Thursday, December 25, 2014

Money makes the English managers do not get the chance in the Premier League – Aftenposten

Still have an English manager to good win the league on 22 attempts.

In 1992, Howard Wilkinson celebrate league title manager of Leeds United. The following season was the Premier League a reality. On 22 attempts have English managers failed quest to copy now to Englishman Wilkinson.

Premier League has gradually grown in status and popularity. Economically it in a separate class, which not only has attracted many of the world’s best players, but also the most skilled managers to the league. It’s part of the reason for the lack of influence of English managers.

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Four Englishmen

It happens hardly any change to the first either. For although both West Ham and Newcastle have shown solid stroke in the fall, so there is hardly anyone think that Sam Allardyce or Alan Pardew will follow in the footsteps of Howard Wilkinson at first. Neither Steve Bruce and his Hull, or Garry Monk and his Swansea win the league this season, and several English managers than these four are not in the top division.

There is a significant change since its inception in 1992. Ron Atkinson, Gerry Francis, Trevor Francis, Peter Reid, Howard Kendall, Brian Clough, Lennie Lawrence, Dave Bassett, Bobby Gould, John Lyall, Howard Wilkinson, Ian Branfoot, Joe Royle, Doug Livermore Moore and Steve Coppell made a massive English majority of managers in the league as it once consisted of 22 layers. Scots George Graham, Kenny Dalglish, Alex Ferguson, Graeme Souness and Ian Porterfield, and Joe Kinnear from Ireland and Mike Walker from Wales accounted rest. In other words, there was not a single continental manager in the league at the time.

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Winner Machines

Now governed top clubs of foreign managers. Not least Chelsea and Manchester City, where foreign owners come in with their billions of dollars, bought many of the best players, and put José Mourinho and Manuel Pellegrini spearheaded their winning machines.

Even the England team traditionally been led by their own, had to resort to Sven-Goran Eriksson and Fabio Capello at a time when there were not so many obvious, English candidates.

The lack of English manager success is also reflected in European club football. After Joe Fagan led Liverpool to victory in the Cup series wins in 1984, in a good English period, only Bobby Robson of the English managers who have won a European trophy for the past thirty years. It happened when the now deceased Robson led Barcelona to victory in the Cup Winners’ Cup in 1997.

There have been many English managers who have left its mark on the Champions League either. Bobby Robson and Ray Harford died, while Harry Redknapp, Steve McClaren and Stuart Baxter is the other three who have led a team in the tournament. The last two have otherwise had Twente and AIK Stockholm as their employers.

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pioneer Venglos

It has since its inception been a number of foreign managers in English elite football, but in the beginning they were only from the British Isles. The first manager who was not born in the UK or Ireland, Josef Venglos. The Czech led his nation to the quarterfinals at the World Cup in 1990 and was then picked up by Aston Villa. There was no success for a Villa side who finished second last season under Graham Taylor, rock barely place in the division with a 17th place during Venglos.

The foreign revolution came first in 1996 when Arsenal employees at the time unknown coach named Arsene Wenger. In 1998 he became the first non-Briton who won a championship, and the following year Ruud Gullit Chelsea the first non-Briton who won the FA Cup. In 2004 Rafa Benitez and Jose Mourinho to Liverpool and Chelsea in a season where best English manager was Sam Allardyce who led Bolton to 6th place.



International knowledge

Many point to that the reason for the dominance of foreigners in the Premier League is that these managers have better knowledge of foreign leagues than the English, and it can make the best purchases. For no leagues is as rich as the Premier League, and therefore, it can lure many of the best players and managers to English football.

– This is a reality we have to live with. Money talks. The way forward is not to force clubs to choose English, but to focus even more on trenerutdannelsen says Howard Wilkinson in an interview with the Daily Mail. He is now head of the League Managers Association and concerned that England gets more top educated trainers.

While England has only 203 trainers with pro license, the highest trenerutdannelsen, the corresponding figures in Germany and Spain in 1000 and in 2140.

– I speak against myself, but there is no reason why there should not be more English managers in the Premier League. They are not inferior to foreign at some points, says Chelsea boss Jose Mourinho told the Daily Mail.

Mourinho is one of the foreign managers with success in the Premier League. Since the league was started in 1992, English clubs won 73 trophies at home and abroad .. English managers have only been behind six of these, and only two of these were won in this century. Steve McClaren won the League Cup with Middlesbrough in 2004, and Harry Redknapp FA Cup with Portsmouth in 2008.

Past winners

1992-1993: Alex Ferguson, Scotland, Manchester U

1993-1994: Alex Ferguson, Scotland, Manchester U

1994-1995: Kenny Dalglish, Scotland, Blackburn

1995-1996: Alex Ferguson, Scotland, Manchester U

1996-1997: Alex Ferguson, Scotland, Manchester U

1997-1998: Arsene Wenger, France, Arsenal

1998-1999: Alex Ferguson, Scotland, Manchester U

1999-1900: Alex Ferguson, Scotland, Manchester U

2000/01: Alex Ferguson, Scotland, Manchester U

2001/02: Arsene Wenger, France, Arsenal

2002/03: Alex Ferguson, Scotland, Manchester U

2003/04: Arsene Wenger, France, Arsenal

2004/05: José Mourinho, Portugal, Chelsea

2005/06: José Mourinho, Portugal, Chelsea

2006/07: Alex Ferguson , Scotland, Manchester U

2007/08: Alex Ferguson, Scotland, Manchester U

2008/09: Alex Ferguson , Scotland, Manchester U

2009/10: Carlo Ancelotti, Italy, Chelsea

2010/11: Alex Ferguson, Scotland, Manchester U

2011/12: Roberto Mancini, Italy, Manchester C

2012/13: Alex Ferguson, Scotland, Manchester U

2013/14: Manuel Pellegrini, Chile, Manchester C

Published: 25.des. 2014 5:08 p.m.

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