bha100
Active member
- Aug 25, 2011
- 898
20 pages of Sami Hyypia and you just know it'll end up being Nathan Jones.
20 pages of Sami Hyypia and you just know it'll end up being Nathan Jones.
As many others have mentioned, the vast majority of promoted teams were managed by Brits. As were the vast majority of mid-table teams. And come to think of it the relegated teams.
Does this mean it's essential to have a British manager to get promoted, relegated or finish mid-table?
Hyypia has great experience of the English game, plus top level managerial experience. It seems strange to write him off due to his nationality.
when i saw this i thought he'd been managing a non-leaugue English side. now i see its Leverkusen. so what ex-Liverpool center back am i thinking of?
Where did I say that I've written him of because of his nationality? I was mealy stating that British managers get clubs promoted (from championship) and that is hard 'facts' whether people like it or not.
Where did I say that I've written him of because of his nationality? I was mealy stating that British managers get clubs promoted (from championship) and that is hard 'facts' whether people like it or not.
Brilliant. Completely disregard all of the common sense arguments that people offer and just stick to your guns, that's a good lad.
Using your logic as soon as Paul Ince gets us promoted to the Premier League we will have to sack him and bring in either a Scot or a Frenchman, as they've won the vast majority of Premier League titles. League success is guaranteed to follow. Because that's how football management works. It's solely based on nationality.
That's the logical extension of your argument, no? Most managers that have won promotion from the Championship were British, therefore we should appoint a Brit. Once we get there, the next aim (in theory) will be winning the Premier League, and most managers that have done that were Scottish or French, so we should appoint a Scot or a Frenchman.
My point is that this fallacy highlights the limit of your argument - that it's based off a tiny sample.
Where did I say that I've written him of because of his nationality? I was mealy stating that British managers get clubs promoted (from championship) and that is hard 'facts' whether people like it or not.
Or if you just want to avoid relegation get yourself a Uruguayan manager - 100% success rate
Don't be silly. This argument about relegation is pointless as we all know that Bloom would never go down that route with relegation from the Championship so your argument is complete rubbish.
2006 was when the last foreign manager was relegated - that was Dario Gradi of Crewe Alexandra (we went down the same year, but who cares about that).
It was 2010 when a foreign manager was last promoted.