balmain boy
Well-known member
Well management and JT are in a pickle here, we all know that, but some of you don't understand why they can't/won't tell their side of the story in any detail.
If you're trying to sell something, you don't publicly proclaim all the faults of that product from the offset. As a sales person, you would talk up the positive traits and skimp over the negatives without actually lying about anything though.
If JT/board come out and say for example that Robbie is super high maintenance, argues consistently with all his coaches, abuses his team mates and creates disharmony within the club it's hardly going to create a wealth of possible buyers calling up to take him off our hands. No-one would go near him and we'd be stuck with him regardless. If we say nothing about all this publicly then a buyer may surface and it's then up to them to determine the fit Robbie would have within their club and structure.
So Robbie's manager takes advantage of this and paints the club as the super bad guys, and a lot of gullible fans and journos eat it up without thinking twice. It may be true, it may be crap or most likely somewhere in between but Robbie dictates the narrative, not the club, so he paints himself as the loyal hero who's been wronged and then waits for public pressure and that of the sponsors to force the change that suits him.
If you're trying to sell something, you don't publicly proclaim all the faults of that product from the offset. As a sales person, you would talk up the positive traits and skimp over the negatives without actually lying about anything though.
If JT/board come out and say for example that Robbie is super high maintenance, argues consistently with all his coaches, abuses his team mates and creates disharmony within the club it's hardly going to create a wealth of possible buyers calling up to take him off our hands. No-one would go near him and we'd be stuck with him regardless. If we say nothing about all this publicly then a buyer may surface and it's then up to them to determine the fit Robbie would have within their club and structure.
So Robbie's manager takes advantage of this and paints the club as the super bad guys, and a lot of gullible fans and journos eat it up without thinking twice. It may be true, it may be crap or most likely somewhere in between but Robbie dictates the narrative, not the club, so he paints himself as the loyal hero who's been wronged and then waits for public pressure and that of the sponsors to force the change that suits him.