Glad someone actually mentioned Watson. He was obviously our back up Right Back and a very promising one at the time. Sadly injury has de-railed him as much as a lack of ability.Hound wrote:Be interesting to hear how Watson has got on. Seems to be a bit in and out but at least seems to have stayed fit. Think there was an element of thinking Watson had more potential hence not making more of an effort to keep Stacey
Fair point Vision, I did forget Watson... he was another I had high hopes for. But after his injury he seemed to go backwards. His loan seems to have helped there though.Vision wrote:Glad someone actually mentioned Watson. He was obviously our back up Right Back and a very promising one at the time. Sadly injury has de-railed him as much as a lack of ability.Hound wrote:Be interesting to hear how Watson has got on. Seems to be a bit in and out but at least seems to have stayed fit. Think there was an element of thinking Watson had more potential hence not making more of an effort to keep Stacey
Whether people like it or not , all academy players started from scratch the moment Stam came in. It was Stacey and Fosu's opportunity to really force themselves into first team contention as Liam Kelly (who lest we forget was a pretty left field selection that few saw coming given he'd spent the previous season at Bath City) did.
Rob Dickie also leap-frogged other centre half contenders that pre-season but he decided he wanted to play first team football rather than be a 4th choice centre half/ 3rd choice right back.
Stacey and Fosu didn't convince Stam enough for him to give them the assurances they were seeking so went elsewhere. The subsequent progress they've made has generally been in positions that they weren't playing when they were here.
Not quite what happened. Dickie was actually one of the players who lost out under Stam, who had this weird habit of rapidly cycling between young centre backs. At various times, Cooper, Jules, Blackett, Ilori, Oxford, Axel, McIntyre, and Holmes, were all his favourite. When Dickie came back from his loan he couldn't get in the U23s because Ilori was in there recovering from injury and Oxford was in there pretending he was still at West Ham. The next January he wanted to sell Blackett and play McIntyre instead, but McIntyre got injured.Vision wrote: Rob Dickie also leap-frogged other centre half contenders that pre-season but he decided he wanted to play first team football rather than be a 4th choice centre half/ 3rd choice right back.
Fair enough SCIAG, you'll know the Academy ins and outs better than I but my point (somewhat lost in your judicious quoting) was in relation to that first Stam summer and Fosu/Stacey not doing enough to impress him in training in the way that the likes of Dickie, Kelly and Watson did. Clearly attention to training was Stam's MO which was evident in some of his more baffling team selections over his time here. With that in mind it's no surprise that others came to the fore whilst Dickie was out on loan. Obviously a major flaw if players out on loan are somewhat forgotten about. Of course by the time Illori and Oxford came along the whole club strategy had changed.SCIAG wrote:Not quite what happened. Dickie was actually one of the players who lost out under Stam, who had this weird habit of rapidly cycling between young centre backs. At various times, Cooper, Jules, Blackett, Ilori, Oxford, Axel, McIntyre, and Holmes, were all his favourite. When Dickie came back from his loan he couldn't get in the U23s because Ilori was in there recovering from injury and Oxford was in there pretending he was still at West Ham. The next January he wanted to sell Blackett and play McIntyre instead, but McIntyre got injured.Vision wrote: Rob Dickie also leap-frogged other centre half contenders that pre-season but he decided he wanted to play first team football rather than be a 4th choice centre half/ 3rd choice right back.
Totally agree. Adkins wasn't perfect but he did a decent job here with the hand he was dealt and certainly the youngsters would have had a viable pathway. Ironically he suffered ultimately because he wasn't McDermott whilst McDermott himself suffered because he was.SCIAG wrote:One of the worst aspects of our rapid cycling between managers is the impact it has on our squad building, which inevitably impacts upon our youngsters. Can't help but feel we'd have been better off sticking with Adkins or even McDermott 2.0 rather than the aimless oscillation we've seen for the past five years.
Adkins had to go I think - it just wasn’t working for him.SCIAG wrote:Not quite what happened. Dickie was actually one of the players who lost out under Stam, who had this weird habit of rapidly cycling between young centre backs. At various times, Cooper, Jules, Blackett, Ilori, Oxford, Axel, McIntyre, and Holmes, were all his favourite. When Dickie came back from his loan he couldn't get in the U23s because Ilori was in there recovering from injury and Oxford was in there pretending he was still at West Ham. The next January he wanted to sell Blackett and play McIntyre instead, but McIntyre got injured.Vision wrote: Rob Dickie also leap-frogged other centre half contenders that pre-season but he decided he wanted to play first team football rather than be a 4th choice centre half/ 3rd choice right back.
One of the worst aspects of our rapid cycling between managers is the impact it has on our squad building, which inevitably impacts upon our youngsters. Can't help but feel we'd have been better off sticking with Adkins or even McDermott 2.0 rather than the aimless oscillation we've seen for the past five years.
Yeah. Adkins got more shafted than pretty much any manager we've had in ages by the ownership shenanigans and lack of money. And was always viewed with hostility by the McDermott fanboys from the start. We've slowly gone downhill since he was sacked. McDermott being brought in for a few months and then unceremoniously dumped again was an absolute disgrace. Sticking with either would have given better stability IMO. We might not have had a finish as high as 3rd with either, but I doubt we'd have consistently been below 16th either.Vision wrote:Fair enough SCIAG, you'll know the Academy ins and outs better than I but my point (somewhat lost in your judicious quoting) was in relation to that first Stam summer and Fosu/Stacey not doing enough to impress him in training in the way that the likes of Dickie, Kelly and Watson did. Clearly attention to training was Stam's MO which was evident in some of his more baffling team selections over his time here. With that in mind it's no surprise that others came to the fore whilst Dickie was out on loan. Obviously a major flaw if players out on loan are somewhat forgotten about. Of course by the time Illori and Oxford came along the whole club strategy had changed.SCIAG wrote:Not quite what happened. Dickie was actually one of the players who lost out under Stam, who had this weird habit of rapidly cycling between young centre backs. At various times, Cooper, Jules, Blackett, Ilori, Oxford, Axel, McIntyre, and Holmes, were all his favourite. When Dickie came back from his loan he couldn't get in the U23s because Ilori was in there recovering from injury and Oxford was in there pretending he was still at West Ham. The next January he wanted to sell Blackett and play McIntyre instead, but McIntyre got injured.Vision wrote: Rob Dickie also leap-frogged other centre half contenders that pre-season but he decided he wanted to play first team football rather than be a 4th choice centre half/ 3rd choice right back.
Totally agree. Adkins wasn't perfect but he did a decent job here with the hand he was dealt and certainly the youngsters would have had a viable pathway. Ironically he suffered ultimately because he wasn't McDermott whilst McDermott himself suffered because he was.SCIAG wrote:One of the worst aspects of our rapid cycling between managers is the impact it has on our squad building, which inevitably impacts upon our youngsters. Can't help but feel we'd have been better off sticking with Adkins or even McDermott 2.0 rather than the aimless oscillation we've seen for the past five years.
Didn't mean to quote judiciously - I cut everything else because I agreed. I think my point, in turn, was that Dickie didn't impress as much as Cooper and Jules, and that Stam's initial promotion of Jules in particular shows that his initial evaluations were flawed. Pre-season, Jules was ahead of Dickie. We announced our squad numbers in July, and Jules was given #22 while Dickie was not given one at all. Dickie didn't go out on loan until the end of August.Vision wrote:Fair enough SCIAG, you'll know the Academy ins and outs better than I but my point (somewhat lost in your judicious quoting) was in relation to that first Stam summer and Fosu/Stacey not doing enough to impress him in training in the way that the likes of Dickie, Kelly and Watson did. Clearly attention to training was Stam's MO which was evident in some of his more baffling team selections over his time here. With that in mind it's no surprise that others came to the fore whilst Dickie was out on loan. Obviously a major flaw if players out on loan are somewhat forgotten about. Of course by the time Illori and Oxford came along the whole club strategy had changed.SCIAG wrote:Not quite what happened. Dickie was actually one of the players who lost out under Stam, who had this weird habit of rapidly cycling between young centre backs. At various times, Cooper, Jules, Blackett, Ilori, Oxford, Axel, McIntyre, and Holmes, were all his favourite. When Dickie came back from his loan he couldn't get in the U23s because Ilori was in there recovering from injury and Oxford was in there pretending he was still at West Ham. The next January he wanted to sell Blackett and play McIntyre instead, but McIntyre got injured.Vision wrote: Rob Dickie also leap-frogged other centre half contenders that pre-season but he decided he wanted to play first team football rather than be a 4th choice centre half/ 3rd choice right back.
I saw Jules at Crawley v Macclesfield recently. He was subbed off mid-way through the first half due to injury, that strengthened Macclesfield considerably - he was trash up to that stage.SCIAG wrote:Dickie and Hyam are now established League One defenders. Jules is bouncing around the benches of the bottom half of League Two.
Good post. I'm probably mistaken but was Antonio academy?Stranded wrote:And for every Malpay there will be a dozen of players who come and go at Brentford who you will never of heard of. The new way Brentford are doing things is interesting, i.e. no youth but just a B team but it is too early to suggest it will be more successful over the long term. It has produced 9 players in 3 years - they've sold one Meaphem (but he was already in the youth academy before it was scrapped) for big money.Jackson Corner wrote:The club love to bang on about how great our academy is with 51 players now played for the first team. In reality how many have been any good? For every Gylfi, Pearce, Obita ect.. There have been loads who have played a few games and disappeared to non league football. The reality is 4 of the last 5 seasons we have been relegation fodder.
How many of the promoted teams in recent seasons have academy players Brighton, Burnley, Watford , Wolves, Huddersfield all have none.
Brentford scraped there academy several seasons ago to concentrate on player recruitment from abroad and lower leagues. They play great football and pick up players like Jota Hogan Watkins Malpey and sell them on for big profits.
They get Neal Malpay for 1.5 million the player with most goals and assists in the championship while we have Danny Loader. Don’t be fooled our academy has way more failures than success stories.
Any youth investment is a numbers game, we've had 51 make a debut in just under 20 years which isn't a bad average and the plan is to get a mix of players who can make an impact in the first team and also bring in funds if they aren't quite good enough or the right fit at the time they are ready.
I would say our successes are as follows (using this list https://www.readingfc.co.uk/teams/acade ... graduates/):
SImon Church
Jake Cooper
Simon Cox
Michael Hector
Darius Henderson
Jem Karacan
Liam Kelly
Shane Long
Alex McCarthy
Jordan Obita
Alex Pearce
Andy Rinohmota
Hal Robson-Kanu
Gylfi Sigurdsson
Aaron Tshibola
Nathan Tyson
So 16 of the 51 listed graduates would have to be classed as a success. WIth the following perhaps too early in their development and at the club yet to be judged as yet:
Tennai Watson
Sam Smith
Omar Richards (could argubly already be on the other list)
Gabriel Osho
Michael Olise
Andrjia Novakovich (again could well be on the above list)
Tom McIntyre
Danny Loader
Josh Barrett
Tom Holmes
Ryan East
So up to 27 qualified successes now - not bad - sure some will disagree with the above and have additions/deletions but over a 20 year spell that is a damn good return.
I wouldn't count Long because he was in the first team squad the same season he was signed, but Rino spent a few years in the Academy didn't he? Even if he didn't come through from 8 like Obita.SCIAG wrote:Technically no - we signed him from non-league when he was too old to play for the academy.
I don't think we should really count people like Long and Rinomhota either but the club do.
Signed in April, only a few weeks before his 17th birthday. We signed Long at the start of June at the equivalent age.Hound wrote:Joined at 16 I think. Think it’s fair to count him
And after tonight I’m sure they will be
Personally would count Long more than Rino because he'd barely played soccer before joining - he played mostly hurling and badminton. So vast majority of his development, apart from natural talent and hard work, was in our academy (and first team training too of course)SCIAG wrote:Signed in April, only a few weeks before his 17th birthday. We signed Long at the start of June at the equivalent age.Hound wrote:Joined at 16 I think. Think it’s fair to count him
And after tonight I’m sure they will be
Obviously it's not cut and dried, but for me personally I think there's something different about bringing someone through the lower levels of the academy or even giving them a scholarship at 16 than bringing them in when they've already played adult football.
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