Pardew departs but fog on the Tyne is here to stay

By Janek Speight / Expert

Idioms are not a writer’s best friend but ‘be careful what you wish for’ is an adequate place to start with when directing attention to Tyneside and the latest chapter in the Newcastle United roller coaster.

Following a dreadful year for the club, where they managed just 6 wins in 30 matches between December 2013 and October 2014, Toon fans were in despair.

Frustrated, infuriated and watching their side play dire and uninspiring football, they directed their anger towards the only man available – manager Alan Pardew.

‘Pardew out’ was the call rung out from St James’ Park, up until a recent purple patch that has become synonymous with Pardew’s Newcastle reign.

Now their calls have been granted, just not in the expected circumstances, and on first glance it looks like a win for everyone involved.

The fans have their wish, Pardew has escaped the cauldron of hate, owner Mike Ashley has pocketed a cool $2 million for a man not wanted, and Crystal Palace have picked up a manager astute enough to steer them to safety.

But in reality, there’s actually a distinct loser in all of this – the fans. This is a smokescreen victory, and is unlikely to solve their woes.

While Pardew wasn’t perfect, he was the best Newcastle fans could hope for under Ashley. During social media speculation on Pardew’s replacement – Michael Laudrup, Frank de Boer and Jürgen Klopp among the candidates – there was a failure to take into account the idiosyncrasies of the man in charge.

Ashley is never going to break the bank to lure someone like De Boer to Tyneside, and none of the above managers are ever going to agree to work under his controlling terms.

Which is why Pardew’s departure leaves Newcastle fans in limbo. Who will replace him that can offer anything better?

Since buying Newcastle from Sir John Hall and Freddie Shepherd in 2007, Ashley has ridden a storm of fan opposition and turned Newcastle into a profitable venture. They are no longer a football club, but a football business, a sad reality in the modern day English Premier League.

He runs the club on a shoestring budget, despite 50,000 packing out St James’ Park fortnightly, and buys promising players before selling them at an inflated profit. To help him operate smoothly, he needs a manager willing to toe the company line.

Pardew was that willing man, and he was doing an adequate job in difficult circumstances. His best players were constantly sold, replacements were a rarity and yet he got on with the job with minimum fuss.

However, the football he played was woeful, the main source of frustration for Newcastle fans. Pardew is a reactive manager, and his long-ball game was getting more and more dire to watch.

His excuses were also constant, monotonous and predictable. That was probably more infuriating than the results and his tactics. Pardew did possess good man-management skills, and the players have always appeared loyal. But the Geordie public was sick of the continuing mediocrity on show.

Newcastle fans aren’t fickle, they just have a list of simple pleasures that they expect – attacking, attractive football, a decent cup run here and there and beating some big teams along the way. Under Pardew, they’ve never experienced all three.

Yet while calls for Pardew’s head were understandable, they were also misdirected. He wasn’t the source of the problem, and never has been. Under Ashley, Newcastle fans are unlikely to see their dreams realised.

Pardew was ideal for the club under Ashley. He was a mid-range manager for a mid-level club, willing to put up with Ashley and his cronies. Getting rid of him was never the answer, and now he’s gone the fans are the only ones losing out.

Pardew’s departure just before the transfer window means the likelihood of the in-form Moussa Sissoko remaining on Tyneside has diminished, as has the potential arrival of new faces. While Pardew has had little input in transfers, he has at least had the job of prodding Ashley into sporadic bouts of action.

There is no Messiah waiting for take over, instead the tongue-in-cheek calls from some for Joe Kinnear, Graeme Souness or Temuri Ketsbaia to take charge are more likely.

The best Newcastle can hope for is current caretaker John Carver seeing out the remainder of the season. He’s a Geordie boy, knows what the club’s about and knows what the fans want.

After that, who knows, maybe Carver should just take the job full-time. He’s also better than what’s available, such as Tim Sherwood, who definitely wouldn’t bring in attractive football, and another frontrunner Steve Bruce isn’t all that popular among Newcastle supporters.

The gloom on the Toon will continue, the fog on the Tyne is not all right. Under Ashley the drama will remain, but at least with Pardew the fans had someone who was decent enough and willing to put up with the crap from above.

Now it’s uncertain what the Geordie faithful can expect, but it’s unlikely to be anything drastically better from what they had.

Follow disenchanted Newcastle supporter Janek on Twitter @JanekSpeight

The Crowd Says:

2015-01-03T15:12:21+00:00

Jayden

Guest


It does, Pardew and Ashley met at a casino as the rumors go. And said rumors continue that he was massively in debt to Llambias, one of the Newcastle's directors when he was hired.

2015-01-03T03:55:05+00:00

claude

Guest


chis Your answer doesnt make sense - even in a small letters

2015-01-02T11:47:28+00:00

Ian Whitfield

Roar Rookie


Howay man ,they divn't need any of these foreign Tarts ,there's a good Geordie Lad who could do the job standing on his heed,name of Peter Beardsley ,former Toon &. England player probably would rate as one of the best players in the modern era to pull on the Black and White shirt ,current manger of the development squad ,and Geordie through and through. Only problem is he's got to put with a Cockney Gent who doesn't give a stuff about Toon winning anything ,and whose only interest is using. The players as a clothes horse to sell his Sports Direct replica Toon football gear . Hopefully he'll decide to sell out of Newcstle and go and inflict himself on Rangers or some other club ,that is unfortunate to make his acquaintance they can have him with pleasure ,until then Newcastle will stumble from near disaster to near disaster

2015-01-02T11:06:20+00:00

chis

Guest


IT WAS A BIG BIG GAMBLE TO HAVE PARDEW AS MANAGER...GET IT.

2015-01-02T09:42:02+00:00

jamesb

Guest


I don't know where to put this but apparently Steven Gerrard is leaving Liverpool at the end of the season and possibly heading to the US. http://m.bbc.com/sport/football/30653547

2015-01-02T05:49:44+00:00

Martha

Guest


According to the herald, Popovic was among the favourites to take over and then I see the odds where he is not even near the favourites http://www.oddschecker.com/football/football-specials/crystal-palace/next-permanent-manager Talk about small town hype about the unlikely... BTW if soccer is football why does the Sydney herald call it football and its writers make a big deal that it is but its Melbourne sister the Age call it soccer???

2015-01-02T02:05:38+00:00

Eden

Guest


Roberto martines might soon be available...

2015-01-01T23:20:30+00:00

Jayden

Guest


Thankfully Bruce ruled himself out of the running. But I take issue with this part here "and none of the above managers are ever going to agree to work under his controlling terms." De Boer's board, similar to Ashley, buy and sell his players and he operates as the head coach with minimal involvement in transfers. Sure I don't expect us to sign De Boer and I don't want us to (Robert Enke's novel has always left me with a sour opinion) but if we did sign him it would be a sign of ambition at last, precisely why I don't expect us to. The next Newcastle manager won't be british, or shouldn't be because they won't be used to the DoF system, if Ashley should be looking anywhere it's in and around Europe.

2015-01-01T23:14:35+00:00

Jayden

Guest


I'd prefer being stabbed in the eyes.

2015-01-01T22:56:37+00:00

HardcorePrawn

Roar Guru


I can think of a likely candidate who's cheap, available, flamboyant, might even live in the area, and has a proven record in NE derbies. Paolo Di Canio anyone?

2015-01-01T22:21:08+00:00

brisvegas

Guest


We can only hope that Ashley finds it in him to do something creative, though I think that's unlikely. It still seems to me - especially with the Rangers interest - that he's putting Newcastle in a sound financial position to entice a buyer, and I think that's been his aim for many years now. Aim for mid-table security, balance the books, work within the income stream, get some advertising for Sports Direct along the way in exchange for his interest free loan. Making the ground a family friendly environment by getting rid of the active support section (to me, his single worst decision - and there are many to choose from) Don't agree that he is pocketing money, though. At least the accounts don't show that. I wasn't a big fan of Pardew, but he did an adequate job under the circumstances; a very average manager. I daresay we'll only progress when Ashley sells up - but only if somebody who wants to bring back the atmosphere at the ground takes over. Another Ashley-type businessman would be unbearable.

Read more at The Roar