It could have been him. Sitting
17th in the table, on the back of a home defeat by Bournemouth and with
one league win since August 19, Mark Hughes will be grateful not to have
the same employment status as Ronald Koeman on Tuesday morning.
'People
can press buttons to get rid of good people,' said Hughes, 'people who
have proven themselves over a decent period. They bow to the immediate
thinking, rather than looking at the quality you have.'
He's
right. If Stoke did sack Hughes, who are the board going to get who
would represent a mighty leap forward. Carlo Ancelotti? Roberto Mancini?
This is Stoke. They're a good club, they're a well-supported club, a
capably run club — but they are not part of the elite. Thankfully, for
Hughes, those in charge know their limitations.
Ronald Koeman was sacked as manager of Everton on Monday after a poor start to the season
Peter Coates has not become
delusional since Leicester's title win. He knows what his club is about.
It would be very easy to burn through managers at Stoke, to have
panicked this season after five defeats in six matches. Yet Coates seems
to have a rather sensible, old school attitude.
Who
out there is better for his club than Hughes? Seriously, who? In all
likelihood, it would be another Hughes-type. An honest British coach who
has had some good years and some bad years, because that's what happens
down the league. If Stoke could attract a famous name it would only be
because that coach had messed up somewhere bigger.
In
reality, that is how they got Hughes, considering he was once at
Manchester City. Koeman might take the Stoke job now; but he wouldn't at
the time he left Southampton.
It could well have been Mark Hughes getting the sack, with is Stoke side languishing in 17th
There
will always be appealing left-field options. David Wagner at
Huddersfield certainly has cachet after Saturday. Yet he would still be
taking on Stoke. Some ordinary players. Some logistical limitations. He
could have a fine season and then a disappointing one, because that is
what happens unless you get the keys to Old Trafford.
Aitor
Karanka looked very good at Middlesbrough, and then he didn't, and was
sacked. Such inconsistency comes with the territory. Wagner could still
end up in a relegation battle at Huddersfield. If not this season, then
the next. Does it make him a bad manager? No, it makes him
Huddersfield's manager.
So
Coates knows what he has in Hughes. A manager who will play in a more
entertaining way than his predecessor Tony Pulis, who can attract bigger
names through his foreign connections, but not a revolutionary. Hughes
isn't radically different from Pulis and, let's face it, his eventual
successor won't be greatly different from him. That is why the constant
clamour to sack managers makes little sense.
How
many genuine revolutions do we see? Even the success stories are
limited by the size and potential of the club. Marco Silva did well at
Hull, but they still went down. Craig Shakespeare had a decent impact at
Leicester but it didn't last long. Paul Clement kept Swansea up, but
nobody can guarantee they will be safe this year.
Sacking
the manager was once the last resort. Now it's the first, as Koeman is
the latest to discover. Three of the teams in the bottom seven have
ditched their manager, and we are not a quarter of the way through the
season.
Craig Shakespeare was dismissed as Leicester City boss despite a bright start to his reign
A
club like Burnley that was relegated and kept faith with Sean Dyche is
exceptional. Usually, owners do not wait that long. In the last five
completed seasons, 10 of the 15 relegated clubs had already sacked the
manager before going down. Two of those 10 were on the third incumbent
for the season when they dropped, and two of the five bosses who
survived left that summer. It did not used to be like that. Relegation
was an occupational hazard at a small club, not the death knell for all
involved.
West Ham went down
in 1978. On the last day of the season they needed to beat Liverpool to
be sure of staying up. It wasn't a bad West Ham side, either — Trevor
Brooking, Frank Lampard Snr, Alvin Martin, Billy Bonds, Alan Devonshire
on the bench.
In front of a
season-best crowd – gates locked long before kick-off – they lost 2-0.
Wolves beat Manchester United, meaning it was as good as over. Yet on
the terraces, in the stands, it never occurred that the manager should
be sacked. The players came back out to the centre circle to thank the
fans for their support and received a warm reception.
John
Lyall was the manager, and would be next season, without question. He
had won the FA Cup in 1975 and reached the European Cup-winners' Cup
final in 1976. Who were West Ham going to get that was better?
Now,
Claudio Ranieri can pull off the greatest feat in the history of
English football at Leicester, and it isn't even good for another year.
Frank de Boer gets five games to turn the philosophy at Crystal Palace
on its head.
Owners
will cite the money at stake when a club falls out of the league, but
that's a poor excuse. There isn't the same money in the Football League
but owners are just as trigger happy. Oldham have burned through 23
managers, including caretakers, to stay in the same division, the third
tier, for 20 years.
'Norwich
put heat on McCarthy,' was The Times' take on Ipswich's home defeat on
Sunday. A graphic showed Ipswich's league position on August 19 — second
— and their 11th place now. Yet who thought Ipswich were going to
sustain that start?
They have
spent a fraction of the budget of most rivals in a league that is more
competitive than ever, with so many big clubs vying for two guaranteed
promotion places. Even 11th might be overachievement for Ipswich — yet
somehow Mick McCarthy is under pressure for sitting mid-table. That
isn't about the money, is it? Unless Ipswich's owners think they deserve
Premier League largesse for low-level Championship investment.
And
it wasn't about money at Burnley in 2015, either. Mike Garlick,
Burnley's owner, will appreciate the Premier League loot, but he also
appreciated that he wasn't going to get better than Dyche — and if he
couldn't keep Burnley up, well, neither could a lot of people.
So
Garlick and his board remained loyal and were rewarded with promotion,
consolidation and an excellent start to this season. Dyche is now one of
the names being linked with the Everton job — an irony considering he
would almost certainly have been jettisoned three seasons ago had
Everton's owners controlled Burnley.
What
Garlick gets, what Coates understands, is that without a significant
upgrade, changing the manager is a shallow solution. Sack Hughes and
appoint another just like him.
Bournemouth
aren't in the bottom three because Eddie Howe has suddenly forgotten
how to coach. They are struggling because they're Bournemouth and in a
league with so many ambitious, wealthy clubs, sometimes this will
happen. Say Leicester, having ditched Shakespeare, attract Dyche. Is it
so unthinkable that there could be a season when they are once again
fighting relegation? Of course not, it goes with the territory. Just as
it does at the majority of clubs around the bottom.
When
Lyall took West Ham down, it was their first relegation season in 46
years. The same club now has to rewind to 2011 to find the last time
they went down, yet relegation is seen as a bigger calamity than it has
ever been, and Slaven Bilic looks haunted on the touchline.







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