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Magilton Leads The Championship Sack Race

How much time will Jim Magilton be given at QPR?

How much time will Jim Magilton be given at QPR?

Of the 24 teams that kicked off the Championship just under a year ago, eleven now have new managers. In the majority of cases, the manager was removed due to perceived failings. Being a Championship manager is like being a duck at a shooting gallery. It’s a question of ‘when’, not ‘if’, no matter how dumb the man holding the gun might be.

It’s a truism, but it all comes down to expectations. Two teams can be promoted automatically, another four can reach the play-offs. Yet by my reckoning seven clubs will expect to finish first or second and nine others will believe they can make the play-offs.

With kick-off still a few weeks away, two-thirds of the managers in this league are now giving optimistic interviews about challenging for the top six. Disappointment for most of them is therefore inevitable. And disappointment leads to jobless managers.

Here’s my top five managers most at risk as teams start their pre-season preparations:

1. Jim Magilton, QPR: The Rangers owners can dress it up any way they like, but the turnover of managers (or head coaches) at the club since Flavio Briatore arrived has been startling even by the bizarre standards football sets itself. QPR have now turned to Jim Magilton, deemed not good enough for Ipswich only a few weeks before his appointment at Loftus Road.

A spat with the Chairman or a poor start to the season could easily see Magilton disappear from his post within a matter of months.  He has to be the favourite to go first.

2. Malky Mackay, Watford: Another new manager who could potentially be at risk early in the season. Watford seem destined to lose talisman Tommy Smith to Sheffield United, and even though the surprisingly high £1.8m fee will be welcome, his departure will be a real blow.

Watford are now a far cry from Boothroyd’s big, dangerous side of a a few years back and if they start badly the club may decide to cut their losses and, against recent practice, opt for a more experienced hand.

3. Gareth Southgate, Middlesbrough: If Southgate had been in charge of any other established Premier League club and turned in the results he did last season, he would be out of a job.  Famously, he belittled Sven Goran Eriksson after England’s 2-1 World Cup defeat to Brazil in 2002, claiming that the team needed Winston Churchill at half time, not Iain Duncan Smith.

I wonder if he recalled those words when his team lost 3-0 to rock bottom West Brom, 4-1 to Bolton or 5-0 at home to Chelsea. The management game, he must now realise, is more than spouting a bit of loud rhetoric at half time.

Steve Gibson always backs his managers but if Boro fall towards mid-table (or worse, as Sunderland did a couple of years back), Gibson may have no other option than to advise Southgate to go back to the pizza commercials.

4. Roberto di Matteo, West Brom: This was truly an appointment out of the left-field. It was as if the West Brom board were so flush from receiving £2m from Celtic for a manager that had just relegated their club, that, like a gambler who believes he’s on a roll, they decided to bet high on a pair of deuces. I mean, the Albion job is a big job these days.

Di Matteo did well at MK Dons, but in truth he was managing a team already built by Paul Ince and one that had a significant financial advantage over most clubs in League One.

It’s a brave decision, but West Brom fans are used to yo-yoing. They’ve had their spin down and now they will be expecting the corresponding spin up. Di Matteo is under significant pressure.

5. Chris Coleman, Coventry: As with the Premier League, there will always be one surprise who’ll go early. I’ll plump for Coleman. He has had time to consolidate at Cov and the board will be expecting something much greater than last season’s finish of 17th.

Only four teams won less home games than Coventry last season and Cookie must somehow find a way to turn that cavernous stadium into an intimidating place to visit.

Now it’s over to you. Who do you think will be first to go? Maybe Shearer won’t be able to take the heat? Or perhaps Gary Johnson will be poached by the Premier League. Let us know below.

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4 Comments

4 Comments

  1. Terry

    November 18, 2009 at 10:39 am

    Three months in and you got 1 out of 5. Well done!!
    Now reassess.

  2. Zorg

    July 6, 2009 at 8:48 am

    Seventeen goals last season when not playing as an out-and-out striker says more than Three the previous season when playing exclusively on the wing. If goalscoring is your only metric you’ll never sign a goalkeeper… Smith has been one of the leading creators of goals in the division for the last two seasons and is astonishingly consistent for an attacking/creative player. Unlike Wardley, he HAS excelled for several years, but the goals are a bonus. 29 or not, he’s worth £1.8m anyway.

    I’d agree with the Sheffield United comment, mind. Not the most obvious complement to their team and frankly I suspect he could do better. With three Premiership seasons behind him, the likes of Burnley could do worse. He hasn’t signed for the Blades yet, mind.

  3. Dan Trelfer

    July 6, 2009 at 6:24 am

    I have been paying attention. He was superb last season. But he’s 29. When he was 26, Watford paid a quarter of that for him. The season before last he scored 3 goals in the entire season. If I was a manager I would be extremely wary about stats like that. The game is littered with players who have one amazing goalscoring run one season and never, ever get close to it again. Just ask Stuart Wardley. With Sheff U’s style of football, where exactly is he going to play? Will he go back out to the wing again, where he is less effective? Will they drop Brian Howard? Don’t get me wrong – very good player, but £1.8m? I’d say ‘surprisingly high’ is a reasonable comment.

  4. Zorg

    July 5, 2009 at 3:48 pm

    £1.8m for Smith surprisingly high? Not to anyone who’s been paying attention.

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