Post by lpgas1 on Apr 17, 2021 19:57:15 GMT
Will you look to sell players this summer? Gasheads will be worried about that. Could we see star striker Jonson Clarke-Harris leaving? Fans won’t want to see that.
1. "We don’t want to see it either. We’re looking to build a squad that’s capable of competing for promotion to the Championship. Sometimes it’s not in our hands and a player may get an offer through his agent from another club which is too good to refuse and we can’t stand in a player’s way, but our intention is to retain the players we see as being credible and have the ability to take us forward to the Championship."
2. During the lockdown, we tried to use our time effectively, with regard to the recruitment of players and we’re delighted with the ones we have been able to bring to the Club. Significantly only 4 of the side that beat Sunderland just before the lockdown appeared in the team that came away with a point at the Stadium of Light last Saturday. It’s a great pity that our fans are unable to watch the new players at the Mem for the time being as Ben and the coaching staff embark upon their work of moulding a competitive and entertaining outfit.
3. We are making efforts to compensate for that in other areas and we are doing a lot to get people engage and coming to watch the team again. We want to be competitive in this division at the very least, but we want to play a more attractive style of football.
We know that the football we played over recent months and even years is not been the most satisfactory from an entertain point of view here at the Memorial Stadium so we’re looking to address that with the style of football but is does take time to transition from playing in one way to another way and it can sometimes cost you results but that’s the long term aim.
4. To make this club sustainable we have to invest in players and look to them to develop and improve under Ben and his coaching staff’s guidance and I think we recruited well in January. We’re already looking one of two transfer windows ahead.
This is part of Tommy Widdrington’s role to look at transfer windows ahead as to what we might require when contracts run out with existing players.
Whether we renew those contracts of bring new players in for certain positions, so we are looking very much to medium to long-term as a strategy for the development of players, at the same time as maintaining competitiveness at the level we are playing at.
5.) Wael Al-Qadi is “totally committed” to Bristol Rovers and the club could “announce something positive” regarding a new stadium within weeks, according to CEO Martyn Starnes.
1. "We don’t want to see it either. We’re looking to build a squad that’s capable of competing for promotion to the Championship. Sometimes it’s not in our hands and a player may get an offer through his agent from another club which is too good to refuse and we can’t stand in a player’s way, but our intention is to retain the players we see as being credible and have the ability to take us forward to the Championship."
2. During the lockdown, we tried to use our time effectively, with regard to the recruitment of players and we’re delighted with the ones we have been able to bring to the Club. Significantly only 4 of the side that beat Sunderland just before the lockdown appeared in the team that came away with a point at the Stadium of Light last Saturday. It’s a great pity that our fans are unable to watch the new players at the Mem for the time being as Ben and the coaching staff embark upon their work of moulding a competitive and entertaining outfit.
3. We are making efforts to compensate for that in other areas and we are doing a lot to get people engage and coming to watch the team again. We want to be competitive in this division at the very least, but we want to play a more attractive style of football.
We know that the football we played over recent months and even years is not been the most satisfactory from an entertain point of view here at the Memorial Stadium so we’re looking to address that with the style of football but is does take time to transition from playing in one way to another way and it can sometimes cost you results but that’s the long term aim.
4. To make this club sustainable we have to invest in players and look to them to develop and improve under Ben and his coaching staff’s guidance and I think we recruited well in January. We’re already looking one of two transfer windows ahead.
This is part of Tommy Widdrington’s role to look at transfer windows ahead as to what we might require when contracts run out with existing players.
Whether we renew those contracts of bring new players in for certain positions, so we are looking very much to medium to long-term as a strategy for the development of players, at the same time as maintaining competitiveness at the level we are playing at.
5.) Wael Al-Qadi is “totally committed” to Bristol Rovers and the club could “announce something positive” regarding a new stadium within weeks, according to CEO Martyn Starnes.