Couple of things here. Firstly, if people who have a problem with rotation mention it only when we lose a match then you get absolutely slaughtered for coming on the forum to "spout bile" and the like. Your very presence "disgusts real fans" if you do things like that, so the only sensible thing to do is also to mention when the team has actually won the game. It's also only fair that way, if rotation is "only a problem for you when we lose" and "you never mention it when we win" then plenty of people are very quick to point out the fact.
One or two people seemed to think the line up on Wednesday was a bit over rotated. I agreed with them but whatever, we won the match 1-0, Fergie rotates and we're ahead of them so so what? Well if we hadn't just endured four seasons of Rafa style, I'd probably be in the "so what" camp myself. As we know though, far from being the exception, the team selection against Pompey at Home would have been a typical mishmash from the previous four seasons. During that four season period, we also won plenty of football matches it's absolutely fair to say, just like we did this time. We didn't though unfortunately win sufficient numbers of them to enable us to mount a title challenge. Not once, not for three weeks, not for two weeks, not even for one match were we ever, ever, in with a shout at the title.
Now this season so far has been different. We've played a settled team and despite not playing that great, we have had sufficient resilience, team spirit, stickability, togetherness and the rest to come from behind three or four times and have had the best start ever in the Premiership, by anyone. Now I know it's either "nothing whatsoever to do with rotation"/"if it is anything to do with rotation it's not very fecking much", but given the situation and what's gone before, you can hardly be surprised that one or two people are a tad nervous that we revert back to our old ways. See I think we've already given mass rotation a good try, God knows we've tried it. I suppose it could be argued that we've never tried it whilst being at the top of the league after 9 games, but I haven't seen an awful lot in the past, and didn't see an awful lot on Wednesday which convinced me it's the way to go.
Last few points. St Mike, why do you absolutely always mention zonal marking when rotation comes up? The inference being that those who opposed rotation also opposed zonal marking and are a bunch of clueless knee jerkers. I was the main proponent of zonal marking on here, boring the whole forum senseless with the jargon and as I saw it the technical theory behind it. The link between the two simply doesn't hold up.
Secondly or fifthly or whatever it is, this idea that Fergie rotates just as much as Rafa used to. So many people said it that I believed it and started using it in my posts, until I got pulled up by a poster last year who categorically proved it wasn't the case. Also, those who tell you that Chelsea and Man Utd rotate the same amount as us, will in the next breath tell you that both clubs have got better squads and therefore better replacement players (which of course they have). Well here's an idea then-LETS NOT ROTATE THE SAME AMOUNT AS THEM THEN IF WE HAVEN'T GOT THE PLAYERS TO MAKE IT WORK!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Revolutionary I know but there you go, I'm in one of those moods this morning.
Lastly, and this is something which will begin to come up more and more as time goes on, is people talking about not wanting to "do an Arsenal". By that they mean leading the league for three quarters of the way through, before failing because "they didn't rotate enough". This particular subject probably deserves a thread of it's own, but I would personally accept a "doing an Arsenal" as a top effort this season. They were right in it with five games to go, came within a couple of minutes and a disputed penalty or two of putting us out of the Champions League, and but for the bounce of a ball here and there might have won it. It's probably worth remembering that despite "falling in a hole" they still finished above us at the end of the day, even though by then our "delayed gazelles" were positively leaping about the pitch (well apart from in the Champions League semi where we got outrun in extra time by an unrotated Chelsea team anyway).
Anyway, morning all. Oh and last thing, the "hungry cheetah" only works if the players are actually hungry to maximise their talents and potential. I would venture you could put Babel and Pennant on hunger strike and they still wouldn't fit the bill. That one really is nothing to do with rotation.