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Post by Milo (not Mylo!!) on Apr 23, 2016 20:14:47 GMT
To lose one manager may be regarded as a misfortune; to lose two in one season looks like carelessness League One side Peterborough United have parted company with manager Graham Westley following Saturday's 2-0 defeat by Scunthorpe United. The 48-year-old took had been in charge of Posh since replacing Dave Robertson in September and lifted the club as high as the play-off places in January. But they have since fallen to 14th in the table and have lost four of their last five matches. Assistant Grant McCann will take charge for the final two games of the season. Westley was asked by BBC Radio Cambridgeshire if he felt increased pressure following Saturday's defeat and said: "I come to work every day and feel pressure, I put pressure on myself. "I don't like losing football matches, but I know the job here. The job is to build long-term winning. "Right now the job is to get our young players on the pitch, to give them a chance to succeed and to grow, and that's what we've done (against Scunthorpe). "There'll be lessons learned by all of the players, and if we're going to be a successful club next year, then we need the young players to step up to the plate and the experience now will be useful for them." The former Stevenage and Preston boss began his career at the ABAX Stadium with 10 wins from his first 14 matches in all competitions. However, after losing to West Brom in a FA Cup fourth-round replay on penalties and the January sale of forward Conor Washington, still the club's top scorer this season with 15, Posh lost six of their next seven league matches. After a brief run of three straight victories, the club's form dipped again, leading chairman Darragh MacAnthony to say "I employ over 300 people at Peterborough United, not one of those employees right now has a job in the summer". Earlier this week, Westley also bemoaned his side's poor discipline - the worst record in the Football League with 104 yellow cards and seven reds - saying it was costing them games. A brief statement on the Peterborough website read: "The club would like to thank Graham for his efforts on behalf of the football club. "Chairman Darragh MacAnthony will take time to speak to prospective candidates for the vacant manager position." bbc
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Post by Milo (not Mylo!!) on Apr 24, 2016 22:43:48 GMT
Posh supremo Darragh MacAnthony admits his next managerial appointment is 'critical'.
Peterborough United chairman Darragh MacAnthony had made his mind up before yesterday’s (April 23) home defeat to Scunthorpe to sack manager Graham Westley.
Dreadful home form, falling gates and unhappy fans were cited by MacAnthony as reasons for parting company with his seventh manager in a nine-and-a-half year reign. The chairman revealed that Westley fought tooth and nail to stay in a job he’d held for just 215 days and 41 competitive matches. Grant McCann would be a popular choice of Posh manager
MacAnthony has thanked Westley for his work at the club and now accepts his next appointment is ‘critical,’ as he bids to end Posh’s four-season stay in League One. Caretaker-manager Grant McCann will be a serious candidate if he decides to apply.
MacAnthony, in an exclusive interview with BBC Radio Cambridgeshire sports editor Nick Fairbairn, said: “Graham fought his corner passionately to stay in the job, but once I have made a decision I tend to stick with it. He was upset with my decision, but I had made my mind up before yesterday’s game. It’s the right decision for the club and me.
“But you will only hear positive words from me about the job Graham did. His stats were not that bad, he had bad luck with injuries and we collectively suffered a poor transfer window in January.
“Initially he had the team playing scintillating football, he got us into the play-off positions, he delivered some magic in the FA Cup, got us a live televised game and he helped turn Conor Washington into a million-pound striker. Graham Westley leaves Posh with his managerial reputation enhanced.
“But it’s been a disappointing run of late. We’ve lost 8 of our last 11 matches at home, our gates are dropping and there was a lot of disappointment, as well as a lack of support, in the area. The form has had an effect financially. We’ve won something like 20% of our last 20 matches.
“We were sixth when the slide started and 10 home defeats this season is really poor. We’ve lost at home lately to Rochdale, Oldham and Scunthorpe and we threw away leads against Swindon and Port Vale. We should be beating those teams at home.
“As far as I am concerned Graham leaves us with his reputation enhanced. He has proved his teams can play good football and he has proved he can turn develop multi-million pound players. I know he wants to get back into football straight away and I believe he will do just that.
“I am fed up with changing managers every five minutes and that’s a criticism I have to take on the chin. The next appointment is critical.
“Grant McCann has been given the job for the next two games so we will see what he makes of it. If he wants the job he can apply and he will be guaranteed an interview. I would want to see the desire and hunger for the job in his eyes.
“Grant is popular with the players, with the fans and with me so put your money on him to be at the club in some capacity next season. Ideally I would want someone who has had experience of getting out of League One to work with Grant.
“I will draw up a short list and interview candidates, probably four or five, when I’m back in the UK after the final game of the season (May 8). I would then hope to appoint by the end of May and certainly before we go to our pre-season training camp in Portugal on June 26. The e-mails and texts have already started, but there will be no power-point presentations!
“I have had my toughest season as Posh chairman, just a bit tougher than our very first season in the Championship (2009-10) when we were getting beaten badly. I also changed managers a lot that season and we fell into disarray.
“It’s my 10th year at the club next season and I am desperate for it to be a good and very successful one.
“We don’t need a massive re-build. Our midfield will be fine, but we need to sort out the defence and the strikers. We need new defenders and I’m not sure I see 40 League One goals between any two of our strikers.
“We will hopefully have Callum Elder back and we will definitely have a fit-again Jermaine Anderson back and a refreshed Chris Forrester. We just need to add a bit of experience and we will have a strong playing squad. We have some very good transfer targets in place.
“I’ve told Grant to call all the current players and cancel every day off between now and the end of the season. The players don’t deserve any time off. They can concentrate on winning the final two games and putting some smiles back on the faces of our fans.”
peterboroughtoday.co.uk/sport/football/posh/westley-sacking-peterborough-united-chairman-thanks-westley-and-admits-next-appointment-is-critical 24/4/16.
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Post by Milo (not Mylo!!) on Apr 27, 2016 15:12:03 GMT
High-profile Peterborough United fan Adrian Durham has accused club chairman Darragh MacAnthony of ‘manager-selection bingo’ following the sacking of Graham Westley on Saturday night (April 23).
Durham, who pays for two season tickets at Posh every season despite work commitments often keeping him away from games, is a personal friend of Westley, but insists he’s not unhappy he’s left the ABAX Stadium.
His comments prompted a Twitter spat with MacAnthony yesterday afternoon (April 24).
MacAnthony tweeted to Durham: ‘You still tweeting as a season ticket holder or a journalist or a close friend to Graham Westley? Football is a results business.’
Here is the article that caused the argument.
Durham wrote: ‘Heard the one about the professional football club who had a succession of managers that lasted on average six months in the job before being sacked? Except for the one manager given time to be successful, and he ended up being sacked twice!
‘Welcome to Peterborough United, the club with potentially the greatest chairman in the world. But he keeps selling players, and keeps sacking managers, and then wonders why we’re mid-table in League One. The answer? Sack another manager of course.
‘I love the chairman. In his own way he loves me too I’m sure. But it’s time for some home truths. And before any clowns get carried away, no I don’t want MacAnthony to sell the club and leave. I do want him to start making some smart decisions.
‘When Graham Westley was surprisingly given the job as Peterborough United manager back in September I offered him one piece of advice – keep it simple.
‘Unfortunately he didn’t do that. The most obvious example of this was team selection, which became random and unpredictable to the point of farce. The Posh fans called it team selection bingo.
‘The chairman Darragh MacAnthony has a long-term version of the same game – manager-selection bingo. His hire and fire policy is completely incompatible with his transfer policy, and so young, hungry players come in, the manager works with them, these players rarely hit the ground running, and when results reflect that, the manager is fired. And the next one comes in and the cycle of success, failure, SACKED continues. It’s never boring, but it’s also never going to work.
‘Westley was absolutely a victim of the chairman’s over-emotional governance, and is there any wonder lower league managers struggle to make the grade when they are cut so little slack.
‘Let’s go back a couple of seasons: Darren Ferguson suffered a cruel relegation from the Championship with 54 points in 2013. It was a freak (MK Dons will go down with 40 if they’re lucky this season), and Ferguson was asked to pick up the squad and himself and get promotion straight back. George Boyd had been sold in the middle of the survival fight (seems insane in hindsight, but it happened), Dwight Gayle was sold that summer, and Lee Tomlin left soon afterwards. All three went on to play in the Premier League, but that quality was never replaced. In 2013-14 Ferguson won the Johnstone’s Paint Trophy and made the League One play-offs but couldn’t win them.
‘Days before the following season started goal machine Britt Assombalonga was sold. The chairman might as well have chopped Fergie’s hands off. How could he do his job? Posh failed to compete, Ferguson was sacked. You see the pattern?
‘After a spell in caretaker charge the youth chief Dave Robertson got the job permanently. He lasted a month of the new season before MacAnthony fired him.
‘As a fan, I wanted Steve Evans. But Westley flew himself to the chairman’s place in Florida, seduced him and got the job.
‘I’ll declare an interest here – I have known Westley for a number of years and we get on very well. My opinion of his management is something completely different. I’ve known Gary Johnson for much longer than Westley, but I was absolutely in agreement when McAnthony fired Johnson in 2011. Gary and I still get on very well. Oh and guess what, Johnson lasted seven months at Posh – same as Westley. Point is, I can easily separate personal interest from managerial ability. Unlike some. I’m not upset Westley has gone. I am wondering what the long-term strategy is at my club when it comes to managers. It all seems so knee-jerk right now.
‘Anyway, for four months under Westley MY Peterborough United returned: great football, lots of goals, good results and from looking like dead certs for a relegation battle we went charging up the table into the play-off places. The key was a goalscorer: Westley turned our impotent striker Conor Washington into a net bulger – any Posh fan will tell you it was a stunning transformation nobody had seen coming. I bought tickets for the FA Cup tie with Luton in December for the whole family, and we witnessed one of the finest Posh performances I’ve ever seen. It was total football, chances galore, and a victory to go with it.
‘But then the chairman sold Washington in January. QPR offered a ridiculously good deal that could not be refused – I understand that. But by accepting the money, the chairman had to also accept the consequences of losing such a crucial player. Not a one man team, but one man the team couldn’t do without.
‘Westley came in, the chairman wanted a quick fix and Westley delivered massively. With £2.5m on the table, for a player worth next to nothing in September, the chairman took the money. But he then expected the miracles to continue. Real life doesn’t work like that.
‘Young, hungry players were signed as replacements, but only a fool would think they would hit the ground running. Results nose-dived, as did the league position. I could mention some key players out injured, but a lot of teams suffer from that. I could also mention Jack Collison’s sad retirement because of injury, but again these things happen.
‘In desperate attempts to sort it out, Westley’s team selections became a sitcom, performances the biggest joke, and when you’re losing there’s no way out.
‘In isolation those things get a manager the sack. In context the sacking will make many coaches wonder if going for the Peterborough job is a quick way to ruining your reputation and ending any hopes of a managerial career.
‘Westley inherited someone else’s losing squad, turned them into winners, had his main goalscorer taken away, and struggled to work another miracle. As fans we had four months of brilliant football, then three months of nonsense, and the sack. It might make sense to some, but Westley left Posh in a higher position than when he arrived, and he made the club £2.5m in January. He didn’t even get a pre-season. Hell, we’re not even getting relegated this season. The manager circus is giving the chairman a reputation.
‘I love the passion of Darragh McAnthony: outsiders beg him on Twitter to go to their club, people lost in a brainless world where they think they will never disagree with anything he does.
‘He’s overseen some great times at Posh, no question about that. And I respect that he cares so much, and that he has always paid bills and wages on time – that’s how a club should be run.
‘But if I tell you the chairman set up face-to-face meetings yesterday. He’s disarmed those wavering, and they will now be charmed into purchasing of course.
‘Clever from the chairman, and the collateral damage will soon be forgotten. What mustn’t be forgotten is that Darragh MacAnthony appointed Westley, but didn’t have the balls to back his own decision-making. And this is becoming a damaging habit. Since the chairman arrived at the club, apart from Darren Ferguson, none of the other six managers he’s had have lasted more than seven months, and that doesn’t include caretakers.
‘Clubs need stability, but that can only come if the chairmen are clever enough to make good decisions. Appointing the right manager is crucial, as well as accepting the consequences of a selling policy. My message to the chairman is simple: make an educated low risk decision on the manager, let him get on with it, give him time, and don’t undermine him by selling players – especially mid-season.
‘He’s good company Darragh McAnthony, but his chat is sharper than his decision-making sometimes. And he’s started worrying too much about some of the stuff morons on social media bark at him. I have absolutely no doubt he will fall out with me over this article. He might even choose to use it as some way out of the club. Let me be clear – I absolutely don’t want him to leave the club.
‘One day Darragh will appoint the right manager. In fact, he may have already sacked that man. The trouble is he is always so quick to pull the trigger when times get a little bit tough, or fans get noisy on Twitter, or he stops liking the man he appointed, that we’ll never know.’
Read more: peterboroughtoday/westley-sacking-the-chairman-s-chat-is-sharper-than-his-decision-making
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