For years, West Brom were known as the
premier league's "boing boing club" with reference to the fact they
always seemed to get relegated and then swiftly get promoted. They only managed
to end this unwanted track record with a respectable 11th place finish in the
2010-11 season, in a season which started with Roberto Di Matteo in charge, but
finished with Roy Hodgson as manager. In Roy Hodgson's one and only full season
in charge of the Baggies, the 2011-12 season, his side made a small
improvement, finishing 10th.
However, under the guidance of new manager
Steve Clarke, West Brom have made vast and highly significant improvements. One
of the best elements of West Brom's team last season was their defence. The
centre backs Olsson and McCauley meant West Brom were always tough to beat,
while Youssouf Mulumbu grafted in midfield. But Clarke has looked at these
solid areas, and made advances on them. There is more width, more attacking
options and more shape to the West Brom side.
The results speak for themselves in some
ways. They have beaten Liverpool, Chelsea, Southampton and Everton to name a
few. The win over Liverpool was probably the most impressive of these victories
as they demolished the reds 3-0 on the season's opening day. Offensively, they
possess many threats, all providing something slightly different. Peter
Odemwingie is a typical goal scorer, always on the end of things, Shane Long
uses his energy and pace to stretch defences, on loan striker Romelu Lukaku
uses his brute strength to outmuscle defenders, and Swedish striker Markus
Rosenberg offers yet another goal scoring threat. Just like last season, there
is a heavy reliance on the attacking midfielders such as James Morrison, Graham
Dorrans and Chris Brunt. In short, based on the evidence of the past five
months, Steve Clarke has made West Brom better in most ways, slightly better in
some ways, considerably better in others.
So to answer the question in the title, how
far can West Brom go?
Well, if they continue with their high
fitness levels and tactical shape, they could well do what Newcastle did last
season and force a surprise Europa league place. However, in the past two
games, cracks have appeared. Teams have begun exposing West Brom spacious
defence and as the Baggies have started attacking teams more, therefore meaning
West Brom's centre backs have to track back more, and something they are not
really used to. However, Steve Clarke has shown plenty of tactical brilliance
to give West Brom fans plenty of optimism for the season ahead.
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