Powerbrokers create a Geordie shambles

By tommy_doleman / Roar Pro

On the pitch, the English Premier League is providing us with some wonderful stories once again this season. Bolton and West Bromwich Albion are among the surprise names in the top half of the table.

Blackpool are playing some of the most exciting attacking football we’ve seen from a promoted side and the top four sides are separated by just three points almost half way into the season.

Unfortunately though, as was the case last season, off-field stories are once again creating the headlines in England. One piece of news in particular has left me shocked and disgusted with the way clubs are treating players and staff.

Less than a month after Ray Wilkins left Chelsea in controversial circumstances, Newcastle United’s Chris Hughton has become the first managerial casualty of the season – raising many eyebrows in the process.

Many have already voiced their surprise in the media, namely fellow managers Roy Hodgson and Steve Bruce, along with big names affiliated to the club such as Alan Shearer and Rob Lee.

“Loyalty in football gets spoken about a lot… Do you see much of it about these days?”

Those were the words of Rio Ferdinand who also felt the need to have a say from his Twitter page, and he is dead right you know. What more would Chris Hughton have had to do keep his job?

He was a likeable character who seemingly had the full support of his players during training and match day. He came to the clubs rescue at a time when Newcastle could have easily plummeted down the rungs of the Football League like Leeds and Sheffield Wednesday did in years gone by.

Last but not least he’s guided the Magpies to a modest 11th in the league, a position of consolidation in comparison to their last Premier League campaign, picking up some impressive results along the way.

Obviously it wasn’t enough for owner Mike Ashley though, who cited a lack of experience for the dismissal of the clubs manager. In October the club had said they were currently in the process of negotiating a new deal for the former Irish international, after speculation from the bookies said he would be the first Premier League boss to be axed.

Regrettably though, the bookmakers once again proved they don’t often get it wrong and Hughton received the wrong type of sack he’d have been hoping for as Christmas looms.

For me, Ashley struggles to vindicate his argument for Hughton’s lack of experience given he joined Newcastle after a twenty year affiliation with Tottenham Hotspur, in which he spent fourteen years as a coach and an assistant manager.

Director of football Dennis Wise then appointed him at Newcastle in 2008 as a coach under Kevin Keegan before he worked under Joe Kinnear as well, after a period of being Caretaker manager.

Hughton was then given the manager’s job after the club was remarkably relegated from the top-flight in 2008/09. Owner Mike Ashley was reluctant to bring in another full-time boss at the time as he aimed to sell the club, but Hughton just got on with it and was rewarded on the pitch as promotion was sealed comfortably with six games to spare.

A record that saw 90 goals, 102 points and just four losses for the season was one that was bound to put Newcastle United back on the football map.

In 2010/11 Hughton made a more than respectable start to his first Premier League campaign as manager.

In a season where stability was deemed a necessity, following the drama that’s been entrenched with the club in recent years, wins at Chelsea and Everton showed that the club was going to be no push-over.

This was backed up by an exhilarating 6-0 demolition of Aston Villa with Andy Carroll bagging a hat-trick. Carroll himself has settled down on the pitch after a number of off-field issues and he, like the club, also seemed to be heading in the right direction.

By October the club had completed a 5-1 win over local rivals Sunderland – their best result against the enemy in 54 years, and defeated Arsenal 1-0 at the Emirates. That result saw Newcastle hitting the lofty heights of 5th in the league and in turn, surely silenced all doubters of Hughton’s credentials.

A winless run of five matches though, including two draws (one against Chelsea) and three defeats proved the catalyst for the inevitable axe. It seemed that Ashley had been waiting for the right time to sack his manager and recent reverses at Bolton and West Brom represented the perfect opportunity for him to do that.

Ashley will argue that it’s simply about business and never one to endear himself to the fans; he’s shown once again that he’s not afraid to pull off a ludicrous decision that could leave the club in the balance again.

Regardless of the situation though, Hughton is one of the nice guys of football. A great character and plenty of coaching experience should ensure the 51 year old should be in the mix for another managerial role in the future. I personally wish him all the best and hope he gets an opportunity somewhere else very soon.

In terms of Newcastle they will turn to Peter Beardsley and Steve Stone on a short-term basis until somebody else is found – with Alan Curbishley, Martin O’Neill and Alan Pardew all rumoured to be in the mix. Beardsley is another favourite among the fans, having previously played for the Toon in two spells during his career.

Last time Newcastle swiftly appointed a former striker in Alan Shearer, it resulted in a six match cameo which couldn’t save the club from their demise.

Circumstances are different this time, but could lightning strike twice? With tough games against Liverpool, Tottenham and Manchester City to come before 2010 ends, Mike Ashley may have just condemned his team to another relegation battle in a season that should have promised a lot better.

The Crowd Says:

2010-12-08T08:03:53+00:00

Rob M

Guest


Rumour has it that he was part of Qatar's 2022 world cup bid....

2010-12-08T05:52:52+00:00

Liam

Guest


Avram Grant probably should have been sacked after day 1

2010-12-08T01:27:46+00:00

Danny_Mac

Roar Guru


Martin Jol has become avaliable, in fact Hughton was released and mere hours later Ajax released Jol... Doesn't mean its right though...

2010-12-08T01:26:12+00:00

Danny_Mac

Roar Guru


I think the problem is that Newcastle were too good/too big to go down in the first place (same as Leeds, and is a testiment to mismanagment rather than poor football). Mike Ashley knows this, and knows that with the squad they have they should be comfortably outside of relegation and pushing into mid-table. The folly is that while they are trying to be positive with the wage and age cap, they may struggle if (when) injuries and suspensions start to bite in the back nine. Stability is the key, and especially given that the playing staff respect Hughton so much. There are a lot of similarities between Newcastle and Liverpool, they both have wonderfully passionate supporters who will always back the club. Sadly it allows the likes of Ashley, Hicks and Gillett to exploit that fact. Seriously, NUFC and LFC fans would do anything to get to a game and travel anywhere to see them play, as if they are going to stop going or stop buying merchandise...

2010-12-08T01:17:55+00:00

Danny_Mac

Roar Guru


If that's all it takes to get sacked, Roy Hodgeson should have been sacked three months ago!

2010-12-08T01:14:53+00:00

Danny_Mac

Roar Guru


Hughton has massive potential in the game, and given the wage and age restrictions placed on him (under 26, less that 30k pounds a week) for recruitment, I think that he has done a stellar job. Admittedly the retained most of the the side that was "too good to go down" and bounced straight back with a side far superior to all the other championship sides. While this was expected, I cannot stress how difficult the job of motivating the more "exotic" foreign players to make the difficult away trips on freezing cold pitches against teams who play an agricultural style of football. Hopefully this isn't the last we've heard of Chris Hughton at the highest level of English football... The reality is that Martin Jol left his post at Ajax on the same day as Hughton's sacking...

2010-12-07T23:25:47+00:00

John P

Guest


Geordy fan hurting here. Hughton was a gentleman and will be sorely missed. What he did on a shoestring was more than the club and the fans could have hoped for. That fat cockney shopkeeper needs to piss off NEWCASTLE FAN!

2010-12-07T23:08:15+00:00

Mick

Guest


Tommy You give an excellent re-cap of Hughtons time at the club. You're right it is shocking cos they are only a recent promoted club. I think Ashley reckons he's bigger than his own boots and this is putting a bad image on the club at present. yet another sad day for the game Keep up the great workmate i'm really enjoying your pieces

2010-12-07T22:34:42+00:00

gruffer12

Guest


Ridiculous to even think why Ashley did what he did. I'm not surprised though, these people have no idea what theyre doing with clubs.

2010-12-07T22:05:20+00:00

The Clint

Guest


Newcastle utd and Leeds utd should both be champions league contenders by now, however the way those two clubs have been run behind closed doors over the last decade or so has been pathetic. Hopefully Mike Ashley can get his head out of his you know what or sell the club before more damage is done. Hopefully we can see Newcastle and Leeds back hanging with the big guns of English football again sooner rather than later, where the statures of those clubs belong. Instead of the 'money can buy championships' clubs we see now.

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