Monday 12 November 2012

Sky Blues feeling Crook


Ian Crook on a bad day

So a day after friends and I were discussing how we think it’s time to fire Ian Crook, Crooky took it upon himself and quit his job as manager for Sydney FC. By all accounts Ian is a great guy and good with youth footballers, but the job of manager of an A-League team always seemed to be out of his comfort zone. I personally wasn’t high on hiring him in that role in the first place and I think now even he agrees. It felt like Sydney didn’t like or get the candidates the wanted and just took the cheap option and promoted internally when they should have hired Tony Popovic before West Sydney Wanderers got him.

Crook will go back to coaching the youth team and will do well at that. But now it’s time for Sydney FC to find a manager that can capitalise on the opportunity they have to succeed with Del Piero in the side. This is not a situation where a guy can come in and take time to build his own team and not have expectations of winning instantly. The man who takes the job has the expectation that the team will turn it around and succeed immediately as having Del Piero only works if the team actually wins games, otherwise the novelty will wear off and the crowds will fall away again.

So who is out there for Sydney FC to hire in what is a very high pressure job?

Locals

Obviously several locally based managers will apply for the job. I would imagine former Socceroos coach Frank Farina will be interested but to say I would be upset if they hired him would be an understatement. After his Socceroos stint, I want nothing to do with supporting a team he coaches ever again. Former Melbourne Victory coach Ernie Merrick might be interested as well and if they can’t find someone high profile from overseas he is a solid option who has done well in the A-League already.

Sydney have already signed Jason Culina so his father Branko might throw his name in the ring, but after Branko was fired in Newcastle for knowing about Jason’s injury before signing him, I can’t imagine Sydney wanting to go down that path.

Miron Bleiberg would be a fascinating option. He is great for a quote and in the media and has coached in the A-League. Whether the board would be willing to deal with him, that’s another story, but it sure would be a fun ride and he might be able to get the best out of the underperforming squad.

Of course Steve Corica is the caretaker manager and if the board aren’t impressed with other applicants and if Corica does well as a caretaker, they might just hand the Sydney FC legend the keys and give him a shot.

After that the local contenders seem to fall off a cliff. Perhaps there are a few other options that might do well in interviews, but given the stakes in this job I would be disappointed if they went to someone else locally who was unproven.

Overseas

Figuring out who is available and might be interested from overseas is a much trickier prospect. A friend of mine who supports Tottenham wants Sydney to sounds out Harry Redknapp but also knows how unrealistic it is that he would want to do it. Fox Sports threw out the name of Gianluca Vialli who is not only a proven manager but also a very close friend of Del Piero. If Alessandro pushed hard for Vialli, I would be totally on board with that. If anything, it would even further strengthen the support of the local Italian community for the club and keep the crowd numbers up.

In terms of the guys coming over from England there are a few available guys such as former Bolton manager Owen Coyle or Manchester United legend Roy Keane, who supposedly was close to coming to coach in the A-League not that long ago. Keane would certainly be a big name, whether he would actually be good at the job is another question.

Ruud Gullit is another big name whose managing career hasn’t lived up to his playing career. Gérard Houllier would be a good choice but given his heart issues might not be interested in managing again. Gordon Strachan is available and would be worth consideration as would Kevin Keegan.

At the end of the day these international options come down to who is even interested in moving out to Australia, but I do hope the club try their best to go for a proven manager from overseas before settling for one of the lesser local options. The club needs to be in ‘win now mode’ and if you are spending big money on a marquee player, it makes no sense to try and save money on the manager.

There would be a plethora of other possibilities on top of those I mentioned and if Sydney FC are serious about making a splash both on and off the field, they must learn from their previous mistake of hiring a cheap, local option who couldn’t handle the magnitude of the job.

Or I could just show them my record on Football Manager and do the job myself.

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