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Top ten worst signings


acrossthepond
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From ESPNsoccernet - http://soccernet.espn.go.com/columns/story...os1&cc=5901

 

The more money there is in the Premier League, the greater scope for it to be wasted. That, at least, is one interpretation of the dealings of the last 12 months. Instead of the 10 worst buys, it could have been a selection of at least 30, though that would not have made more happy reading for Sam Allardyce, Lawrie Sanchez or Damien Comolli.

 

There would have been unpleasant moments, too, for Roy Keane, Alan Curbishley and whoever has been responsible for Chelsea's recruitment for the last 12 months while, in the interests of not inflicting still further pain, Derby's arrivals were ignored altogether. From a lengthy list of contenders, however, these signings stood out for the wrong reasons.

 

10. David Nugent (Portsmouth, £6 million)

It seems a long time ago that the scramble for Nugent's services appeared to involve many of the Premier League managers. Rewind a couple of months and he was in demand in another division, with several Championship clubs eager to take him on loan. It was a sign of how far his star has fallen; his goal-a-game record for England appears likely to remain intact, because his form dictates another cap is unlikely. Nugent has the same number of Premier League goals as Alan Smith, though he did at least find the target in cup competitions.

 

9. Kieran Richardson (Sunderland, £5.5m)

Crossing Roy Keane is a dangerous approach, yet it is something Kieran Richardson appears to do with impunity. While one or two of Keane's outbursts appear directed at his more ill-advised signings, Richardson seems a target of more than most. Besides a match-winning double against Portsmouth, his has been another season of underachievement and it is thought his attitude, as well as his performances, contributed to the omission from the 16 for the matches against Chelsea and Arsenal. Keane believes he requires a hefty budget this summer - presumably to replace some of his own recruits - but with the January arrival of Andy Reid, he has already improved upon Richardson.

 

8. Kieron Dyer (West Ham, £6 million)

Blaming Kieron Dyer for breaking his leg in just his third game for West Ham would be unnecessarily harsh. Faulting his manager for his choice of targets, however, is legitimate. Buying injury-prone players and then complaining when they get injured is hardly a foolproof plan and Alan Curbishley's willingness to sign Dyer, Freddie Ljungberg and Craig Bellamy last summer ignored their habit of spending extended spells on the treatment table.

 

7. Jose Enrique (Newcastle, £6 million)

It takes years to establish a good reputation, and a matter of months to destroy it. Sam Allardyce arrived at Newcastle renowned for his ability to sniff out a bargain and lauded for his knowledge of the European market. He departed with buys like Jose Enrique having given him a name for wasting money. For £6 million, a left-back would be expected to be amongst the best in the league; the clumsy, slow and often omitted Enrique certainly wasn't that, with midfielder Charles N'Zogbia often preferred to play out of position. It is no surprise that a left-back figures prominently on Kevin Keegan's summer wish-list.

 

6. Hameur Bouazza (Fulham, £3.5 million)

Lawrie Sanchez's occasional interviews invariably involve mentions of overhauling Fulham on a huge scale with the implication that his was an unfinished job. But for Roy Hodgson, however, the wholesale importing of Championship players for excessive fees almost transformed them from a Premier League to a lower-division club. Bouazza, the £3.5 million winger from Watford, was, like Lee Cook and Seol Ki-Hyeon, one of several players Sanchez signed to play on the left flank who made no discernible impact. He was, however, a conspicuous absentee from the team whose remarkable resurgence ensured safety.

 

5. Titus Bramble (Wigan, free)

Chris Hutchings' first venture into management was notable for the lengthy and lucrative contract offered to Benito Carbone, almost bankrupting Bradford. At least the Italian was a genuinely high-class player; Bramble, granted a three-year contract at Wigan, is not. While he remains an easy target, there are reasons why; the terrible blunder 27 seconds into Steve Bruce's reign to give Manchester City the lead, for instance. It is no coincidence that Wigan's defensive record improved and their survival was secured when Bramble was dropped.

 

4. Steve Sidwell (Chelsea, free)

Signing a £9 million defender who never plays - the lesser-spotted Branislav Ivanovic - ranks among Chelsea's more bemusing deals, but others are still stranger. When Steve Sidwell was signed, the question many posed was: 'Why?' Twelve months on, no satisfactory answer has been proffered. To the benefit of his bank balance and to the detriment of his career, Sidwell is a particularly well remunerated reserve. At best, he is Chelsea's sixth-choice central midfielder at a club blessed with options in the centre of the park. And after Khalid Boulahrouz's unfortunate experiences, Sidwell's Chelsea career does not bode well for the next man to inherit the No. 9 shirt.

 

3. Darren Bent (Tottenham, £16.5 million)

In Darren Bent's defence, he rejected a more profitable deal from West Ham to join Tottenham. That, though, is where the credit ends. Apart from being an utterly unnecessary addition to a squad blessed with striking options and costing an inflated fee, Bent helped create the impression that Tottenham was a club with more money than sense and represents another triumph of Damien Comolli's recruitment policy. Eight goals is not a disastrous tally but, for £16.5 million, they hardly provide value for money. Clearly an inferior player to Robbie Keane and Dimitar Berbatov, neither does Bent.

 

2. Greg Halford (Sunderland, £2.5 million)

Perhaps it summed up Greg Halford's undistinguished Sunderland career that, after he was sent off against Fulham, his team-mates fared better with 10 men and equalised. The conclusion - that Sunderland were a superior side without Halford - didn't seem lost on Roy Keane, who later shipped him out on loan to Charlton in January. There, his season got still worse when he was singled out for criticism after being a member of a defence breached five times by Blackpool. Halford's nine Sunderland games included two red cards, but no indication that the ponderous right-back is ready to play Premier League football. He might not again.

 

1. Alan Smith (Newcastle, £6 million)

Alan Smith has the remarkable distinction of failing to score a goal all season while, for much of the campaign, being the man who had committed most fouls in the Premier League. Among many possible nadirs, the most recent came against Chelsea when Smith came on, proved unable to hold the ball up and duly lost Michael Ballack for the first goal. Despite his continued inability to trouble opponents - apart from upending them - it was remarkable that Sam Allardyce, in perhaps his worst decision, made him captain while Steve McClaren continued to include him in England squads. Newcastle owner Mike Ashley started the season in a Smith replica shirt. Now the XXXXL garment is presumably to be found in a bargain bin in one of his sports stores.

 

Very harsh - bordering on ignorance - to list Enrique there. I think Nugent should be up there with Smith, and Malouda should certainly feature.

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Very ignorant.

 

Enrique was a decent signing.

 

Smith was a bad signing but for the money involved Darren Bent should top that list.

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Shite list tbh, Enrique shouldn't be anywhere near that he's the best left back we've had in yonks. It's bad enough him being on the list but classing Richardson, Nugent and Dyer as better buys than him definitely shows the writer to be a window licker. Tbh the writer shows himself up again when selecting Sidwell, I know he's done nowt but he was a free and having him above Bramble is insane as Bramble actually cost Wigan points you can't say that for Sidwell.

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How can he put Sidwell at number 4 and in the same breath mention a £9m defender who hasn't even made a first team appearance yet not put him in the list?

 

As soon as I saw Enrique's name in there I knew the fella was obviously talking shite.

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Nimrod. :icon_lol:

Just incase you dunno what it means, i done a quick Google search for you.

 

In the Bible and in legend, Nimrod (Standard Hebrew נִמְרוֹד Nimrod, Tiberian Hebrew נִמְרֹד Nimrōḏ), son of Cush, grandson of Ham, great-grandson of Noah, was a Mesopotamian monarch and "a mighty hunter before Yahweh". ...

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Nimrod. :icon_lol:

Just incase you dunno what it means, i done a quick Google search for you.

 

In the Bible and in legend, Nimrod (Standard Hebrew נִמְרוֹד Nimrod, Tiberian Hebrew נִמְרֹד Nimrōḏ), son of Cush, grandson of Ham, great-grandson of Noah, was a Mesopotamian monarch and "a mighty hunter before Yahweh". ...

Thanks mate. :D

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Nimrod. :icon_lol:

Just incase you dunno what it means, i done a quick Google search for you.

 

In the Bible and in legend, Nimrod (Standard Hebrew נִמְרוֹד Nimrod, Tiberian Hebrew נִמְרֹד Nimrōḏ), son of Cush, grandson of Ham, great-grandson of Noah, was a Mesopotamian monarch and "a mighty hunter before Yahweh". ...

Thanks mate. :D

"Glad you consider me as your mate Jonny. :blush:"

Edited by bawan
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Nimrod. :icon_lol:

Just incase you dunno what it means, i done a quick Google search for you.

 

In the Bible and in legend, Nimrod (Standard Hebrew נִמְרוֹד Nimrod, Tiberian Hebrew נִמְרֹד Nimrōḏ), son of Cush, grandson of Ham, great-grandson of Noah, was a Mesopotamian monarch and "a mighty hunter before Yahweh". ...

Thanks mate. :D

"Glad you consider me as your mate Jonny. :blush:"

Wouldn't have it any other way. :)

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Nimrod. :D

Just incase you dunno what it means, i done a quick Google search for you.

 

In the Bible and in legend, Nimrod (Standard Hebrew נִמְרוֹד Nimrod, Tiberian Hebrew נִמְרֹד Nimrōḏ), son of Cush, grandson of Ham, great-grandson of Noah, was a Mesopotamian monarch and "a mighty hunter before Yahweh". ...

Thanks mate. :blush:

"Glad you consider me as your mate Jonny. :)"

Wouldn't have it any other way. :D

Not even the way you have asked me to have you?

 

:icon_lol:

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Nimrod. :blush:

Just incase you dunno what it means, i done a quick Google search for you.

 

In the Bible and in legend, Nimrod (Standard Hebrew נִמְרוֹד Nimrod, Tiberian Hebrew נִמְרֹד Nimrōḏ), son of Cush, grandson of Ham, great-grandson of Noah, was a Mesopotamian monarch and "a mighty hunter before Yahweh". ...

Thanks mate. :)

"Glad you consider me as your mate Jonny. :D"

Wouldn't have it any other way. :D

Not even the way you have asked me to have you?

 

:icon_lol:

You mean what you've just asked me to do on MSN? :D

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Nimrod. :)

Just incase you dunno what it means, i done a quick Google search for you.

 

In the Bible and in legend, Nimrod (Standard Hebrew נִמְרוֹד Nimrod, Tiberian Hebrew נִמְרֹד Nimrōḏ), son of Cush, grandson of Ham, great-grandson of Noah, was a Mesopotamian monarch and "a mighty hunter before Yahweh". ...

Thanks mate. :D

"Glad you consider me as your mate Jonny. :D"

Wouldn't have it any other way. :D

Not even the way you have asked me to have you?

 

:icon_lol:

You mean what you've just asked me to do on MSN? :blush:

:D

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Agreed, Enrique might now be the quickest, but he aint slow. He came on canny well under KK and while he has alot to learn, he looked much the better player after a run in the side.

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Couple of free's that weren't massively hyped, and a £2.5m signing that shag all people would really be bothered about, while leaving out the likes of Kaboul and Chopra. Hell, £9m on Craig Gordon too!

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Anelka for one £15m goal since joining Chelsea, got to be in with a shout. Granted, he probably has 1 or 2 assists and hasn't been played up the middle all that much but when you spend a load of money on someone to beef up the attack at the business end of the season, you'd expect more than 1 goal in the league for 15m!?

Edited by bassplayerjj
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Anelka for one £15m goal since joining Chelsea, got to be in with a shout. Granted, he probably has 1 or 2 assists and hasn't been played up the middle all that much but when you spend a load of money on someone to beef up the attack at the business end of the season, you'd expect more than 1 goal in the league for 15m!?

 

Honestly? Smiths record is better than that, 1 goal for 6m isnt too bad for a taity like him

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Anelka for one £15m goal since joining Chelsea, got to be in with a shout. Granted, he probably has 1 or 2 assists and hasn't been played up the middle all that much but when you spend a load of money on someone to beef up the attack at the business end of the season, you'd expect more than 1 goal in the league for 15m!?

He hasn't been played correctly at all though.

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