Give him to Christmas? Too little or too long?
Another shit thread on NSC from a dull moderator
Why not get behind Hughton and look to the future instead of questioning how long he has? I get bored of these threads.
This club is screaming out for stability and a bit of financial backing on the pitch.
Agreed. Long-term thinking and stability is what we need right now and Hughton, despite the frustrations the fans may currently be feeling, is the right sort of boss for that.46, plus the cup games.
If things were REALLY dire by Christmas, might need a rethink, but what we really need now is a bit of consistency, not a continuing merry-go-round of managerial changes.
Chris Hughton is a long term manager, give him both windows next season and then see where we are at the end of next season.
Another shit thread on NSC from a dull moderator
Why not get behind Hughton and look to the future instead of questioning how long he has? I get bored of these threads.
This club is screaming out for stability and a bit of financial backing on the pitch.
Agreed. Long-term thinking and stability is what we need right now and Hughton, despite the frustrations the fans may currently be feeling, is the right sort of boss for that.
Couple of examples of clubs in the Championship who have been rewarded for sticking by their managers for the long-haul (relative to the average of 6-months or whatever ridiculous stat it is these days at least): Middlesbrough, who went 8 games without scoring a goal last season under Karanka before he was able to bring in the sufficient attacking quality in the summer, and Ipswich, who had some pretty uninspiring spells during McCarthy's rebuilding job after he initially stablised things.
Sometimes you have to stick out some poor football before things come good over a longer period of time. Hughton feels to me like the sort of manager who will reward our patience if we can recruit well and to his demands this summer with more astute Kayal-like signings. But then I may be way off the mark.
Doesn't bear out on his Wikipedia page, though he's not exactly able to control when clubs decide to sack him. Think more what he's getting at is that Hughton is at the stage of his career where he's unlikely to be interesting any top flight clubs anytime soon and is also unlikely to quit in a huff if we don't look like romping the league next season. Thus would seem ideal for a more stable period following the past few years.Is he?
Accordingly to Wikipedia:
2008 Newcastle United (caretaker)
2009–2010 Newcastle United (Sacked)
2011–2012 Birmingham City (left to take over at Norwich)
2012–2014 Norwich City (Sacked)
Not really long term
Agreed. Long-term thinking and stability is what we need right now and Hughton, despite the frustrations the fans may currently be feeling, is the right sort of boss for that.
Couple of examples of clubs in the Championship who have been rewarded for sticking by their managers for the long-haul (relative to the average of 6-months or whatever ridiculous stat it is these days at least): Middlesbrough, who went 8 games without scoring a goal last season under Karanka before he was able to bring in the sufficient attacking quality in the summer, and Ipswich, who had some pretty uninspiring spells during McCarthy's rebuilding job after he initially stablised things.
Sometimes you have to stick out some poor football before things come good over a longer period of time. Hughton feels to me like the sort of manager who will reward our patience if we can recruit well and to his demands this summer with more astute Kayal-like signings. But then I may be way off the mark.