by Julian Davis
Last season,
Leicester City completed one of the greatest accomplishments in all of sporting
history, winning the Premier league, going from relegation fighters to
champions. At the heart of this monumental triumph was Claudio Ranieri, a man
who had never won a division title, suddenly winning one in the most improbable
fashion - at 5000-1 odds. Yet now he’s been sacked.
In one sense
it was a huge injustice, to achieve something so extraordinary, then just to be
sacked nine months later; one could argue that he had merited the chance to
keep his side up. However, the board of Leicester City felt they couldn’t afford to
take that chance, couldn’t afford to be relegated. Both Hull City and Swansea City had sacked their managers and had a significant uplift in their fortunes,
with Swansea winning 4 of their last 6 games since hiring Paul Clement,
including an impressive win at Anfield.
It was this
so called ‘new manager bounce’ that the board had decided to take their chances
on, because Leicester need to turn around their season. They have failed to
score a single goal in the Premier League during 2017 and are one point above
the relegation zone; for the defending champions this is inexcusable. The players
were publicly rebelling against the managers and, without the backing of the
players, any manager's position becomes untenable. In a way Ranieri follows a
pattern stretching back the last five years, with a manager leaving the season after
winning the league, demonstrating the fiercely competitive nature of the
Premier League.
Many Leicester
fans have been indignant at the sacking, with Gary Lineker admitting he ‘shedded a tear’ when hearing about the sacking, and the league will be a worse
place without his joviality and wit, but, while it was a ruthless, almost
callous, decision, it was necessary due to the money-driven mentality of the
league; results and money come before sentimentality and loyalty. Ranieri
wasn’t delivering, Leicester have been underperforming since October and so, as
tragic as it is, Ranieri had to go.
But does it all have to be about money? Is a football club a business or a centre piece of a community? Sutton manager Paul Doswell has stated that he has no interest in taking Sutton into the football league, and his aim is for Sutton to be the best non league side in England. Would Pompey fans prefer to be back in the Premier league owned by a foreign corporation, or stay in the lower leagues owned by the fans?
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