The core problem we have is that our owner is well intentioned but doesn't know what he's doing, and doesn't really trust anybody else to make decisions either. He employs various men in suits but I'm not sure he knows how to select those people either, and ultimately he doesn't seem to trust them to make key decisions anyway. Expensive administrators, money burned.
The last thing a football club needs is changes of manager every few months. But he keeps making decisions based on fear and ignorance and returning to square one. No club owner should need to make a video in which he holds up a dossier which proves beyond doubt that the latest appointment is the correct one. It's a nonsense. I hope he didn't actually waste good money paying someone to write that dossier.
Buying a football club is rarely a smart move, given everything you have to contend with, including the attitude and behaviour of quite a few football supporters. Unless the money involved is pretty inconsequential to the owner, who stands to benefit from the platform and profile obtained. And I 'm not sure there will be much interest in stepping into Sadler's shoes. Owning BFC doesn't look very attractive. Sadler leaving could easily make things worse. Repeating what Belokon did is highly unlikely, without a major investor, so let's not live as if it should happen. It partly happened because nobody believed it could.
As much as I was a fan of NC first time I was amazed he was brought back, it was such a weak decision. Desperate really. Stop looking backwards Simon. Find a model that allows young coaches like Dobbie to develop with the guidance of an experienced mentor, as Critch did first time. If they move on to bigger things, don't take them back when they fail, especially if they just vanished in a puff of smoke at the first opportunity. Keep moving forwards. There was nothing to lose by giving Dobbie an opportunity to show what he could do this season. It would have been far more interesting.