More than 200 managers & coaches lost jobs this season, says LMA
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More than 200 managers & coaches lost jobs this season, says LMA
More than 200 managers and coaching staff lost their jobs in English football last season amid a hire-and-fire culture that undermines the profession. League Managers Association statistics show managers in the top two divisions of men’s football are staying in their roles for the shortest time in history. The data covers the top four men’s leagues and the top two women’s leagues in English professional football. In the Premier League, nine managers were dismissed last season with an average tenure of 0.87 years, the shortest in records going back to 2013-14. Several clubs changed managers multiple times, including Nottingham Forest with four permanent head coaches and Tottenham and Chelsea with three each. The League Managers Association chief argues success is not driven by instability and points to clubs with longer managerial investment.
"More than 200 managers and coaching staff lost their jobs last season in English football in a "hire and fire culture" which "undermines the profession", says League Managers Association (LMA) chief Richard Bevan. Statistics provided by the LMA show that managers in the top two divisions of men's football are staying in their job for the shortest time in history. The statistics cover the top four men's leagues in English professional football and the top two in women's."
"The Premier League saw nine managers dismissed last season with an average tenure of 0.87 years which is the shortest period of time in the LMA's records,, external going back to the 2013-14 campaign. A number of clubs in the league changed their manager on multiple occasions, with Nottingham Forest having four permanent head coaches, while Tottenham and Chelsea had three apiece."
""Certainly in my 18-19 years the hire and fire culture that's ever-present definitely undermines the profession," Bevan said on BBC Radio 4's Today programme. Bevan says managerial instability is not a bedrock for success and pointed instead to clubs such as Manchester City, Arsenal, Bournemouth and Newcastle as examples."
""When you look at short-termism, compare it to the way Man City, Arsenal, Bournemouth, Newcastle ... many other clubs look at the investing time and trust in their managers," said Bevan. "Longevity to managers, the same in many industries and people listening this morning, it's""
Read at www.bbc.com
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