Post by QPR Report on Jun 5, 2009 8:42:29 GMT
Les Ferdinand: Give NUFC manager job to Alan Shearer
Jun 5 2009 by Mark Douglas, The Journal
Les Ferdinand admits the days when Newcastle United were challenging at the top of the Premier League table feel like “another age”. Mark Douglas reports
A FORTNIGHT ago, Les Ferdinand studied the final Premier League standings, paused for a minute and shook his head.
The man synonymous with Kevin Keegan’s first era of excess and success could not believe that the golden opportunity presented to Newcastle United just over a decade ago had been frittered away so quickly – and so spectacularly.
While the top four contained three of the teams that Newcastle had gone up against in the race for the title in 1996-97, United – under the player signed supposedly to push them over the top back then – had departed out of the division with barely a whimper.
As someone who tasted the good times on Tyneside, Ferdinand is bewildered that it could have been fouled up in such a manner.
He shares a bit of the anger rebounding around Newcastle about the demise of the club that took him to its heart.
But he remains wary of making a scapegoat of either Mike Ashley or the players, believing it is “too easy” to attribute blame solely to one person or one group of people. “It is a crying shame what has happened at Newcastle and absolutely unbelievable really. And the way it happened, with Alan (Shearer) at the helm, was even more cruel to the fans and everyone associated with the club,” he said.
“I have discussed this quite a lot this season and the thing that really sticks out is just how quickly things have deteriorated up there.
“In my second season, we were battling it out with Manchester United, Liverpool and Arsenal for the league. Chelsea were in the mix as well but it was mainly those three teams and Newcastle were on an equal footing with them all.
“We could have taken players from those teams, we were able to sign players that they all wanted as well. But while they’ve established themselves, Newcastle have moved backwards so quickly. It can’t all be down to Mike Ashley or a few bad transfer decisions.
“The problem is getting back up there now is more difficult than it was back then because of the money involved. How many managers have the other teams in the top three had since then? And how many have Newcastle had?”
Ferdinand sees stability as a priority if the team is to claw its way out of the Championship – both in the boardroom and the dug-out.
While Ashley’s future is still up in the air, he is more certain about the identity of United’s next boss.
He has urged the club to move ‘heaven and earth’ to make sure that Shearer remains in charge and is given a fighting chance to get the team out of the second tier. “Without a shadow of a doubt, he is the man for the job,” he said.
“People have talked about the record that he had when he was in there and there will be no one more disappointed than Alan that the results weren’t better. But it was a bigger job than maybe he realised it was.
“The one silver lining for Newcastle at the moment is that he does want the job and he is willing to hang around to wait and see what happens with Mike Ashley and the takeover business. He’s out there, ready and available to manage.
“Does he need experience? Not necessarily. Managers with experience have gone in at Newcastle and found it difficult.
“Alan is the only manager who could go in there and hit the ground running. The advantage of Alan is that he will get a very long honeymoon, the players and the supporters will give him as long as it takes.
“This is an opportunity to get things right. Newcastle cannot let it go begging.” If he gets the job, Ferdinand feels that it is inevitable that Shearer will preside over a mass clear-out at United.
The likes of Fabricio Coloccini, Obafemi Martins and Alan Smith are all heading for the exit door and their departures will be unlamented by supporters who feel they have let the club down.
Ferdinand, however, felt that accusations that the players weren’t trying and did not care about the club’s predicament are unfair.
“I know from my time at QPR that when you’re struggling, there’s a massive lack of confidence in the players and that it can look like you’re not trying. People said it about us when we were down the bottom and we were – things just weren’t coming off for us,” he said.
“But believe me, the players were trying. The bottom line was they just weren’t good enough for the majority of the season.
“The game at Aston Villa was such a disappointment because of the way it went. But if you strip away the disappointment of it all, it was the same problems that Newcastle have had all season.
“The biggest thing was there were no legs in midfield. They’ve struggled there all season, no one has been able to get forward and they’ve just not created enough.
“Alan probably looked around at who he had in the squad and wouldn’t have seen many other options, to be quite honest with you.”
With Shearer, Ferdinand predicts better days ahead. But without him, the former Newcastle striker fears for the future.
“It’s important that people learn from the lessons of what happened to Leeds United,” Ferdinand said.
“I didn’t think it would ever happen again but there are so many similarities. Newcastle are a bigger club in terms of attendances but there is a chance that the same thing could happen and they could tumble down the divisions.
“It’s so important that they don’t make the same mistakes.
“The next week or two are so important for the future of the football club.”
www.journallive.co.uk/nufc/newcastle-united-news/2009/06/05/les-ferdinand-give-nufc-manager-job-to-alan-shearer-61634-23793929/
Jun 5 2009 by Mark Douglas, The Journal
Les Ferdinand admits the days when Newcastle United were challenging at the top of the Premier League table feel like “another age”. Mark Douglas reports
A FORTNIGHT ago, Les Ferdinand studied the final Premier League standings, paused for a minute and shook his head.
The man synonymous with Kevin Keegan’s first era of excess and success could not believe that the golden opportunity presented to Newcastle United just over a decade ago had been frittered away so quickly – and so spectacularly.
While the top four contained three of the teams that Newcastle had gone up against in the race for the title in 1996-97, United – under the player signed supposedly to push them over the top back then – had departed out of the division with barely a whimper.
As someone who tasted the good times on Tyneside, Ferdinand is bewildered that it could have been fouled up in such a manner.
He shares a bit of the anger rebounding around Newcastle about the demise of the club that took him to its heart.
But he remains wary of making a scapegoat of either Mike Ashley or the players, believing it is “too easy” to attribute blame solely to one person or one group of people. “It is a crying shame what has happened at Newcastle and absolutely unbelievable really. And the way it happened, with Alan (Shearer) at the helm, was even more cruel to the fans and everyone associated with the club,” he said.
“I have discussed this quite a lot this season and the thing that really sticks out is just how quickly things have deteriorated up there.
“In my second season, we were battling it out with Manchester United, Liverpool and Arsenal for the league. Chelsea were in the mix as well but it was mainly those three teams and Newcastle were on an equal footing with them all.
“We could have taken players from those teams, we were able to sign players that they all wanted as well. But while they’ve established themselves, Newcastle have moved backwards so quickly. It can’t all be down to Mike Ashley or a few bad transfer decisions.
“The problem is getting back up there now is more difficult than it was back then because of the money involved. How many managers have the other teams in the top three had since then? And how many have Newcastle had?”
Ferdinand sees stability as a priority if the team is to claw its way out of the Championship – both in the boardroom and the dug-out.
While Ashley’s future is still up in the air, he is more certain about the identity of United’s next boss.
He has urged the club to move ‘heaven and earth’ to make sure that Shearer remains in charge and is given a fighting chance to get the team out of the second tier. “Without a shadow of a doubt, he is the man for the job,” he said.
“People have talked about the record that he had when he was in there and there will be no one more disappointed than Alan that the results weren’t better. But it was a bigger job than maybe he realised it was.
“The one silver lining for Newcastle at the moment is that he does want the job and he is willing to hang around to wait and see what happens with Mike Ashley and the takeover business. He’s out there, ready and available to manage.
“Does he need experience? Not necessarily. Managers with experience have gone in at Newcastle and found it difficult.
“Alan is the only manager who could go in there and hit the ground running. The advantage of Alan is that he will get a very long honeymoon, the players and the supporters will give him as long as it takes.
“This is an opportunity to get things right. Newcastle cannot let it go begging.” If he gets the job, Ferdinand feels that it is inevitable that Shearer will preside over a mass clear-out at United.
The likes of Fabricio Coloccini, Obafemi Martins and Alan Smith are all heading for the exit door and their departures will be unlamented by supporters who feel they have let the club down.
Ferdinand, however, felt that accusations that the players weren’t trying and did not care about the club’s predicament are unfair.
“I know from my time at QPR that when you’re struggling, there’s a massive lack of confidence in the players and that it can look like you’re not trying. People said it about us when we were down the bottom and we were – things just weren’t coming off for us,” he said.
“But believe me, the players were trying. The bottom line was they just weren’t good enough for the majority of the season.
“The game at Aston Villa was such a disappointment because of the way it went. But if you strip away the disappointment of it all, it was the same problems that Newcastle have had all season.
“The biggest thing was there were no legs in midfield. They’ve struggled there all season, no one has been able to get forward and they’ve just not created enough.
“Alan probably looked around at who he had in the squad and wouldn’t have seen many other options, to be quite honest with you.”
With Shearer, Ferdinand predicts better days ahead. But without him, the former Newcastle striker fears for the future.
“It’s important that people learn from the lessons of what happened to Leeds United,” Ferdinand said.
“I didn’t think it would ever happen again but there are so many similarities. Newcastle are a bigger club in terms of attendances but there is a chance that the same thing could happen and they could tumble down the divisions.
“It’s so important that they don’t make the same mistakes.
“The next week or two are so important for the future of the football club.”
www.journallive.co.uk/nufc/newcastle-united-news/2009/06/05/les-ferdinand-give-nufc-manager-job-to-alan-shearer-61634-23793929/