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The Prophet

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  1. The Prophet

    Paul Mitchell

    I don't think I'm the one with the agenda here. I've written, multiple times, I have no problem with Paul Mitchell and I'm excited to see what he can do for the club. This conversation was in relation to one particular segment of his interview, which as a club executive trying to present a united front, sounded a but dicey. The interview was needed, but sounded like a self preservation exercise in parts. Granted, we don't know what questions he was asked.
  2. The Prophet

    Paul Mitchell

    Wasn't sure where to put this bit about Nickson...
  3. He's looking sharp again.
  4. The Prophet

    Paul Mitchell

    I think it was important someone other than Howe came out to discuss the transfer window, it shouldn't be all on him. I still think we'll hear from Eales too.
  5. The Prophet

    Paul Mitchell

    What's with all the straw men? "The segment of the interview doesn't read great from Mitchell." "So you don't want the club to improve then?" Wut.
  6. The Prophet

    Paul Mitchell

    I'm not complaining about the appointment of Mitchell or the changes he wants to implement. They sound very positive. It was a response to a specific comment made in Mitchell's interview, which in my opinion doesn't read great. Perhaps it was because of the question he was asked, maybe he phrased it clumsily or maybe he's a bit of a dick, but it sounds awfully like self preservation on his part. I'm not really fussed, as long as Eales, Mitchell and Howe forge a good working relationship that allows us to effectively navigate future transfer windows.
  7. The Prophet

    Paul Mitchell

    While I'd agree with this, Mitchell does talk about his admiration for Howe and that he's excited about the collaboration going forward. I didn't like some of his interview, but it wasn't all bad.
  8. The Prophet

    Paul Mitchell

    I think there's some good stuff and some iffy stuff in his interview, but there's definitely am element of delegating blame in the above. It might not be intentional, but the subtext is pretty evident. As long as Howe, Mitchell and Eales get their shit in a pile, I don't care who's fault it was, it's water under the bridge.
  9. The Prophet

    Paul Mitchell

    It sounds like blame delegating to me: 1. He states multiple times he's new and was there to support rather than control. 2. He implies we could have worked on multiple deals, but Howe only wanted that one player (Guehi).injuries 3. He implies that Howe had final say on all transfers.
  10. The Prophet

    Paul Mitchell

    Perhaps he's just a bit of a dick? Doesn't mean that he isn't great at his job or is unable to get on with Howe.
  11. The Prophet

    Paul Mitchell

    I have mixed feelings about them. Some good stuff in there and some unnecessary bits too. That's why I think a video interview might have been a better format, always difficult to frame these things when you don't know what questions were asked or how the answers were delivered.
  12. The Prophet

    Paul Mitchell

    I don't think that's what he was trying to say. More that we need to be more data-led and cast a wider net with our approach to scouting. He feels our current approach is too narrow and isn't effective with PSR around.
  13. The Prophet

    Marc Guehi

    I can't find it, but Kieran Maguire did a piece on how they estimate stuff and in a nutshell it's nonsense.
  14. The Prophet

    Paul Mitchell

    As Mitchell says, conflict isn't necessarily a bad thing and is needed to push the envelope. Even us laymen recognise we need to take more risks within the PSR restricted window we're forced to operate within. It might not be that Howe is unwilling to do that, but we previously didn't have the means. Similarly Mitchell needs to recognise Howe believes in a tight knit dressing room and scouting is as much about the person as it is the player for him. Both have spoken of a collaborative approach, so I don't think we should assume they can't work together.
  15. The Prophet

    Paul Mitchell

    I get what you mean. For example... Howe said in July that for him to be happy at the club, the new working dynamic with Mitchell and performance director James Bunce had to be right. On the addition of Bunce, Mitchell added: ‘I would like to believe someone as smart and intelligent as Eddie Howe would recognise quality wherever it came from. We’ve got to keep building that into our infrastructure. ‘That goes for scouting as well. I think good players are becoming harder to find because scouting is so competitive. But I think Eddie recognises good players and he also recognises this club is evolving to be bigger, and bigger and bigger. If you look at the super clubs, their infrastructure, their recruitment, they don’t just look at one market only. Feels pointed and a bit condescending. Obviously we can't hear how it was delivered though.
  16. The Prophet

    Paul Mitchell

    They all have a slightly different spin, but I do feel the Hope version does feel (probably deliberately) more pointed.
  17. The Prophet

    Paul Mitchell

    It's from Hope's article.
  18. The Prophet

    Paul Mitchell

    Fair enough, what parts did you find shocking? (Not a dig, asking out of interest.)
  19. The Prophet

    Paul Mitchell

    I like Eddie's method of signing good eggs to build on a solid dressing room, but Mitchell is right, we need to take more risks in foreign markets.
  20. The Prophet

    Paul Mitchell

    Overall it does sound like that both Howe and Mitchell are going to have to put on their big boy pants and concede a bit of ground.
  21. The Prophet

    Paul Mitchell

    It does feel like no one wants to take responsibility for the Guehi chase...
  22. The Prophet

    Paul Mitchell

    Douglas' spin: Newcastle United sporting director Paul Mitchell has defended the club’s summer transfer window and the decision not to meet Crystal Palace’s club-record valuation of Marc Guehi, saying their approach “set a precedent” for future windows. Mitchell said the club retain their long-term ambition to join the elite – revealing a boardroom meeting with Yasir Al-Rumayyan on Sunday had given him “grey hairs” at the scale of the club’s targets – but paying over the odds for Guehi or other targets would have caused long-term “harm”. “Would it have been easier to sit in front of you all with hallmark signings that cost a load of money? Of course it would,” he said as part of a fascinating 90-minute chat covering the club’s strained summer. "But ultimately (to) have them at the detriment to Newcastle’s ability to grow and high strategic ambitions (just) for Paul Mitchell’s glorification, that’s not the job I’m paid to do. “I’m paid to do the job in the short, the medium, the long-term. I do take that part of my job seriously.” Mitchell admitted the club have “a lot to look at” after failing to land one of the elite defenders they had tracked during the transfer window and admitted some of the infrastructure left behind by Dan Ashworth isn’t “fit for purpose” to achieve their aims in the new era of Profitability and Sustainability Rules (PSR). And while the club looked at other targets apart from Guehi, Mitchell also conceded the club had been “too narrow” in their search for an elite centre-back. Without directly naming Guehi, he offered insight into the club’s fraught negotiations with Palace and said the days of “spending, spending” were over for Newcastle, and would be replaced by a global recruitment strategy with improvements in data and talent ID helping them replicate clubs like Brighton who have found “undervalued talent” in the summer. He also said the club’s sales strategy would be revamped. In a wide-ranging interview with reporters – his first since being appointed in July – Mitchell also detailed: How Saudi owners PIF remain “super, super ambitious” and are wholeheartedly committed to supporting the club. Hour-long daily chats with Eddie Howe during the transfer window which reaffirmed the club’s desire to keep him as manager for a “long time”. How they were now out of the PSR “hole” which forced them to sell Yankuba Minteh and Elliot Anderson, and would not put themselves in that position again. How his appointment in mid-July did disrupt plans, with Mitchell left “facilitating” the club’s existing recruitment plans rather than “driving” them. But the most pressing issue was Guehi. Mitchell did not want to be drawn on the England man directly i understands he was the main defensive transfer target in the summer window, although there were simultaneous talks with a small band of alternative targets. It’s understood that Newcastle’s final official bid for Guehi – the ceiling price they were prepared to pay – was a fortnight before the deadline and while dialogue continued until late in the window there was a determination not to pay over the odds. There was also dialogue with Nottingham Forest over Anthony Elanga, but contrary to reports in the East Midlands it did not extend to a deadline day bid of £50m. Mitchell said the decision not to increase their Guehi bid was a joint decision with CEO Darren Eales and Howe with a view to the long-term. “As custodians of this club we can’t just keep spending, spending because at some point that won’t enable the club to facilitate its goals and I don’t think any Newcastle fan wants to see this club in a place where other clubs were last season with docked points, with financial penalties because that can really affect our growth,” he said. “My job is to get us in five years’ time to our ambition. Once again I have to weigh up the pros and cons of the short-term nature of performances today and tomorrow in the Premier League while enabling us to get to our five-year objective. “We didn’t have the sales window we thought we would have – and we have to look at that strategy as well, was that right, it was all aligned with the head coach. We have a lot to look at.” He said it was a club decision not to “overpay” – partly to eliminate future issues with a “Newcastle tax”, clubs applying a premium to targets because of perceived spending power. “Is there a point of value for every single player and did maybe this football club need to draw a line in the sand of ‘we’re not going to overpay?’,” he added. “Probably looking at the players we have signed – and we’ve signed some really good players – could we say that some of those players potentially cost more money than they should have done in the market at that current context? You probably could have that argument and discussion. “For this club to come out and say actually, we really liked this player and thought he could have bring benefit to this squad but it is at any cost? Is it at financial risk to the organisation and our growth and our plan? I don’t think we should do that.” He said in future the club would not be so trained on a few targets. “You can be on multiple deals at any one time, the focus doesn’t have to be that narrow,” he said. “We probably were too narrow, but coming in in mid-July, it’s not my strategy to control. It’s my strategy to support.” Weekend pictures of Mitchell with Al-Rumayyan and Eales prompted speculation about PIF’s feelings on the window, but the sporting director said they he held a positive boardroom meeting with the chairman on Sunday. “I have a few more grey hairs because of the level of ambition that we actually have. He (Yasir) is as ambitious and enthused as ever,” he said. “I only know from my interaction – I can’t speak for anyone else – but he’s super ambitious and he wants us to perform at the number one level. “He wants us to perform not only through the money we spend – he wants us to be best in class across everything we do, whether that be youth development, the women’s team, scouting and recruitment, data and insight, coaching, innovation. He wants our position to be at the top, but to be there for the reasons that people admire as a really well-oiled, well-executed machine of a football operation. “That for me came across in his message.” Mitchell also said the club could still achieve their ambition of getting into Europe this season – even without major first team additions. “With the current quality of individuals we have and collective experience, with the current quality of head coach we have, should we be getting into Europe in some context this year? I think that is a realistic ambition, I do,” he said. “Because I think we are a good team, and I think last year there were a lot of different contributing factors that still need to be assessed, I think there were a lot of different challenges that this club for a long time hadn’t faced before, that we no longer have, and I think the quality and growth of some of our young players, the experience that we currently have. “European football as an ambition is a realistic one, I think for everyone, and that has to be the challenge for us all.”
  23. The Prophet

    Paul Mitchell

    I'd imagine we'll hear from both at some point.
  24. I don't think we'll make a fuss until we feel that we've exhausted all legal means of increasing commercial revenue. We've still not hit that ceiling yet. I'd also think we'll have a very close eye on the Man City - related party transaction case.
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