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Graham

NewPie
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  1. I was a big fan when he was at Notts and have followed him ever since. These days we're getting used to very youmg players making a splash at big clubs and at international football. Miller is a good example of a player slowly maturing over a number of years. His all round game has continued to improve and his physique is much more athletic than it was 6 years ago. He has had a superb time at Falkirk with goals and assists - averaging one goal involvement every two matches in 90 odd games. At the age of 28 he is a great catch for Hearts.
  2. Graham updated their mood to Optimistic
  3. I like this. A very strong start to the summer signings. An established player, probably not yet reached his peak. Seems to stay fit. Fans favourite. Gets stuck in and, oh...scores goals (especially when playing in a team of ten men against promotion rivals. Also, has a long throw. The only doubt is that his recent experience has been as part of a back four. But maybe this is a signal of a tactical tweak or an attempt to find more flexibility. Keep 'em coming. Roberts next ...
  4. Chesterfield, like ourselves, have a recent record of underperforming and even self-destructing when the pressure is on and the expectation is high. Their home defeat to Shrewsbury in March is a recent example of this. There are others. You can see why they are bookmakers' favourites for the playoffs but that might just suit us perfectly. If we can play without fear we have every chance of giving them two very difficult games.
  5. I agree, and to that end I would suggest another crack at 4-4-2, at least for the first 60 minutes. Play Browne with Ness in the middle, Jones and Bennetts as attacking midfielders, and Dennis with Ndlovu up top. We need to scrap for points in each of our last 3 games, in order to gain a bit of confidence after last weekend, and we also need to develop some versatility and unpredictability to tackle the playoffs.
  6. Also, by some distance the youngest of the four young head coaches the brothers have appointed. What he's got that they didn't have is proper experience as a serious footballer (at all levels).
  7. I keep having to remind myself that MP is, by some distance, the youngest manager in the division. Also, I believe, the least experienced. Whether we get promotion or not, he's had an incredible first season in charge.
  8. If you had to sum up the season so far you might say: a lot of industry, but not quite enough end product. It will be interesting to see if MP can find a formula that works from the resources available. And interesting to see what part Enoru and Tangen (and perhaps Luker) play in opening up defences during the run in. You live in hope ...
  9. With just 14 league matches left to play I thought it would be interesting to look back at how we performed, in terms of points gained, for the last 14 matches played at the end of our two most recent seasons back in League Two. I knew we had gone out with a bit of a whimper in both seasons but was surprised to see how bad it actually was. First season back was: Won 4 drawn 2 (lost 8). Second season back was Won 4 drawn 3 (lost 7). Last season we were on 57 points at this stage so in an almost identical position for the run in. Martin Paterson has undoubtedly instilled more fight and more steeliness in this year's squad (apparent in some matches more than others of course!) so I for one am expecting more points this year. If we continue on our current points per game we end up on 83 and with this we could sneak into the top three. If we have another end of season slump it could be more like 72/73. So...which scenario is the more likely? I'm going to be an optimist and go for 83. What do others think?
  10. Thanks McPie, great question. I've gone for Championship. Promotion this year or next and then 3 years in League One with continuous improvements year on year. You advised to vote with head not heart. I tried but the heart wouldn't be sidelined for this task I'm afraid. My prediction is based partly on the interview given by the brothers when they bought the club in 2019. They have the Championship in their sights I'm sure and from memory their initial time frame was 10 years.
  11. Despite the changes of coaching and playing staff and playing style you could argue that many of our unsolved problems remain the same. The biggest of these is inconsistency. In my opinion this can only be addressed if we sign three or four experienced players who are good enough to start matches.
  12. I couldn't agree more Robbie. The more you think about the last transfer window the worse it gets. I was impressed with Colchester yesterday. They were very fit and very organised, but we should have created more and we should be able to beat teams like this. It could be a long 38 days waiting until January. Let's hope not.
  13. We all have our own ways of picking ourselves up after watching our team underperform. In my personal quest for reassurance, I sometimes find it helpful to listen to Martin Paterson’s post-match interviews with Adam Hassel. We’ve all listened to enough of these types of interviews to know not to expect too much from them, but sometimes the words and phrases chosen by Paterson provide important clues about how he is interpreting what he has just witnessed. After the Harrogate game he said, “we were not ourselves”, and used the word “cumbersome” to describe the first-half performance. At the very beginning of the interview he said, “emotional control is key”. Few who watched the game would disagree with any of these observations. Many of us who watched the game are now left wondering what the coaching team can do to make sure it doesn’t happen again. I believe that this is a particularly important question, given that the recent game against Harrogate Town was not the first time this season that our players have looked tentative and inhibited against significantly inferior opposition. The match against Brackley Town is another obvious example. So, what happened? Did the players ‘bottle it’ or ‘freeze’? If so, what does this tell Paterson about our players and our squad, and what can he do about it? One answer would be to say that we don’t have enough players with the right mentality and we need to make this a recruitment priority. Another approach is to understand the problem as a mental fitness issue which can be addressed through better training and preparation. I would like to think that Paterson and his coaching team will be doing both. You do not need to be an expert to recognise ‘freezing’ and ‘bottling it’ in sport as symptoms of performance anxiety. It is also widely known that performance anxiety can be overcome with the right mental preparation. But mental preparation in football is not something that often gets discussed in any detail, and this makes it difficult to understand exactly what it entails or what work is going on behind the scenes. In many ways it is no different from other types of preparation. Clubs who feel that they are gaining an advantage over their rivals by adopting certain practices want to maintain that advantage. I am not an expert and I have no inside information relating to Notts County, but I do have a general understanding of what the term mental preparation encompasses in a footballing context. For any performance activity, there are always two distinct elements of mental or psychological preparation. One concerns things like determination, confidence, motivation and belief. Performers need to have a strong will to succeed and a strong belief in their ability. Footballers must start the game in the right frame of mind and be ‘up for it’. They must also be mentally strong to keep going in adverse circumstances and, where necessary, grind out results. There is a growing body of evidence which suggests that under Martin Paterson this is becoming an area of considerable strength. As fans, we love the players who embody this mindset. It shows that they care, and their raw enthusiasm and aggression make them easy to identify with. But this is the easy bit. The other element, which is much more subtle, concerns the requirements for emotional control and concentration. Put simply, footballers need to be able to keep calm and stay focused. These requirements are necessary to balance the ‘being up for it’ element – Paul Gascoigne in the 1991 FA Cup Final being a classic extreme example of what happens when this balance isn’t achieved. They are also necessary because of the inherent randomness of football. Football includes many random events with mistakes, ricochets, interceptions and blocks sending the ball spinning or bouncing in ways which are hard to predict and successfully anticipate. A key footballing skill therefore is improvisation. But to improvise well, you must be maximally alert and maximally calm at the same time – a state of mind often referred to as being ‘in the zone’. It is much harder to achieve than it sounds, and evolutionary biology explains why. Human evolution has valued enhanced alertness as an innate and essential survival tool, used for identifying danger and threat, and this alertness is triggered by our anxiety response. In most circumstances therefore, if you are very alert you will be tense rather than calm, and if you are trying to calm down it is easy to lose focus. Although difficult to learn, the skills required to attain a state of mind which combines alertness with calmness can be learnt. Footballers who develop an expertise in this area find that, instead of being paralysed by pressure, they can convert it into an enhanced performance. Without wishing to ignite the whole David McGoldrick controversy, it does appear that he was a notable master in this regard. All professional footballers have pre-match rituals and routines which they use to help them with their emotional control and focus. But pre-match pressures vary from match to match and are often at their greatest when the expectation of impending success is high. So maybe what we are finding out is that, for matches in which Notts are overwhelming favourites – such as the recent Harrogate game – too many of our current players are discovering that their existing routines are not working. I have mentioned two other clubs in this article. There are ironies relating to each of them. Gary Cowan, the Brackley Town manager, is a man who co-hosts a podcast in which the presenters reflect on the mental side of the game, so we can assume that mental preparation is a particular interest of his. Simon Weaver, the Harrogate Town manager, famously brought in Gareth Southgate, who lives in the Harrogate area, to talk to his players about mental preparation in the week leading to their 2020 Wembley play-off final against us. As Martin Paterson is constantly saying, there is always something to learn from a sub-standard performance. It might just be that Harrogate Town have taught us the most important lesson of the season so far. Encourage people to join in with Pride of Nottingham and have their say on the match discussion ahead of tomorrow's home game against Colchester United. Take a deep dive into the Pride of Nottingham dashboard page and see which content fans feel like joining in with the conversation.
  14. @piedestrian, I can't argue with this analysis but I am still clinging onto the (perhaps desperate) hope that the high quality, high tempo and exciting football football we have been given very brief glimpses of (e.g. Newport first half) will translate into a proper 90 minute performance at some point soon. I do have some worries though. Here is my top 4: 1. The players are currently too tentative and look like they don't fully understand what is being asked of them tactically. 2. There is a lack of movement when we have possessionand there are too many examples of miscommunication between players (understandable at the start of the season but won't be after 15 matches). 3. Jodi hasn't smiled all season and hasn't yet really got going in his new role. (How many players are enjoying life under the new regime? 4. Dennis in his most recent interview appeared to be dwelling on the challenges of adapting to a new environment more than the excitement of being at a new club and starting well. It is hard not to imagine that Paterson is currently passing on slightly more of the stress he feels under than is good for the players. That said, we have to remember that Paterson has started a lot better than Maynard who, if my memory serves me correctly, won one and lost six of his first eight league games as Notts boss.
  15. I think you've hit the nail on the head @Sheffield Pie. There does appear to be a lack of obvious identity at the moment. Initially with the brothers, it was made fairly clear that the playing style was set by them and that all appointments of coaches and players were carefully chosen for how well they fit with this style. The brothers have either lost confidence in the style and are deliberately experimenting with a different type of coach who has brought with him a different playing philosophy, or they are now realising that the appointment of Paterson was an error. Whatever happens, it wil be interesting to see how this particular story ends ....
  16. Hello all, many thanks for the warm welcome - very much appreciated, and many thanks to anyone who has taken the time to read my article and leave a comment. To the fan of Big Tone, I would have bought you a pint but you're too late. I've already spent the winnings! 😉

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