Are you suggesting that even after correcting the statistic and providing factual evidence that supports my original point, I should simply remain silent instead of engaging in further discussion?
This seems to be a recurring issue with some individuals on this forum (by the way, I also believe you're a decent contributor). Any critique of the team is met with such bewilderment and resistance that one might assume the club has won six league titles in the past ten years. Instead of addressing the overarching theme of a post, the conversation often fixates on one or two specific points, which may be beside the main point being made.
I have no problem apologizing for anything, and I have already done so, along with correcting the statistic. My concern, as I mentioned earlier, lies in the tendency for the conversation to stray from its original focus and devolve into nitpicking. It's noticeable that this nitpicking often occurs only when the post is a negative assessment of the team.
My main argument is that there are significant underlying issues, serious ones, that have been largely ignored and instead masked by what can only be described as an immense effort throughout the season. This sustained effort has inevitably taken its toll on the team, leading to our elimination from three out of the four competitions we were involved in and very predictibally so. I actually refrained from posting throughout most of the season because of that. Imagine, negative comments, in the middle of a complete unravelling of our season, are met with total refusal from some on here, imagine what would've happened in January or December when those same issues were still as obvious as they are now, only then the results were there. Our football simply hasn't been up to par this season, especially when compared to the standards we've grown accustomed to in recent years.
Football, yes, is about results, but what you see on the pitch, first and foremost, is the indicator of how a club will fare in the medium to long term. Results are unsustainable when you're playing football that isn't at the level you need it to be for whatever your ambitions are.
There's a notable distinction between two types of posters: those who incessantly exude negativity, particularly centered around the transfer market, and those who conscientiously articulate their concerns about the team while actively seeking alternative viewpoints beyond the conventional 'sell him, buy him' discourse
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