting a settled side is synonymous with successful teams. The run-in for last season’s promotion is Vale’s recent example. John Rudge’s successful teams were (barring injuries and suspension) the epitome of consistent selection. When Darren Moore managed Sheffield Wednesday to promotion from League 1, he too was fairly consistent with his starting line ups. Not now though. Why ? One explanation could be that he’s assembled a large squad and picks a starting eleven purely based on form he sees in training. Another could be that he simply believes it’s a squad game, spreading player resources flexibly over 46 games. Or, he has a bloated squad, is spoilt for choice, and simply can’t make his mind up on his best selection formula. It’s a conundrum for which he must find a solution, and quick. Personally, I would simply ask him, “why don’t you select your best fit eleven, and stick to that while giving the incentive to those benched ?”

Dajaune Brown – 2 Substitute Appearances
George Byers – 5 Starts
Mitch Clark – 6 Starts and 1 Substitute Appearance
Devante Cole – 1 Start
Ryan Croasdale – 5 Starts and 2 Substitute Appearance
Ronan Curtis – 4 Starts and 2 Substitute Appearances
Jesse Debrah – 5 Starts
Mo Faal – 3 Starts and 2 Substitute Appearances
Ben Garrity – 1 Start and 1 Substitute Appearance
Joe Gauci – 2 Starts
Liam Gordon – 3 Starts and 2 Substitute Appearances
Connor Hall – 6 Starts
Jaheim Headley – 4 Starts and 1 Substitute Appearance
Ben Heneghan – 2 Starts and 3 Substitute Appearances
Cameron Humphreys – 6 Starts
Kyle John – 3 Starts and 2 Substitute Appearances
Jordan Gabriel – 1 Substitute Appearance
Marko Marosi – 5 Starts
Funso Ojo – 4 Starts and 3 Substitute Appearances
Ruari Paton – 1 Substitute Appearance
Rico Richards – 1 Substitute Appearance
Jordan Shipley – 3 Starts and 2 Substitute Appearances
Jayden Stockley – 1 Start
Lorent Tolaj – 4 Starts
Ben Waine – 2 Starts and 3 Substitute Appearances
Rhys Walters – 2 Starts and 1 Substitute Appearance

Ian Mountford

I argued this point all last season, you play your best players in their best positions, and try to go out and win games. Moore not only has massive playing squad, he also has a massive back room staff, and it’s not only on the coaching side, they seem to have a massive medical set up. A lot of managers nowadays instead of just using their own judgment seem to be guilty of allowing their medical team dictate to them on how many minutes players should be allowed to play and how much recovery time they need ect. Moore has on numerous occasions tended to put these comments into his interviews. This could possibly explain why changes are being made for changes sake. I recall one experienced manager once saying how at one club, he had the medical staff continuously sticking clipboards under his nose with graphic on players heartbeat, distance run, sprinted distance, minutes played. He disregarded it all, saying he was the manager and if the team was playing well, individuals were playing well and if no one was obviously injured, they were staying on and playing the next game. Take note Mr Moore!

jAnthony Johnson

You could reverse the argument. Instead of saying that a settled team brings out the best in the players, you could argue that if your eleven best players are playing the best they can then it forces the manager to keep picking them.
Twenty six players is not an oversized squad. 18 are required on matchday. That leaves 8 players to cover for injuries, suspensions and loss of form. Of course players who are left out won’t be happy, but that’s when they have to pull out all the stops in training to force the manager to give them a chance.
Most of the changes have a good reason behind them. We changed goalkeepers from Marosi to Gauci and back to Marosi. Clearly, the manager decided Gauci was the better keeper, but Marosi came back in because Gauci was away on international duty. At wing back, i have no doubt that Clarke and Headley woul be amongst the first on the team sheet. Unfortunately, Mitch Clarke is one of the players whose fitness needs to be managed to avoid a long term breakdown. Also, Headley missed a couple of games due to suspension. Up front, I am sure his first choice would be Stockley and Cole. Unfortunately Stockley has been injured and Cole has only just arrived. None of the other forwards have covered themselves with glory, except Tolaj who has now gone. The one exception is Ruari Paton, who I think may have deserved more games. Unfortunately injury also played a part in that. In midfield I’m sure the managers preferred choice would be Ojo (or possibly Croasdale), Byers and Garrity. Unfortunately Ojo is another player whose fitness needs to be managed and Ben Garrity is still coming back from injury and can’t be used too much. George Byers missed out due to suspension and has had less serious injury problems. That just leaves central defence. The managers preference is clearly Debrah, Humphreys and Hall. Ben Heneghan and Kyle John have forced their way into the team on a couple of occasions. Perhaps this could have been tactical.
So I don’t see a manager who’s tinkering and changing the team unnecessarily and, fitness willing, I am sure we will get back to a serttled team as soon as possible.

JAnthony Johnston – yes, I take the point you need a strong squad for a season but I’m talking about a season. We’re not talking 46 games here but using 26 players in seven. Shipley (perhaps forgotten because we have so many players) has also been a starter in midfield for three games. That means we’ve had six different players selected for three midfield places in seven games. Upfront – Stockley and Cole probably should be the starters but in these seven games we’ve handed starts to Waine, Faal and Curtis (and Paton and Brown coming off the bench) – so that’s five different starters (seven players if you count the subs) for two places upfront in seven games. This can’t all be down to managing fitness, suspensions and so on. It smacks of a revolving door policy – the very same one that caused significant worry in the first-half of last season.