Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Two Draws Nearer the Drop

i haven't blogged in a while now... not since the arsenal game; which, at the time, seemed pretty much like the end of the season as far survival in the premier league was concerned. especially with the previous dismal performance against fulham - in which it looked that the team spirit that the baggies had (quite amazingly) been able to maintain all season in the face ever mounting and increasing adversity was gone altogether. there has, of course, been a long layoff between games, with a weekend of european competition and domestic cup play, and on top of that the albion's weekend fixture being a monday night game away to west ham. i think that makes it 11 days without a match.

West Ham United 0-0 WBA


it was the hammers' lowest turnout for any league match of the year, so far, and the famously intimidating upton park seemed no more than a sulky little environment with no real atmosphere generated by the crowd. therefore - and coupled with the horribly jaded attitudes becoming evermore present in the english football community every day - it was easy to miss that the baggies provided the only real entertainment on the evening, were the better of the 2 teams, should have won 1 or 2-0; and would have done so but for superior goalkeeping on the part of west ham's robert green, and an unlucky header by first time premier league starter, shelton martis, coming back off the cross-bar with no one in position to knock it in the otherwise open goal. so, and in the end, despite being entertaining going forward, displaying impressive midfield skills, both in attack and at winning defensive balls with good, clever footballing, and high quality passing; as well as a surprisingly beefed up and tidy defensive performance - the baggies were otherwise mired in a game against a depleted and somewhat deflated looking west ham side that dragged down the quality of play to the point of the match being deemed "mediocre" by the BBC.

but then really, it's all a case of perspective. i guess if you are the team that looks most likely to get relegated ( as the baggies do at the moment, having become competitively a few points genuinely detached from the rest of the pack at the bottom) you're not much of a draw, and regarded as being of little consequence. in short, you're not going to get a particularly balanced critique of last week's performance in the mainstream press.

while it's more than likely going to become a case of "too little too late", but the baggies have every reason to feel positive about last monday's performance; and mowbray may have found a team that would - under better circumstances - have a decent chance of staying up. but with just 9 league games left there is just not enough time for this particular set of individuals to develop... well, anything! the only thing in which i can take heart, is that there are still a lot of "firsts" to be achieved and precedents to be set in the premier league; and while the FA Cup and the european places all look set to end in upholding the status quo - i can't remember a year like this at the bottom of the table.

i've been saying all year, that there are no bad teams in the premiership this year. period. you can point to the baggies' difficulty in scoring goals, for example; but you can't say they've played bad football. even borja-valero, who has been a player of little impact or consequence this year - is a tidy, talented midfielder with above average skills on the ball; and not short on footballing creativity. he - like much of the team - have been ineffective in producing final product.

how the season got away



there are two defining moments to the albion's season this year: even though i have called him a "pirate", and it became evident early on that the baggies needed him much more than the blues did - letting kevin phillips go was the biggest (and i believe the only really serious) mistake on the part of the management. i know there was the issue of the 2 years guaranteed - but i think in this case both parties should have just found the middle ground or some reasonable compromise, since i think he would have had more impact over a longer period of time with the baggies; as well as seen more actual playing time - as i think the baggies would have found just as much use for him as a starter, as well as, substitute; and he'd have been good for at least a dozen goals at this point - and his presence alone, in terms of confidence... perhaps as much as another fifteen from bednar, koren, greening, morrison and miller/moore/simpson. that's 24-plus potentially very important goals. anyway, that's how i imagine it would have been and i think he could have seen that through and gotten the second year that he wanted, as easily as albion could've just given him the 2 years straight off the bat. i figure both sides were wrong-headed in this one, and either side accepting the other's terms would have been preferable to the eventualities - or so it would seem. phillips would have been a more important presence at west brom than at city - and he would have been a central figure, even in the capacity as mentor amd inspiration to the younger players who were coming in this year. beyond that, an eventual coaching position with the club... maybe?

but that all happened and was part of the machinations before the season started, and we weren't quite sure where we were going to be. the first couple of months went ok. the albion spent the best part of august, september and october hovering around the middle-top half of the table - their best premier league start ever. even though it was clear by that point that no great burst of goals was welling up to take the premier league by storm, the baggies played well, and showed that they could scrap out tight victories (WBA 1-0 Fulham) with some unfamiliar tactical formations. for example, they were very clearly working on a system that was not at all in the model of the 4-4-2 and 4-3-3 formations of last year and of years before. these were formations dedicated to the idea of the single striker as the primary target man and a basic 4-5-1 formation flexing into a 4-3-3 on attack, with brunt and morrison playing wide like old fashioned left and right-wingers respectively. part of this experiment was to bring greening higher up in the attack formation playing directly behind the single striker - who, at the time was ishmael miller. as the baggies went into november and started their slide to the bottom of the table, this tactic began to come under a lot of criticism from the supporters, as pro-mowbray supporters stuck behind the gaffer and his detractors started calling for him to resign or get the sack - citing the poor performance of the single striker formation and poor quality in the selection (and availability) of central defenders; and the 4-5-1 formation was baffling everyone.

i, myself, was not at all convinced of the tactic. i thought, surely two strikers and an attacking central midfielder is the proper style for "west bromwich albion" football. i thought that mowbray was distracted, perhaps with the defensive difficulties that were beginning to show, and that that was his motivation in sticking with the five midfielders? i just didn't know. that is - up until the match when pompey came to the hawthorns - then did i understand.

jonathan greening scored to put the baggies ahead. this was a direct result of having him attack and penetrate the box behind single striker, ishmael miller. the baggies played a good game... the usual tidy passing and retention of possession; and as this made the game fairly open in the midfield, the portsmouth fullbacks were starting to get caught out by miller's pace on the break. i could see what the gaffer had been working on all along: the traditional albion passing game with a central midfielder playing high in attack, and a first-rate counter attack. as the second-half wore on - and with the albion 1-0 up - miller kept finding himself free to attack goal, and on several occasions - including the incident that took him out for the rest of the year - when he looked like a goal was well on and would only be a matter of minutes before he scored. in fact, as i said at the time, i thought he hurt himself because he could feel that he was on a goal - and that with the thrust of what he and the team had been working on starting to gel - he went all too enthusiastically after a ball that was never his.

when miller came off - and it looked serious from the outset - you could see how that at the very moment that the team had coalesced, everything was about to come together and the baggies were going to set the tone for how they would play out the rest of the season and remain competitive in the bottom half of the table, it all unraveled. without a player with miller's pace the 4-5-1 formation that the gaffer puzzled us with all season, and was suddenly making itself evident and its merits plain, went out the window - and within a few minutes peter crouch had equalized and the 2-0 home win that looked apparent ended in a 1-1 draw and half the season's work and planning gone - out the window! the albion - and with olsson out injured for a number of weeks - were left to scramble for someone who could score and a massive hole was now left in their back line. despite 2 or 3 good results that eventually followed (manchester city and tottenham) the albion have struggled with all their secondary plans, despite bringing in a couple of potentially talented young strikers and returning to a more conventional 4-4-2 formation. barring any late season heroics and a five game winning streak that rescues them from relegation, i will always see the miller injury as the turning point of this season.

WBA 1-1 Bolton Wanderers




this was, i believe, the same team that started against west ham with exception of dorrans, who came on as a sub. it was the usual sort of thing we've come to expect this season. with the added presence of shelton martis - and graham dorrans looking a clever little footballer - the team is highly improved, and this is probably the basic line-up that will see out the season. all i can suggest from this one - and as robert koren showed us - is that the baggies should be working to create opportunities for a few more 12-15 yard shooting chances and have a crack at the bloody goal instead of trying to walk it in on every possesion!

Friday, March 6, 2009

WBA 1-3 Arsenal

they didn't play as well as they did against everton, but the team is playing ok again. but, what has happened to meite?!?! for the duration of olsson being out due to injury, he's gone from looking the only half sufficiently experienced, motivated and hard-working central defender to something akin to a frightened deer caught in the headlights of the TV cameras... alarmingly nervous.

although they're probably well enough drilled and either have or are developing (as with donk and barnett) the knowledge, skills and work rate to be a professional footballer, but the best of the back four is zuiverloon and he's essentially an attacking player in the model of an old-fashioned right winger. the central defenders - and the defending done directly in front of goal is league 1 level, and just not quick enough by half for the pace of the premier league game. scott carson is a top goalie, and was easily the best albion player on the day, as this one could have been 5 or 6-1...

the team is going to have to take a step (and perhaps back to the championship) and develop this element in their game in order - through personal improvements and player acquisitions to be competitive in the premier league at some point in the near future.

i'll let the match speak for itself:

live text replay


Tuesday, March 3, 2009

A Modest Proposal

although i'm perfectly delighted that i will have the opportunity to see the baggies play today; by virtue of a 4 hour delay broadcast on Setanta Sports Canada (liverpool v sunderland is the live broadcast at 2 pm EST) - and of course - as i will avoid any football news for a couple of hours - when i sit down to eat dinner with the game on, i will have no doubt that today's the day and the albion will deliver the performance of the season (we haven't really had one yet... have we?!?) and give us a glorious, emphatic and shocking victory over arsenal. but that's not really what i want to write about - and might not get this posted until after the match.

anyone who has followed my blogging here, knows that i am writing about english football from a north american perspective and, consequently, i write a lot about how the game is broadcast here, as well as the relationship of english football to cable TV, and new media technologies. my biggest issue being the rights to radio and, consequently, live online streaming of audio commentary for english football matches and how the "broadcasters'" rights to these audio media are exercised. the other thing i write about here is FREE and OPEN-SOURCE software, and how the general philosophy behind these ideas extends into other areas, mostly concerning information and the control exerted over it by copyright holders and the large commercial broadcasting corporations.

when fighting corporate control in the digital information age, you can't find a more formidable target than professional sports. the whole industry has distinct advantages in terms of information control due, in large part, to the constitutional structure of the medium. for example, once an audio cd is copied to someone's hard drive, it becomes potentially accessible to anyone - or on any network - that you choose to make it available to. the same thing goes for dvds, as long as one has the software to do it with. the same is now true for television and radio through streaming sites like JUSTIN.TV where people have figured out how to stream TV and radio online to a non-restricted audience. my favorite example of this is how a blackpool f.c. supporter has created a channel that streams the BBC local audio commentary of his team's matches to an international audience. this is significant because the match as streamed from the BBC website is unavailable to listeners outside the UK. that is, it's online transmission is blocked at the server level, and cannot be accessed outside the UK; unless it is streamed through an alternative site with enough bandwidth.

MIGHTY_POOL


of course this happens with just about every game that Setanta and Skysports broadcast, someone streams the manchester united or chelsea match online at JUSTIN.TV and it becomes free for people to access, within the sites bandwidth limitations. for example, there is a limit as to how many people can join the chat room that enables them to access the stream. as long as you can get in on it at the time, this would benefit those wishing to avoid added expenses to their monthly cable/satellite bill, as everything here emanates from a TV broadcast - which i can pay for and watch on TV anyway; and that provides it at much better quality. so, i am here and now, much more interested in the radio broadcasts and live streaming online of audio commentary than i am with video streams or TV broadcasts for the moment.

Sports Rights for BBC Local Radio

as it is now, individual clubs retain the rights to audio broadcasts inside the UK. typically, they will license the BBC to do a live radio broadcast - which is available through the BBC online to any UK users. the club's reserve the right (and through a mutual agreement with the FA) to use these broadcasts to stream online through their website as DRM (digital restrictions management) streaming content that is part of the services offered to paying members of the website. the only trouble is that the websites don't exactly seem to belong to the club, but to the FA - and with whom the club has entered into an agreement.


Richard Stallman on DRM (repost)




for those of you who are wondering, richard stallman is the founder of FREE SOFTWARE FOUNDATION and, thus, is the originator of the idea of free software. he is also the author of the GPL (general public license). as well, he contributed a lot of code early on to the original set of programs (the GNU project) that served as the basis for the deployment of the LINUX family of operating systems. for those of you who are still unaware that you do not need microsoft - there are, in fact, loads of alternatives. my personal recommendation is UBUNTU since it is easy enough to install and use that anyone who knows how to install and run windows would be able to do so with a minimum of preparatory reading.

this is a statement of requirements for accessing live or archived media as it appears on all of the premiership and football league (championship/leagues 1 & 2) websites, developed by a professional digital content management company, and under the auspices of something originally called PREMIUMTV.CO.UK:

Platforms Supported - In order to access our World subscription products you will need Microsoft Internet Explorer 6 or above on the following PC operating systems, Windows 98SE, ME, 2000 and XP. Other browsers on these PC operating systems (eg Netscape, Opera, Galleon etc) will not work and are not supported

Under the terms of our rights agreements that enable us to bring you this service we have to take every effort to protect the content from piracy. We therefore use Windows Media DRM which means this service will not work on Macintosh PC's at this time

You will also need Windows Media Player 9, 10 or 11 in order to be able to access our World subscription products. If you do not already have the latest Windows Media Player you will be able to download one here


replace the word "piracy" with "file-sharing" and see how it reads to you...

the above conditions are completely unacceptable and incompatible with the interests of the computer user's freedom; and it is totally unethical as it attempts to coerce the user to run microsoft software... and let's face it: even most people who use microsoft hate it, with all the information lost to trojans carrying viruses and the slow boot-up and execution times caused by constantly running anti-virus software, as well as all kinds of needless background programs that the user is unaware and has no control of - and accept it only out of the perceived inevitability of what it takes to run a PC computer. there is no issue here except the blatant attempts to control; which i do not see as being in the interest of anyone including the broadcast companies, and the football clubs themselves. which brings me around to the point:

after years and years of resistance to the medium of TV on the part of the FA and its member clubs, imagining that it would damage attendance and thus, gate revenues - the more powerful and successful teams (the old 1st division) eventually broke away from the governing body (the football league) so it could form "the premier league" and take control of those revenue opportunities that it finally saw were there to be made from both domestic and international cable television broadcasts - and that the age of digital information.... rather digital information itself should now supply a similar change with a very much different effect; that will, for quite different reasons - meet again with much more tenacious and hysterical resistance.


Stephen Fry on Free-Software



copyrights, patents and other conventions and systems of the analog information era - that themselves were responses to the needs of a culture that depended first - and for a very long time, uniquely - on the medium of printed information; then, in the 20th century and with the rapid growth of electric technologies - sound recording, radio, film, and television. the constitutional nature of digital information, is that it changes all of these conventions as to be unenforceable or more simply (and more honestly speaking) obsolete in regards to their original functions. while patents and copyright are very different things covering very different areas of information, both were originally designed as systems of collecting and retaining information for the benefit of advancing science and the useful arts. as well as, giving some reasonable length of time to the originator to retain certain rights, in order to provide the opportunity to collect monetary recompense for his industry and invention. copyright was never intended as a way for any corporation or individual to hold a monopoly on that deemed "intellectual property" in perpetuity, simply to advance what are assumed to be the natural rights of capitalism. in an information age - like we have experienced since the invention of the electric circuit in 1847, news, education, entertainment, sport, drama... all have become big business. it's only a matter of time, however, that - and as with anything, we encounter or we will encounter, a reversal of form.



one of the biggest problems, with this particular reversal of form, is that those who would benefit from a more free use of digital information media haven't figured it out yet. for example, with manchester united being one of the most well known and popular teams in the world whose league, cup and european matches are all broadcast on international TV - would have little reason to worry too much about the audio commentary accessed by paid subscription to their website. it probably doesn't amount, relatively speaking, to very much in terms of revenues when compared to its many other sources of income. only the most isolated of fans, with no television access, might choose audio commentary accessed through a paid subscription as a preferred method of following manchester united. i mean, even if you don't have a TV (let alone the expensive digital-cable subscriptions that are required to watch the full complement of english football each week); one can go to the manchester united supporters club which locates itself at a local bar, and a widescreen live broadcast of the manchester united match is offered. in the case of cup games that do not have a regular cable broadcast, the club pays for closed-circuit TV coverage, and in turn charges an extra-fee in the guise of a "cover-charge" to its attending members. there are similar clubs for arsenal, liverpool, and chelsea; but looking for other such activity, all i could find was a spurs club and an everton club - both of which appeared to be more or less inactive - with the toffees fans congregations listed as being at the pub that i know to have been taken over by the liverpool supporters; and the spurs information had not been updated in several years. as for the baggies, i managed to find a contact in victoria, british columbia - but all there was in terms of information, was a private email address - and it appeared to be a project that never got off the ground. besides, being located on the other side of the country puts me in closer geographical proximity to the hawthorns than i am to the canadian WBA supporter(s) club, as it may or may not exist.



as interest in football - especially the premier and champions league - continues to develop here at an ever-increasing rate, there are also more than a few traditional sports bars that have begun to cater to the interests of the saturday morning english football fans. in fact, there is a small sports-bar on bathurst street, here in toronto, aimed exclusively at meeting the needs of the growing football market by adopting soccer as its full-time theme.

so given the situation and realities concerning the continuing development of english football as an international entity, we are going to have to get beyond the premier league in order for a fuller, more complete and satisfying understanding of the game. while the so-called "big-four" - and its relationship to the champions league - may serve as a foundation for a sustained and ever increasing interest in english football in north america - the only real way to go for expansion of that interest is down. just as TV served as the eventual and deciding catalyst for the founding of the premier league, and the eventual and subsequent development of a significant and all important international following for the sport; the internet, and digital information - if allowed to do its work - will provide development to the game by opening up access to the lower leagues. it took almost 30 years for the football bureaucracies to fully embrace the medium of television - and there's every chance that the changes i am expecting could take quite some time to achieve, as i fully expect corporate resistance to the internet to be much less accepting of it than it was of television. it did, after all, start compromising with television fairly early on as reflected through the venerable and seemingly eternal Match of the Day.

digital information inverts the old broadcast structures by giving users a medium in which they possess the control over content creation, and the general effect is a broad "localizing' and "democritization" of the process of information dissemination. by "localizing", i mean to describe the advent - through the internet and digital technology - of international and non-geographically based communities that form around specific or esoteric subjects, values and ideas. in other words, where we were previously faced with the sharp distinction between "mainstream" and "underground" in our cultural options - much is redefined in the face of digital technology. the making of a "home movie" with a digital video camera and using your favorite song as soundtrack, becomes a subversive act as soon as it is posted to a site like YOUTUBE; as, if it comes to the attention of the copyright holder of the music, then it is quite likely that you will have the audio portion of your video removed by YOUTUBE at the copyright holder's request. likewise, the use of a site like JUSTIN.TV as a way to make TV available free to other users, is to be using the mainstream media as a radical statement against itself. whether by default or design - that is the effect.



as i've written in earlier blogs; blue square premier matches - that have a similar relationship to the league matches in terms of broadcast rights - both in TV (Setanta Sports... of course!), the radio rights (differing only in that the club retains the international rights, as well domestic) and the crucial part that the BBC plays in all this. this means that i can listen to every cambridge united or histon (just to use BBC local radio cambridgeshire as our example) match live on the BBC, i cannot listen to the audio stream of peterborough united which is transmitted through the same local radio. the truth of this is quite insidious, as it serves no purpose - and as i have pointed out before - requires the added effort of blocking the server transmission for the specific time period of the match.

HEART OF MIDLOTHIAN




so just as the richer and more powerful teams broke away from the traditional governance of the football league and formed the premiership to take advantage of what they had identified as an opportunity to promote english football to whole world through the advent of cable TV, ultimately making it the richest and most followed domestic sports league in the world; leagues 1 and 2 should similarly breakaway from the football league, in order to take control of their radio broadcast rights. as this is the essential licensing that they would require to be able to stream their matches live to an international audience, in the same manner as the blue square conference is able to do now.



this type of scenario (or some variation thereof - for example, the championship could decide to go with them) would have two profound effects on english football, one cultural, and one a simple democratic expansion of capitalism.

culturally, it completes, to no small extent, the ability for an increasingly engaged, international audience to follow the game in depth and have a full complement of teams they can effectively follow, and continue their support for over many years, and from season to season. for example, someone who followed leeds united during their hey-day of the 1970s, replete with FA Cup wins, League championships and European Cup competitions, would, at this point, have effectively long lost their ability to follow the team except through reading score-lines and news reports. how many potential team, t-shirt, scarf and hat sales were never realized due to this situation?!? how many video tapes (and now DVDS) might have been bought? nobody really knows and the crazy thing is, nobody has seemed to take much notice... but with the digital media age upon us, it can't be long before somebody makes this observation; especially given the present potentials!

the reason that there are no streaming audio commentaries from any of the premiership or football league clubs has to do with outdated thinking about broadcast licensing. the FA, realizing that full TV coverage is still too expensive for the average cable TV subscriber - retains the international rights to audio broadcasts in order that they can license "big four" matches to local sports radio in the big north american markets. where they have miscalculated is that online streaming of the audio commentary of championship, league 1 or 2 would not interfere or take audience away from the larger broadcast - as football, even in the realm of the "big four" is about team loyalties and rivalries... there is absolutely no way that the development of an audience that would be familiar with and want to follow teams like leyton orient, preston north end, leicester city, hartlepool united, brighton hove albion, ipswich town, millwall, brentford f.c., cardiff city, wycombe wanderers or accrington stanley would ever be competition to a similar transmission of manchester united or chelsea.

in my promised "modest proposal", i suggest that the lower leagues work to get control of their audio broadcasting rights and stream their broadcasts free online to an unlimited, unrestricted international audience. it would simply be more football all around, and develop the interest in a wider and more complete scope of the english game. after all, it's been well over a hundred years since promotion/relegation divisional play has been a part of north american sport, as it was with baseball in the old federal league of the 19th century - and nobody has thought through the logic yet - still employing outdated and outmoded models of capitalist broadcast protocols as related to TV and radio in the 20th century.

let's hope that soon, doncaster rovers, sheffield wednesday, macclesfield town, and coventry city realize how many more shirts they could sell with free, live, international streaming of their home games.

Monday, March 2, 2009

WBA 3-0 Port Vale F.C. (retro)




WBA v Port Vale F.C.



just a little reminder of how far we've come in 16 years - and at the outset of the premier league - as well as a chance to revel happily in some albion folklore.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Mowbray's Finest Moment


well, after two weeks of real disappointment - including my own resignation to the probability of relegation - the gaffer has come up with ultimate in post game assessments to cheer us and give us hope. i always love what he has to say, because he's never dishonest, not a sore loser, and he always speaks realistically. i think, as well, if a manager were on a more tentative tenure he would not be able to get away with what he says sometimes, and certainly not in the style with which he says it. no premier league manager, for example, appears in the international media smiling ear to ear over his team's performance after being beaten 2-0 and losing ground in a relegation battle without feeling relatively safe in his job. only someone who is secure in the feeling that he has the backing of the chairman and the board would come out saying: "never mind the result - just look at the quality of the football!" at this stage of the season and with relegation looming so large. so, i think that unless there is a drastic change, it would seem that mowbray is around, come what may, for another couple of years - at least! that is how i would read the situation as it appears in the media today, and that is just fine with me.

Mowbray on BBC


i think the bigger message from TM's statements on the weekend would indicate that the team is now in the general mold of what kind of team - and he was very clear about it - what kind of football he wants to see. the only job now is to improve what they're doing and find the missing elements that would turn it into something that can win games in the premiership - even if that takes another year, the season's major injury returns, and another relegation/promotion scenario in order to achieve. judging from the general reactions on BBC 606 he quite delighted his admirers and further alienated his detractors. there was even someone on the west brom board this morning (albeit, most satirically) claiming to be roy keane's cousin, saying that he (roy keane) was in talks with management, and that the club is in the process of sacking tony mowbray. but, like it or not, up or down, it would seem that tony mowbray will get the chance to see his plans through to success.

i was really feeling crushed after the second goal on saturday, and dwelt all day on the goal-line clearance and moore's screamer that rocketed off the crossbar. but on reflection, the remarkable aspect of yesterday's match - at least from my perspective, was that while we were totally lost and altogether lacking confidence in the fulham match; and i was convinced all week that the fine "spirit in the face of the adversity" that the baggies have maintained all year - was all but gone; and the team would achieve nothing without at least the return of jonathan greening - they made the adjustment in their play and the optimism and belief in the mowbray style of football that i had believed gone, was on full and vigorous display right from the kick-off.

so, once again, and leaving it late in the season, it would seem that we're still in the hunt and looking for that elusive three game winning streak that will make the relegation battle competetive, as the baggies lost ground on the whole division this week, with middlesborough beating liverpool, stoke eking out a late draw with villa, and blackburn pulling themselves up by virtue of a victory over hull, who look definitely the form team, at the moment, to be relegated. unfortunately, the albion - in just three games - have gone from being the form team to stay up over middlesborough, stoke, and hull, to needing some real heroics - and soon - to avoid the drop in front of all of them.

all in all though - and after a week that restored my faith that we can still be competitive in the battle to avoid relegation - i'm looking forward to tomorrow, as it gives me the rare opportunity to see the baggies on TV twice in the space of a few days; and although i have no right to - i shall expect an albion victory... after all - and as the gaffer had alluded to earlier in the season - you can't go on playing quality passing/possession/attacking football and not start winning some matches - it's just not possible - and eventually the tide's got to turn. on top of that - and no matter how unrealistic my aspirations for tomorrow may be, you've got admit: we're more than overdue for both a win, as well as a big upset.