Quote tm - tl="tm - tl"No, I never said it was, i said it shows the intent to retain his services. You are correct that it common practice to offer an early extension. But you hit the nail on the head with the word KID. He is just that, he is an untried, exciting prospect so i would assume that the contract offer reflects that.'"
Well that's the sixty thousand dollar question, figuratively and literally. At the end of the day we're in the dark on this. Eastmond is a kid and a bloody gifted one, too. He may or may not be the playmaker we desperately need, but we DESPERATELY need a playmaker. Which leaves us standing centre stage in a seller's market. In poker parlance Eastmond and Offiah have the high hand whilst McManus is aiming to bluff.
It's a bad situation. But it's wrong to slate Eastmond. He's only looking after his own interests. Indeed, I doubt there are many players on our books who haven't argued with the chairman over money in the past.
One thing is for certain - we can't afford to start relying on an unreliable player - especially when he's our only genuine playmaker. McManus and (to some extent) Potter have dug themselves into a hole on this. Long's successor should have been announced twelve months ago - signing or promotion. In an ideal world the signing would have been made on or around the same day. If the plan was to give Eastmond the job he should have started over 50% of this season's games, so when Long hangs up his boots he picks them up whilst they are still warm. If that WAS the plan it went tits up from the very beginning. Granted, Kyle had one or two injuries at the start of the year so he couldn't get game time, but I'm not convinced Potter would have played him anyway.
Which gets us to the thorny question: If Eastmond was playmaker elect, why has the club shown such little confidence in him this year? We've all heard McManus talking about bringing through an "exciting generation". Great. Nobody with a brain would disagree. But neither McManus nor Potter have shown much interest in "bigging" Kyle up this season. When he's fit he doesn't play, or play in the right position. When he plays well he's often been damned with very faint praise. Reading between the lines I think the club is in no way convinced by him - both as a player and a person. And it's been like this for up towards twelve months.
So why have we not acted? McManus appears like some startled rabbit trapped in the headlights of an onrushing truck that will do a hell of a lot of damage to us if it hits. I just don't get it. McManus is a smart guy. Nothing like some of the dillons who've steered the ship in the past. He must know this problem is only going to get WORSE until he makes the call to pay up or send Kyle on his way and look toward someone else.