I'll be honest, I was quite excited at the list of names
coming in to Vicarage Road over the summer of 2001. Vega, Hughes, Glass, Gayle.
All players with Premier League experience. Add to that the exotic (for
Watford) Galli & Blondeau and expectations were high going into the season.
Of course, led by the charismatic Gianluca Vialli who had already won trophies
as manager of Chelsea, nothing could go wrong, could it? The Premier League and
the injection of cash from Sky had seen clubs' spending go through the roof.
Little ole' Watford had never had the resources to match that. However, now
armed with parachute payments from the 99\00 jaunt to the top flight and the
promise of bundles of money from the newly signed ITV Digital deal, the Hornets
board were handing over wheelbarrows of moulah to Mr. Vialli to spend, spend,
spend.
Given the Italian influence currently in place at the Vic,
the Vialli season has been oft discussed over recent months. But there are 3
games that I remember in particular. If only, for resetting my expectations.
Downwards.
I travelled up to Maine Road, full of optimism. Clash of the
Division One titans on the opening day of the season and live on the ITV Sport
channel. In my old university stomping ground too. It all felt like it was
coming together nicely....... OK. 3-0. Taught a bit of a lesson. But hey, a big
home crowd behind them, a manager who's last job was England, that could have
been our toughest game out of the season already. We still had another 45 games
to get enough points to reach the promised land.
One week later. Rotherham. New to this level. Easy.... Well
we won. But it was never comfortable. This group of stars didn't look like a
team. They seemed uneasy at this level. Maybe the route to glory wasn't going
to be as easy as I thought.
And so it proved to be. Wind on to New Years Day 2002.
Millwall at home. An inept display as any I've witnessed at Vicarage Road. A
4-1 home defeat. A red card for Vega. A complete capitulation. And from there,
it all petered out. The last 4 months all seemed rather pointless. Not going
up. Not going down. Not showing any signs of having anything to build on.
And by the time players were heading back to their clubs for
the following pre-season, both ITV digital and Vialli were gone. Whilst both
knew they were not able to attract the very best, instead they threw cash at
what they thought was the best available. But neither could get it to work and
failed miserably. ITV Digital went into administration and Watford FC only
avoided the same fate by the narrowest of margins.
We weren't the only ones to get dollar signs in our eyes at
the prospect of the ITV cash, only to be burnt when it all went wrong. Delia
Smith claimed Norwich City had a £2m hole in their budget when the deal
collapsed. Bradford City went into administration, still struggling after two
years of big spending in the Premier League, followed by missing out on the
promised money from ITV that was supposed to accompany their return to the
Football League. Bury also went into administration that season and many other
clubs suffered after spending the non-existent cash.
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