By Tony Attwood
Sacking a Premier League club manager is expensive, and dangerous, and doesn’t always work. In fact it doesn’t normally work. In fact, it rarely works. But is generally expensive
Fortunately for Arsenal, the board are now made of sterner stuff than before, and there was never any real chance that Arteta would be sacked although the blogs and newspapers did their best to get him out. Consider these headlines picked from thousands of a similar ilk that were published week after week…
- Arsenal make Mikel Arteta sack decision after awful Everton defeat (Express December 2020)
- Mikel Arteta told ‘his time is up’ as Arsenal boss (Football London December 2020)
- Mikel Arteta: Footage appears to show Arsenal boss being told to leave (givemesport.com, August 2021)
- Piers Morgan calls for “weak” Mikel Arteta to be sacked (Mirror, August 2021)
- Arsenal fans demand Mikel Arteta sacking (Daily Star, August 2021)
- Arsenal could have sacked Arteta weeks ago (iNews October 2021)
- Arteta admits Arsenal deserved to lose as bookies slash odds on him being first manager to get sacked (The Sun, August 2021)
- Mikel Arteta sack deadline revealed, with new Arsenal boss lined up (teamtalk, August 2021)
These of course are just the tip of the iceberg and the question deserves to be asked, how could the media have got this so wrong, and how could a blog written by a little group of fans like this one get it so right?
Certainly one reason for the media getting it all so wrong is that they don’t like hard work, so having some dead beat ex-footballer sounding off about how awful Arsenal are, is about the easiest way of writing a column that anyone can invent.
Now you will know, if you have read Untold before, that we’ve been out on our own highlighting the issue of fouling and how reducing fouling is a way of wresting back control of a match from a referee who might be biased (as PGMO figures on the use of referees in Arsenal matches show is the case.)
But what is interesting is that the media over the years have actually asked the question, does replacing a manager mid-season improve results? So they know the answer.
There is a fulsome academic study on this, and I am currently awaiting permission from the authors to quote their work, but for now I’ll make do with a statement from Sky Sports which said, “In almost all cases, the immediate upturn in form after sacking a manager is temporary.”
The most likely reason for that upturn is that with a new manager in place the players put in an extra effort to show the new man that none of the previous downturn was their fault, but over time that extra effort dies away, and the club slips back down again.
Meanwhile elsewhere, looking at the bottom five of the Premier League only Sean Dyche of Burnley remains from the managers that started out the season with those clubs.
In fact if we run down all of the clubs who have changed managers this season it all begins to look a bit grim.
Team | Outgoing manager | Date out | Position in the table | Incoming manager | Date in | Position now |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wolverhampton | Nuno Espírito Santo | 24 May | Bruno Lage | 9 June | 8th | |
Everton | Carlo Ancelotti | 1 Jun | Rafael Benitez | 30 June | 11th | |
Tottenham Hots | Ryan Mason | 30 Jun | Nuno Espírito Santo | 30 June | 9th | |
Watford | Xisco Muñoz | 3 Oct | 14th | Claudio Ranieri | 4 October | 17th |
Newcastle U | Steve Bruce | 20 Oct | 19th | Graeme Jones | 20 October | 19th |
Tottenham Hots | Nuno Espírito Santo | 1 Nov | 8th | Antonio Conte | 2 November | 9th |
Norwich City | Daniel Farke | 6 Nov | 20th | 20th. | ||
Aston Villa | Dean Smith | 7 Nov | 15th | 16th | ||
Newcastle U | Graeme Jones | 8 Nov | 19th | Eddie Howe | 8 November | 19th |
We might conclude that we’re lucky Mr Arteta was not sacked when the media and some fans demanded him out.
As for why clubs sack managers when it is clear it generally does no good. Try this… First because they think it might just work, and second because they haven’t got a foggiest idea of what else to do.
People in leadership positions rarely get there because they know how to lead. Quite often it’s either luck or they are related to someone in a position of power. No surprise then that these boards have no clue.
OT, but according to Tariq Panja’s Twitter feed, the ECA is thinking of holding its next general meeting in Doha, Qatar.
The chairman of the ECA is…….. Nasser El-Khelaifi
I hope they will be walking.