It is obvious that loyalty long died in Football and what obtains now is instant results or you are thrown out like dirty water, but considering the treatment the Portuguese got in West London, I thought North London would be more lenient and patient. It is a sad development that managers are ever so often relieved of their appointments as soon as one or two negative results surface. If Arsenal had been so quick to act, Wenger would have long departed the Emirates. The French manager might be the most successful manager in Arsenal's long and proud history, but he hasn't won a thing since 2005. In this day and age, that is totally unacceptable. Whatever be the case, he remains manager and for a long time yet.
SACKED AGAIN BY A LONDON CLUB |
Coupled with the inability of the new players to cope with the pace and power of the Premier League, some devastating results have also come Spurs way. A 3-0 loss to toothless, striker-less West Ham was perhaps the most painful. Manchester City robbed salt with a 6-0 demolition of the North Londoners and the last straw was the weekend's 5-0 humbling by Liverpool in a match that was largely dominated by a side that hadn't won there since 2008. Even Jon Flamagan was having a field day against overrated England right back, Kyle Walker. Paulinho's rash and idiotic challenge on Luis Suarez was even more crushing than the defeat itself and it left the manager wondering what next. The Brazilian midfielder might need a break as he has been playing competitive football since the turn of the year with Corinthians, Brazil and now Spurs. AVB didn't see the need to rest him as he plays in every competition because of his reliability and strength.
All said and done, the news of AVB's departure was shocking, considering the fact that he lies just five points behind 4th place with another 22 matches to play. Spurs may be 7th now, but there's room for improvement and Sunday's 5-0 loss was largely because of a makeshift defence that had Naughton at leftback and Capoue in the centre. With Vertonghen and Kaboul on the sidelines, there's little or nothing the manager could do. Sandro also had to leave the fray in the first half and that weakened the midfield. All these may be seen as flimsy excuses, but they are not. If the transfer kitty was in the excess of 107 million and many players came in, then enough time should have been given to the coach to find the right balance and team. We are only in December for crying the bucket. Only 19 months into a 3 year contract with a bright future ahead of the dude and the team and he has been sent away. Not a good sign for whoever is going to replace him. I hear names like Murat Yakin, Mauricio Pochettino who will take some convincing, not only because it depends on him alone. Southampton Chairman, Nicola Cortese is an ambition man and will certainly put up a fight. Fabio Capello has thrown his hat in the ring too because of his friendship with DOF, Franco Baldini. Guus Hiddink takes over from LVG after the World Cup, so he's ruled out. Interim manager, Tim Sherwood, also has a chance to be considered on a permanent basis. Swansea's Micheal Laudrup is also among the possibilities being looked out. That is likely to happen.
The question Joe Lewis and Daniel Levy should ask themselves is- What is the guarantee that the new manager will find the balance between now and the end of the season? How many available managers can achieve the goal of reaching the Champions League with the present crop of players? Manchester City, Arsenal, Liverpool, Chelsea and Everton will take some stopping this season and relieving AVB of his duties will not change anything. I can't remember the last time TOTTENHAM HOTSPUR sacked a manger when above MANCHESTER UNITED on the Table. That and a lot of things best explain why Levy and Lewis have made probably the worst decision. Managers should be given more time. Boards should take a cue from Manchester United and Arsenal. Success isn't easy to achieve. it takes some people a longer time, others, shorter and short lived at the same time. Stability is a prerequisite for success.
For Andre Villas-Boas, it is a case of what next for the rather unfortunate guy. London seems to be a nightmare place for him in just two years. Awful and a big slight on his young and growing managerial RESUME. It has been rumoured that Valencia may be his next port of call after Miroslav Djukic suffered the same fate at the weekend. Whatever happens, he wouldn't set foot on English soil for the foreseeable future
LE DESEO SUERTE! DESEJO-IHE SORTE!
Ohireime P Eboreime
@ohiskaka1990