Oso planning to go pro
As a Spurs fan, I understand the Poch move, but I hate it.
Same. Probably necessary, but may mean a step in the wrong direction.Levy may be able to redeem himself by landing Max Allegri.
Spent the last decade at AC Milan and Juventus. With that experience, that honeymoon will last until the summer when he gets pissed for the same reasons Poch did.
Allegri isnt even on the list. Mourinho probably is the odds on favorite, but that will just be another dumpster fire in 2 years.Probably will appoint a caretaker, spend nothing in January, and be further behind on the rebuild for next year.
I'll stick with my opinion on Gold. He'll be in foul trouble within the first eight minutes.
I continue to be amazed that in 2019 Jose is linked with these big jobs. You're not getting the Jose from a decade ago. Granted it wasn't entirely on him, but look at how screwed up his last two clubs are now. IMO he needs to go rework some goodwill at a smaller club before he should get another shot at a big boy.I would take a good long look at Eddie Howe if I was Levy. This is Bournemouth's 5th year up, and he has them sitting in the top half with a shoestring budget.
I agree with you about Howe.But Mourihno won a Premier League title his second go around with Chelsea and finished better (2nd) than anyone else has post Ferguson at United. (And won a Europa League too.)It may not end well, but he usually gets results in the short term.
I would take a good long look at Eddie Howe if I was Levy. This is Bournemouth's 5th year up, and he has them sitting in the top half with a shoestring budget.
This is the no brainer candidate IMO. He’s not sexy, but he’s the solid mid major CBB coach who has been consistent at the top of their conference and made the tourney 3 out of 5 years. Not the guy who made a senior laden Cinderella run.Mourinho would be amusing, cause I think the EPL is better with him involved. But Spurs just need to know what it is. 2 years and have a plan for when it inevitably goes sideways in 2021/2022. But have him try to make things happen with the roster assembled
Looks like the city of Charlotte is going to spend $110 million to help our newest resident billionaire, Panthers owner David Tepper, bring an MLS expansion franchise here.I'm neither here nor there on us having a team -- I probably won't go to any games, but I'm not against having a franchise.Still, with all the needs Charlotte has, and knowing that Tepper soon will be asking for significantly more money than that for a new Panthers stadium, it's pretty hard for me to justify such a giveaway to a billionaire.
I thought I saw that they were gonna use the funds to upgrade BoA stadium. Similar to what Chicago did to update Soldier Field for example. And that it was hospitality funds, so it wouldn't be some new tax.As for the soccer aspect, this should be a great fit, given the success of the programs at UNC, Duke, Wake, and others in the area. Seems even more ripe than other recent expansion markets like St Louis or Sacramento.
Looks like the city of Charlotte is going to spend $110 million to help our newest resident billionaire, Panthers owner David Tepper, bring an MLS expansion franchise here.
Ehh. Milwaukee has one of, if not the, most successful MASL teams, won the championship last year, and still barely averaged over 4,000 fans a game. Now that number would probably go up for an MLS team, but I just don't think there'd be enough support for it to be feasible.
I really feel Milwaukee missed the boat here. They had an ownership group led by Peter Wilt, a Marquette alum and the GM of the Chicago Fire team that won the MLS Cup with Bob Bradley at the helm. When the Harley Museum pulled out of the Park East Corridor, there was a proposal to bring a team here. With Wilt at the helm, we likely would've landed a franchise, but the City wasn't willing to pull the trigger. I suppose it worked out for the Bucks, but the Corridor sat empty for 15 years because of it.