ASSE: Guillou charges Kilmer and reveals the priority of the Mercato

ASSE: Guillou charges Kilmer and reveals the priority of the Mercato
ASSE: Guillou charges Kilmer and reveals the priority of the Mercato

Former Greens defender Patrick Guillou believes that Olivier Dall’Oglio is not primarily responsible for ASSE’s very delicate first part of the season.

In the Sainté Night Club of the Peuple Vert site, Patrick Guillou returned to the ousting of Olivier Dall’Oglio, at ASSE. “The departure of Olivier Dall’Oglio is part of a logic that is specific to the Canadian leaders of ASSE,” he commented. From the moment he didn’t extend, every day he went to practice, it was a day he won before he got fired. It’s in continuity. The results don’t speak for themselves. He is responsible for the team compositions, he is the one who is responsible for the team. On the other hand, he was not the one responsible for recruitment. We put the blame on him and it’s completely logical. » A stone in the pond of leaders.

“In the midfield, a boss is missing”

But Guillou also points to the responsibility of the players. “I don’t stay 90 minutes in front of my to see the purges that we have seen. You can point the finger at ODO, but the players’ first responsibility is to fight and get down to business. Today, there are no longer these players, this personality, this collective motivation. You no longer have frames like you could have had last season. Cardona, Larsonneur, Briançon, it was Ligue 2 level, but they were executives. What framework is this team based on? If you name two players, you are geniuses. » And for him to add… “In midfield, there is missing a boss, there is missing someone who breaks the rhythm, there is missing someone who is capable of setting the sole, who is also capable of directing the game. We don’t have a real boss. » The priority of the Mercato, according to him, is therefore clear.

ASSE-Guillou-charges-Kilmer-and-reveals-
-

-

PREV Manchester City wants to recruit Paul Pogba!
NEXT Girondins. Jean-Louis Triaud on Gérard Lopez: “He put in the money, but he was not well supervised”